At least 57 suspected of contracting bird flu in Indonesia (AFP) Updated: 2005-09-28 16:32
At least 57 people were being treated for suspected bird flu in Indonesia,
where the disease has already claimed six lives, officials said.
OF the total, 20 patients were under observation at Jakarta's Sulianti Saroso
hospital for infectious diseases, a doctor there, Ilham Patu, said.
The latest suspected case, a 23-year-old man from the capital, was admitted
late Tuesday.
Blood and muccus samples from the patients were being tested locally with any
positive results indicating bird flu being sent to World Health Organization
laboratories in Hong Kong for confirmation.
Since Monday the hospital has released five people who were suspected of
contracting bird flu but tested negative.
Health ministry spokesman Sumardi said Wednesday that a shipment of some
20,000 doses of Tamiflu, anti-viral medication that can stop flue if given
quickly when symptoms develop, will arrive in the country on Friday.
"This medicine will be sold commercially at pharmacies," he said. So far, it
has only been available in hospitals.
Six Indonesians have died of bird flu, bringing to 65 the number of people in
Southeast Asia known to have died from the H5N1 strain of the virus since 2003.
Vietnam has recorded 43 deaths, Thailand 12 and Cambodia four.
The WHO fears H5N1 will mutate, acquiring genes from the human influenza
virus that would make it highly infectious and lethal to millions in a global
pandemic.
But it has also urged calm, saying investigations in Indonesia had produced
no evidence that H5N1 was spreading easily from person to
person.
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