The Borneo Post

Bird-flu deaths rise in China, shutting poultry markets

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BEIJING: China is experienci­ng its deadliest outbreak of the H7N9 bird-flu strain since it fi rst appeared in humans in 2013, killing 79 people in January alone and spurring several cities to suspend live poultry trade.

The National Health and Family Planning Commission said on Wednesday that by the end of January a total of 100 people had died in the current bird flu season, which commonly emerges in winter and continues into the spring.

The 79 deaths in China last month compared to just five in January 2016, according to the commission.

The surge in fatalities has raised concerns that a severe outbreak looms, though health officials have said the worst has likely passed.

H7N9, a subtype of influenza that affects both birds and humans, was fi rst discovered in China in 2013.

Most infected patients become severely ill, and nearly one in three cases are fatal.

The government is urging people to avoid live poultry markets, where poor sanitation conditions can raise the risk of contaminat­ion.

Ni Daxin, a top official with the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, was quoted yesterday by the state-run China Daily as saying the common Chinese preference for live or freshly- slaughtere­d chickens was contributi­ng to the disease’s spread.

“If the public buys only frozen poultry, control of the epidemic will be much easier,” Ni said.

The live poultry trade has been temporaril­y halted in the cities of Guangzhou in the south, Changsha in central China, and the entire eastern province of Zhejiang, among other areas.

Zhejiang alone reported 35 infections in January, state-run Xinhua news agency quoted officials saying. — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows an H7N9 bird flu patient being treated in a hospital in Wuhan, central China’s Hubei province. — AFP photo
Photo shows an H7N9 bird flu patient being treated in a hospital in Wuhan, central China’s Hubei province. — AFP photo

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