Thai boy has avian flu; UK finds H5 virus in parrot

The 7-year-old son of a Thai farmer who died 2 days ago of H5N1 avian influenza also has the virus, but there is no evidence that the boy caught it from his father, according to news services.

Reuters and Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports said the boy tested positive for the virus, but they didn´t say what test was used or where it was done. The boy is hospitalized but is expected to recover.

"There is no evidence that the boy contracted the disease from his father," said Siriraj Hospital Director Prasit Watanapa, as quoted in the AFP report.

The father fell ill after slaughtering sick chickens. Prasit said the boy "had close contact with the virus" from being around the chickens, AFP reported.

"The H5N1 virus found in the boy and the father was the same strain that has been found for the last two years, with no signs of a mutation," Prasit added.

Reuters reported that the 7-year-old was treated with the anti-flu drug oseltamivir (Tamiflu) early in his illness. The boy has recovered his appetite and his fever has resolved, the story said.

If the boy in fact has avian flu, his illness is the 19th case in Thailand since the disease began spreading in East Asia in late 2003. The country has had 13 deaths. The World Health Organization (WHO), which has not yet confirmed the boy´s case, currently lists a total of 118 human cases, with 61 deaths.

In Britain, meanwhile, a parrot that was imported from South America and died in quarantine tested positive for a highly pathogenic H5 avian flu virus, government officials announced today.

The parrot had been imported from Suriname, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) said in a news release. It was part of a shipment of 148 parrots and "soft bills" that arrived Sep 16.

All the birds in the consignment were being destroyed, DEFRA said. Chief Veterinary Officer Debby Reynolds said, "The confirmed case does not affect the UK´s disease free status because the disease has been identified in imported birds during quarantine."

As an additional precaution, the few people who had contact with the birds in the quarantine unit were being given antiviral drugs, the statement said.

H5N1 avian flu has not been reported in the UK or in South America. DEFRA said no form of avian flu has been confirmed in Britain since 1992.

Officials said another serious avian illness, Newcastle disease, has been detected in imported quarantined birds and successfully contained five times previously.

In Indonesia, a 63-year-old man and his 22-year-old son who were suspected of having avian flu have tested negative, according to an AFP report today. The report of their cases yesterday had prompted talk about a possible family cluster.

"The pneumonia they are suffering from was not caused by bird flu," a health ministry official named Hariyadi Wibonoso was quoted as saying. He said further confirmatory tests would be conducted in Hong Kong.

The WHO has recognized five cases of avian flu in Indonesia, including three deaths. But government officials have described several more cases as probable on the basis of local tests.

Many news items related to avian flu were reported from around the world today. Here is a sampling:

See also:

UK DEFRA news release
http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/2005/051021f.htm