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EPIDEMICS
Two die of bird flu in China
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jan 17, 2015


Egypt reports 3rd bird flu death this year
Cairo (AFP) Jan 16, 2015 - An Egyptian woman died Friday of bird flu, the health ministry announced, the third victim killed in the country this year by the H5N1 infection.

The 43-year-old woman died in the southern city of Asyut, five days after she was hospitalised at the facility where she worked as a nurse, a ministry official from her hometown said.

The woman also raised birds, an activity which could have caused her infection, the official added.

Her death brings to three the number of Egyptians who have died from bird flu since the start of 2015, according to the health ministry, which reported 10 deaths last year.

The H5N1 strain has killed more than 400 people worldwide since it first appeared in 2003, most of them in southeast Asia.

It is one of several deadly or potentially deadly strains of bird flu that are closely monitored by the World Health Organisation.

Two people have died of the H7N9 strain of avian flu in China's eastern province of Fujian, state media said Saturday, quoting local health officials.

Fujian has confirmed 15 cases since the start of 2015, Xinhua news agency reported. It did not say when the two patients died.

Another human infection was reported in the adjacent province of Jiangxi on Friday, Xinhua said, while both the municipality of Shanghai and neighbouring Zhejiang province have reported cases "this winter".

Cases of the virus accelerated in China in 2014, with statistics compiled by health authorities in Beijing showing 310 cases were diagnosed on the mainland from January until December 10, including 132 deaths. Another death was recorded on December 29.

In 2013, the country recorded 46 deaths and 144 cases since the outbreak started in March of that year.

The virus ignited fears that it could mutate to become easily transmissible between people, threatening a global pandemic.

But Chinese officials and the World Health Organization have said there is no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission, despite occasional instances of apparent infection between family members.

The report came as Taiwan said it had begun culling an additional 22,000 birds Saturday after they tested positive for the H5 strain of the virus in the island's worst bout of the disease in a decade. More than 200,000 birds have now been killed there in just over a week.

Taiwan has reported several outbreaks of H5N2 but has no recorded cases of the potentially deadly H5N1 strain, although authorities said pet birds smuggled from China tested positive for the strain in 2005 and 2012.

burs-st/kjl


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