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Avian influenza
(aka bird flu, avian flu) is caused by a type of influenza virus that is hosted by birds, but may infect several species of mammals. It was first identified in Italy in the early 1900s and is now known to exist worldwide. A strain of the H5N1-type of avian influenza virus that emerged in 1997 has been identified as the most likely source of a future influenza pandemic.
Strains of avian influenza virus may infect various types of animals, including birds, pigs, horses, seals, whales and humans. However, wild fowl act as natural asymptomatic carriers, spreading it to more susceptible domestic stocks. Avian influenza virus spreads in the air and in manure and there is no evidence that the virus can survive in well cooked meat.


Diagnosis
How to Recognise Avian Influenza
What to look for
  • Ruffled feathers
  • Soft-shelled eggs
  • Depression and droopiness
  • Sudden drop in egg production
  • Loss of appetite
  • Cyanosis (purplish-blue coloring) of wattles and comb
  • Edema and swelling of head, eyelids, comb, wattles, and hocks
  • Green diarrhoea
  • Blood-tinged discharge from nostrils
  • Incoordination, including loss of ability to walk and stand
  • Pin-point hemorrhages (most easily seen on the feet and shanks)
  • Respiratory distress
  • Increased death losses in a flock
  • Sudden death
  • Nasal discharges
For more detail in avian influenza in poultry click here


Poultry Vaccination as a strategy for controlling AI in commercial birds
Outbreaks of avian influenza in the poultry industry cause devastating economic losses and is generally controlled through extensive culling of infected birds. Alternative strategies also use vaccination as a supplementary control measure during avian influenza outbreaks.
Advantages of Vaccination
  • Vaccination reduces susceptibility to infection.
  • A higher dose of virus is necessary to infect the vaccinated birds.
  • Vaccinated birds shed less virus.
    - Decreased contamination of the environment.
    - Decreased risk of human infection
  • Used strategically vaccination compliments a stamping out strategy by slowing/stopping the spread of the virus
For more information on poultry vaccination see:


Biosecurity
Avian Influenza (Fowl Plague) is a potentially devastating disease, predominantly of chickens and turkeys, although the virus can also affect game birds (pheasants, partridge and quail), ratites (ostrich and emu), psittacine and passerine birds.
Avian Influenza is caused by an orthomyxovirus, or influenza virus and can survive for considerable lengths of time outside of the host and birds are infected through contact with other birds, mechanical vectors such as vehicles and equipment and personnel travelling between farms, markets and abattoirs.
Precautionary requirements include cleaning and disinfection of premises and the establishment of a Biosecurity barrier to help prevent spread of disease is essential.
For more information on biosecurity see the links below
Avian and Bird Flu News
Avian Flu News
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Friday, October 02, 2009
Switzerland - Bird Flu News The Vancouver Sun
Study: Bird Flu Vaccine Production Still Lags
GENEVA - Drug companies would need four years to meet global demand for bird flu vaccines if a pandemic broke out today, but new technology could significantly boost production by 2014, a study said Tuesday.
Friday, May 29, 2009
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Reuters
Scientists Develop New Basis for H5N1 Vaccine: WHO
GENEVA - Scientists have used bird flu virus samples from Egypt to develop a new basis for a vaccine against the toxic H5N1 strain that continues to circulate, the World Health Organization said on Thursday.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Switzerland - Bird Flu News AHN
WHO Chief Warns Of Bird Flu, Swine Flu Interaction
SWITZERLAND - In her annual address to the 62nd World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan warned against the possible interaction between two deadly viruses; the Avian flu (H5N1) and the swine flu (H1N1). The international summit, which brings world health officials together, began Monday amid the backdrop of a deadly global pandemic.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Reuters
Health Authorities Prepare to Limit Flu Drug Use
GENEVA - The two drugs used to treat the influenza should be used carefully and only when needed for the chronically ill, pregnant women and other vulnerable patients, global health officials said on Tuesday.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Reuters
Bird Flu Vaccine Production Four Years Away
SWITZERLAND - Drug companies have increased their capacity to make bird flu vaccines by 300 per cent in the past two years but will still need four years to meet global demand in the event of a pandemic, according to s new study. Doses of vaccine tailored to the actual strain of pandemic influenza that emerges will not be available until four months after that strain is identified.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Forbes
Vical Reports Positive Bird Flu Vaccine Trial
SWITZERLAND - Biotech drug developer Vical Inc. says its pandemic bird flu vaccine candidate, Vaxfectin, was safe and effective in an early clinical trial.
Friday, September 19, 2008
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Reuters
Novartis Reports Good Results for Bird Flu Vaccine
ZURICH - A vaccine produced by Novartis induces a protective antibody level against diverse strains of bird flu in individuals already vaccinated six years earlier, a study presented on Friday showed.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Swissinfo.ch
Risk of Bird Flu Low This Winter
SWITZERLAND - The risk of an outbreak of avian influenza in Switzerland this winter is negligible, the Federal Veterinary Office has announced.
Thursday, May 01, 2008
Switzerland - Bird Flu News TheCanadianPress
WHO Denies Advising Olympic Tourists to Pack Bird Flu Drug
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND — The World Health Organization denies it is recommending that visitors to China for this summer's Olympic Games should pack an antiviral drug to protect themselves against avian flu.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Switzerland - Bird Flu News BBCnews
Roche Rues Bird Flu Drug Decline
SWITZERLAND - Swiss drugs firm Roche has missed analysts' sales forecasts, after demand for cancer medicine Herceptin slowed and revenue from flu drug Tamiflu fell.
Friday, March 28, 2008
Switzerland - Bird Flu News SwissInfo
First Bird Flu Case in Switzerland for Two Years
SWITZERLAND - A wild duck has tested positive for bird flu in the first case in Switzerland in two years.
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Reuters
WHO Launches System to Track Bird Flu Samples
GENEVA - The World Health Organisation says it has begun to disclose how and where the samples of bird flu virus it receives from affected countries are used, in response to poor countries' demands for more transparency.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News therawstory
UN hails Asian transparency over bird flu
GENEVA - The UN's top official on bird flu on Wednesday praised heightened levels of transparency in Asian countries over cases of the disease, but warned that more was need to prepare for a possible pandemic.
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News ChinaView
IFRC: Bird flu remains a threat worldwide
GENEVA - The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said here Wednesday that governments and aid agencies should give priority to the "very serious" threat of bird flu.
Monday, May 14, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News SwissInfo
Flu Pandemic Remains Number One Health Threat
GENEVA - A human bird flu pandemic is still the biggest global health threat, according to a senior Swiss official speaking on the eve of the 60th World Health Assembly.
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Onmedica
Production of flu drug Tamiflu to be cut
Production of anti-flu drug Tamiflu, which governments around the world have been busily stockpiling in the event of a bird flu pandemic, is to be curbed.
Friday, April 27, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Wis10
Roche Says Tamiflu Capacity Outstrips Demand
BASEL - Swiss-based Roche (ROG.VX) said on Thursday it was cutting production of influenza drug Tamiflu, seen as one of the best defenses against a possible bird flu pandemic, because supply now exceeds demand.
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News Qiagen
H5N1 Vaccine Stockpile Plan Advances
SWITZERLAND - With all the fear about an avian flu pandemic, you might think that stocking vaccines to protect humans from the virus ravaging poultry worldwide--H5N1--would be a no-brainer. It's not.
Friday, April 06, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News France 24
WHO urges countries to unite against disease
GENEVA - The World Health Organisation on Friday urged countries to join forces to tackle the growing number of cross-border threats to public health, including avian influenza and HIV/AIDS.
Monday, February 26, 2007
Switzerland - Bird Flu News NZZ Online
Bird flu "could return" to Switzerland
SWITZERLAND - The Swiss authorities are not ruling out more bird flu infections, one year after the first case of the deadly form of the virus was detected in the country. Since then the Swiss have implemented a series of measures against bird flu and are carrying out wide:ranging surveillance. No cases of high:risk types of the virus have been recorded in Switzerland since October last year.
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