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Avian Influenza and the Threat of an Impending Pandemic Eden V. Wells, MD, MPH Michigan Department of Community Health.

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Presentation on theme: "Avian Influenza and the Threat of an Impending Pandemic Eden V. Wells, MD, MPH Michigan Department of Community Health."— Presentation transcript:

1 Avian Influenza and the Threat of an Impending Pandemic Eden V. Wells, MD, MPH Michigan Department of Community Health

2 Influenza Strains Type A –Infects animals and humans –Moderate to severe illness –Potential epidemics/pandemics Type B Type B –Infects humans only –Milder epidemics –Larger proportion of children affected Type C –No epidemics –Rare in humans Source: CDC

3 A’s and B’s, H’s and N’s Classified by its RNA core –Type A or Type B influenza Further classified by surface protein –Neuraminidase (N) – 9 subtypes known –Hemagluttin (H) – 16 subtypes known Only Influenza A has pandemic potential

4 Influenza Virus Structure A/Moscow/21/99 (H3N2) Neuraminidase Hemagglutinin Type of nuclear material Virus type Geographic origin Strain number Year of isolation Virus subtype

5 Differentiating Influenza  Seasonal –Caused by influenza A or B strains circulating in humans –~36,000 human deaths annually in USA  Avian –Caused by Influenza A –Shorebirds and water fowl are the reservoir and rarely see outbreaks, except in current H5N1 strain –Domestic poultry (chickens and turkeys), causes morbidity and mortality with outbreaks annually worldwide  Pandemic –When new virus strain occurs –Humans lack immunity –Simultaneous epidemics worldwide –Disease easily transmitted between people –Significant number of illness and deaths

6 Influenza A: Antigenic Drift and Shift Hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminadase (NA) structures can change Drift: minor point mutations –associated with seasonal changes/epidemics –subtype remains the same Shift: major genetic changes (reassortments) –making a new subtype –can cause pandemic

7 Seasonal Influenza October to April People should get flu vaccine Children and elderly most prone ~36,000 deaths annually in U.S.

8 Seasonal Effects

9 Seasonal Influenza Surveillance

10 Avian Influenza The “Bird Flu” Images from: http://www.usda.gov/oc/photo

11 Avian Influenza Infection can be in two forms –“low pathogenic” (LPAI) - causes mild illness and may go undetected –“highly pathogenic” (HPAI) - affects multiple organs, spreads rapidly among birds, causes high mortality very quickly

12 Avian Influenza and Domestic Poultry Virus is shed in saliva, nasal secretions, and feces of infected birds Virus can survive for long periods in feces, water, and even on the ground, especially when environmental temperatures are low Avian influenza is a reportable disease in Michigan

13 The Role of Animals in Influenza A Infection Shore Birds and Wild Waterfowl Domestic Birds Mammals Humans

14 Countries with H5N1 in Poultry (OIE, 8/22/06) AfghanistanAlbaniaAzerbaijan Burkina Faso CameroonCambodiaChina Cote d’ Ivoire CyprusDenmarkDijboutiEgyptFranceGermany HungaryIndiaIndonesiaIraqIsraelJapanJordanKazakhstanLaosMalaysiaMyanmarNigerNigeria North Korea Pakistan Palestian Aut. Territories Romania Russia Serbia and Montenegro South Korea Sudan Sweden Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam

15 Domestic Poultry Surveillance Michigan veterinarians are responsible for overall livestock and poultry reportable disease programs They conduct investigations into reports of diseases such as: –Avian influenza –Rabies –Eastern equine encephalitis –Equine infectious anemia –Tuberculosis –Psittacosis www.michigan.gov/MDA

16 H5N1 in Poultry and Wild Birds (WHO, 8/2/06)

17 Countries with H5N1 in Wild Birds (OIE, 8/22/05) Afghanistan Austria Azerbaijan Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Cambodia Cameroon China Cote d’ Ivoire Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Egypt France Georgia Germany Greece Hungary Indonesia Iran Italy Japan Kazakhstan Kuwait Mongolia Nigeria Poland Russia Serbia and Montenegro Slovakia Slovenia South Korea Spain Sweden Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine United Kingdom Vietnam

18 Wildlife biologist monitor diseases of wild birds at the population level Sick or Dead Wildlife website reporting Bird Banding Hunter Surveillance Wild Bird Surveillance http://www.michigan.gov/dnr

19 H5N1 Influenza in Humans- Risk Transmission from birds to humans does not occur easily –Contact with feces or secretions from infected birds –Risk with butchering, preparing, defeathering of infected birds –NOT transmitted through cooked food

20 Implications for Human Health Asian Strain H5N1 in humans more aggressive than seasonal flu strains –Severe clinical course –Rapid deterioration –High fatality –Low transmissibility human-to-human Incubation may be longer than seasonal influenza –Seasonal influenza: 2-3 days –H5N1: possibly up to 10 days More studies needed

21 Confirmed Human Cases of H5N1 (WHO, 8/23/06) Country H5N1 Cases Fatalities Mortality Rate (%) Azerbaijan8563 Cambodia66100 China211467 Djibouti100 Egypt14643 Indonesia604677 Iraq22100 Thailand241667 Turkey12433 Vietnam934245 Total24114159

22 http://www.pandemicflu.gov/ (July 7, 2006)

23 What is the H5N1 Pandemic Risk? Three conditions must be met for a pandemic to start: –Emergence of a new influenza subtype –The strain infects humans causing serious illness serious illness –Spreads easily between humans Each new H5N1 human case gives the virus a chance to mutate into a highly transmissible form, increasing the risk of a pandemic

24

25 MDCH Pandemic Influenza Plan 2005 Revision of 2002 plan Released November 2005 Appendix to MDCH All-Hazards Response Plan Pandemic plan updated as needed www.michigan.gov/influenza

26 Leads for Public Health International: World Health Organization United States: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, DHHS Michigan: Michigan Department of Community Health County: Local Health Department/Jurisdiction

27 Current WHO Risk Assessment

28 20 th Century Influenza Pandemics 1918 – 1919, “Spanish Flu” (H1N1) –Influenza A H1N1 viruses still circulate today –US mortality: approx. 500,000+ 1957-58, “Asian Flu” (H2N2) –Identified in China (February 1957) with spread to US by June –US mortality: 69,800 1968-69, “Hong Kong Flu” (H3N2) –Influenza A H3N2 viruses still circulate today –First detected in Hong Kong (early 1968) and spread to US later that year –US mortality: 33,800

29 Estimated Impact of a Future Pandemic in Michigan (*Michigan figures developed with Flu-Aid 2.0 software, CDC) Characteristic Moderate (1957 / ‘68-like) Severe (1918-like) Illness3.4 million Outpatient2.5 million1.5 million Hospitalization51,000420,000 Deaths15,000125,000

30 Influenza Surveillance Michigan Disease Surveillance System Sentinel Surveillance Syndromic –Pharmacy –ER LaboratoryNationalInternational LHD’s/MDSS Non-MDCHLabs WHO Data CDC Data LHD’s/Healthcareproviders Pharmacy OTC OTC SentinelPhysicians ERSyndromic Hospitals MDCHLabs Mi-Flu Focus

31 Treatment Options Antiviral Medications –Neuraminidase Inhibitors OseltamivirZanamivir Pandemic strain vaccine –Minimum 5 month production time –Need chicken eggs and viral seed stock Source: CDC

32 Oseltamivir- Not a Panacea Limited availability (one manufacturer) Personal stockpiling could lead to: –Inappropriate use –Increased resistance by the virus (already one documented case) –Decreased availability for the critically ill For prophylaxis, multiple courses may be needed throughout flu season

33 Human Vaccine for Avian H5N1 Effective vaccine is not yet available –Small batches of vaccine are undergoing clinical trials –Not ready for mass production US has advance-ordered 20,000,000 doses May not match strain that causes pandemic Seasonal influenza vaccine does not protect against H5N1 strain

34 Public Health:Non- Pharmaceutical Interventions Social distancing –Schools –Business practices –Public gatherings Respiratory/Cough Etiquette Hand Hygiene

35 Influenza Control Measures Education to encourage prompt self- diagnosis Hand hygiene Consider masks, if possible, for symptomatic persons (then send them home!) Cancellation of school/social gatherings Quarantines

36 Have a Plan! DevelopExerciseUpdateReviewExerciseUpdate…. CDC/EOC-PHIL

37 Current U.S. Status No current evidence in U.S. of highly pathogenic H5N1 in –Wild birds –Domestic poultry –Humans Images from: http://www.usda.gov/oc/photo

38 Conclusion Many unknowns Simple precautions go a long way Education is critical to your COOP Get employees involved in the process

39 Health Advice Good Now, Good in a Pandemic Get your annual flu shot –Won’t protect against a pandemic strain Stay at home if you have a fever Wash hands with soap or hand sanitizers when you sneeze or cough Get adequate sleep, eat healthy, stay hydrated

40 References pandemicflu.gov Michigan Department of Community Health (www.michigan.gov/flu) www.who.intwww.cdc.gov Local Health Department Chamber of Commerce


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