Hong Kong virologists: Bird flu cases may be double that reported
21
April, 2013
As
the death toll from the H7N9 bird flu strain in China reached 21 and
infections continue to increase, Hong Kong authorities now believe
the virus may have already infected double the known figure.
The
H7N9 bird flu virus has continued to progress among human populations
in China, and virologists operating in Hong Kong are assessing the
infection rate to be double that of the 104 reported on Monday by the
Chinese government, according
to Bloomberg.
Researchers at the University of Hong Kong attribute the discrepancy
to mild symptoms that many of the infected may be experiencing and
therefore not reporting to health-care authorities.
There
are known to be 21 deaths attributed to the volatile influenza
strain, however scientists have not been able to discern whether or
not the virus is being transmitted from person to person.
Additionally,
the H7N9 virus appears to be targeting the elderly - unlike the H5N1
pandemic that primarily impacted younger populations. Virologists
have not yet been able to explain this.
“One
thing that is very striking is the age distribution of the cases,”
Benjamin Cowling, associate professor at the University of Hong Kong,
told Bloomberg. “They’re very different from the confirmed
infections of H5N1.”
While
human-to-human transmission has not been confirmed, it remains a
disturbing fact that more than 40 percent of those infected by the
H7N9 strain were not exposed to poultry, as
Forbes reported on Monday.
Until
human-to-human transmission can be confirmed, the threat of a global
pandemic from the H7N9 strain remains muted.
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