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Avian Influenza H5N1 The Next Pandemic? May 9, 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "Avian Influenza H5N1 The Next Pandemic? May 9, 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 Avian Influenza H5N1 The Next Pandemic? May 9, 2006

2 1997 First Human Outbreak  Hong Kong  18 Infected  6 Killed

3 1997 through February 2004

4 August 2004

5 July – August 2005

6 October 2005

7 April 27, 2006

8

9

10 How does this affect humans?  Risk of direct infection  Risk of mutation  More infected birds = more opportunities for human infection

11

12 Country 2003200420052006Total casesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeaths Azerbijan0000008585 Cambodia0000442266 China0000851071812 Egypt000000135 5 Indonesia0000171116143325 Iraq0000002222 Thailand00171252002214 Turkey000000124 4 Viet Nam3329206119009342 Total33463295416339207115 Source: World Health Organization 55% Mortality

13 Country 2003200420052006Total casesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeaths Azerbijan0000008585 Cambodia0000442266 China0000851071812 Egypt000000135 5 Indonesia0000171116143325 Iraq0000002222 Thailand00171252002214 Turkey000000124 4 Viet Nam3329206119009342 Total33463295416339207115 Source: World Health Organization 55% Mortality

14 Country 2003200420052006Total casesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeaths Azerbijan0000008585 Cambodia0000442266 China0000851071812 Egypt000000135 5 Indonesia0000171116143325 Iraq0000002222 Thailand00171252002214 Turkey000000124 4 Viet Nam3329206119009342 Total33463295416339207115 Source: World Health Organization 55% Mortality

15 Country 2003200420052006Total casesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeaths Azerbijan0000008585 Cambodia0000442266 China0000851071812 Egypt000000135 5 Indonesia0000171116143325 Iraq0000002222 Thailand00171252002214 Turkey000000124 4 Viet Nam3329206119009342 Total33463295416339207115 Source: World Health Organization 55% Mortality

16 Country 2003200420052006Total casesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeaths Azerbijan0000008585 Cambodia0000442266 China0000851071812 Egypt000000135 5 Indonesia0000171116143325 Iraq0000002222 Thailand00171252002214 Turkey000000124 4 Viet Nam3329206119009342 Total33463295416339207115 Source: World Health Organization 55% Mortality

17 Country 2003200420052006Total casesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeathscasesdeaths Azerbijan0000008585 Cambodia0000442266 China0000851071812 Egypt000000135 5 Indonesia0000171116143325 Iraq0000002222 Thailand00171252002214 Turkey000000124 4 Viet Nam3329206119009342 Total33463295416339207115 Source: World Health Organization 55% Mortality

18 Current State  WHO Phase 3 – Self limiting  Human infection with a new subtype, but no human-to human spread, or at most rare instances of spread to a close contact. Even without human intervention it would be self- limiting among humans

19 Reasons for Concern  H5N1 entrenched in Southeast Asia  Infected poultry and birds in new areas increase opportunities to infect humans and swine  Each human case gives H5N1 an opportunity to improve transmissibility  Each swine case provides an opportunity for mutation

20 Reasons for Concern  Domestic ducks acting as “silent reservoirs”  H5N1 now lethal to mice and ferrets  H5N1 surviving longer in the environment  H5N1 increasing its host range  Infecting and killing mammalian species previously considered resistant

21 Treatment  Amantidine  Cheap  Easy to Produce  Oseltmivir (Tamiflu)  More expensive  Difficult to produce in large quantities  Zanimivir (Relenza)  Untested on H5N1  Expected to be an effective treatment

22 Treatment  Amantidine  Cheap  Easy to Produce  Oseltmivir (Tamiflu)  More expensive  Difficult to produce in large quantities  Zanimivir (Relenza)  Untested on H5N1  Expected to be an effective treatment

23 Worst Case Scenario  30% Infected in United States  40% of work force absent at peak of pandemic  1.9 million dead

24 Pandemic Planning

25 Pandemic Planning - Federal  Stockpile of antiviral treatments  26 million treatment courses  81 million by end of 2008  Enough to treat 25% of US population  Increased funding for vaccine development and production

26 Pandemic Planning - Social  Quarantine  Only effective at onset of pandemic  Social Distancing  Likely result of widespread pandemic  Increases distance between individuals  School Closures  Business Closures  Staying home when ill  Avoiding large gatherings  Telecommuting

27 Pandemic Planning - Local  Goals:  Increase the use and development of interventions known to prevent human illness.  Decrease the time needed to detect and report threats to the public health  Decrease the time to identify causes, risk factors, and interventions for those affected.  Decrease the time needed to [provide countermeasures and health guidance to those affected  Improve the timeliness and accuracy of communications regarding threats to the public's health

28 More Information  United States Information  www.pandemicflu.gov www.pandemicflu.gov  World Health Organization  www.who.int www.who.int  World Organization for Animal Health  www.oie.int www.oie.int  Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy  www.cidrap.umn.edu


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