China
bird flu: Two men die in Shanghai
Two
men have died in the Chinese city of Shanghai, after contracting a
strain of bird flu not previously known in humans, Chinese officials
say
BBC,
31
March, 2013
The
men, aged 27 and 87, both fell ill with the H7N9 strain in February
and died some weeks later in March, Xinhua news agency reported.
A
woman of 35 who caught the virus elsewhere is said to be critically
ill.
It
is unclear how the strain spread, but the three did not infect each
other or any close contacts, officials say.
While
both men who died were in Shanghai, the third victim was reported in
Chuzhou in the eastern province of Anhui.
According
to China's National Health and Family Planning Commission, all three
became ill with coughs and fevers before developing pneumonia.
Commission
experts said on Saturday the cause had been identified as H7N9, a
strain of avian flu not thought to have been transmitted to humans
before.
There
is no vaccine against the strain, the commission said, adding it was
currently testing to assess its ability to infect humans.
Another
strain of bird flu, H5N1, has led to more than 360 confirmed human
deaths since 2003 and the deaths of tens of millions of birds.
The
World Health Organization says that most avian flu viruses do not
infect humans and the majority of H5N1 cases have been associated
with contact with infected poultry.
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