Sunday, March 26, 2023
  • PRESS RELEASE
  • ADVERTISE
  • CONTACT
Asia Post
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • INDIA
    • CHINA
    • WORLD
  • DEFENSE
  • POLITICS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • SPORTS
  • ENTRTAINMENT
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • TRAVEL
  • OUR TEAM
Asia Post
No Result
View All Result

Bird Flu’s Young Victims – The Diplomat

March 17, 2023
in LIFESTYLE
0 0
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Email


Bird Flu’s Young Victims

In this photo released by the Cambodia Ministry of Health, Cambodian health experts spray disinfectant at a village in Prey Veng eastern province of Cambodia, Feb. 24, 2023.

Credit: Cambodia Ministry of Health via AP

Advertisement

The death of an 11-year-old in Cambodia last month reopened a Pandora’s box of questions about the mysterious H5N1 virus.

The case initially set off alarm bells among pandemic watchers. The girl from Prey Veng province appeared to be part of a family cluster; her 49-year-old father also tested positive for the virus. Post-COVID-19, the phrase “family cluster” has an ominous ring. Could the infection have involved human-to-human transmission? Much to the relief of scientists, Cambodian health officials ruled out that possibility.

The girl’s death, however, highlighted another vexing problem. In the past decade, children accounted for nearly 80 percent of bird flu fatalities in Cambodia. In 2014, 100 percent of recorded cases were in the under-14 age group; nine contracted the virus, and four died. Data gathered by the Institut Pasteur du Cambodge shows that the median age of a bird flu patient is six years.

In 2013, when Cambodia experienced its worst avian influenza outbreak, Health Minister Mam Bunheng observed, “Children often care for domestic poultry by feeding them, cleaning pens, and gathering eggs. Children may also have closer contact with poultry as they often treat them as pets, and also seem to be most vulnerable and are at high risk because they like to play where poultry are found.”

Diplomat Brief

Weekly Newsletter

N

Get briefed on the story of the week, and developing stories to watch across the Asia-Pacific.

Get the Newsletter

Backyard chicken farming is a family activity in Cambodia. Around 85 percent of the country’s farmers raise poultry for extra income. Children help their parents by feeding chickens and ducks, collecting eggs, and even cooking the birds.

Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.

In 2013, the year of the worst outbreak, Cambodian papers carried numerous reports of young victims sickened by dead fowl that they had either handled or cooked. One H5N1 case involved a nine-year-old boy from Battambang province who helped his father prepare a meal with an infected bird. He fell sick soon after and died in a Siem Reap hospital.  “We don’t have money so we didn’t want to waste the dead chicken,” said the boy’s father.

Rural families raising backyard chickens are unlikely to comply with “biosecurity” procedures followed by commercial poultry farms, such as culling a diseased flock, discarding the carcasses, and disinfecting the premises. Although the Ministry of Health warns families about the dangers of consuming infected poultry, dead birds often go straight into the cooking pot.

A 2013 review of cases by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine found that most bird flu patients were young (under 18), had not received antivirals in the early stages of infection, and were taken to the hospital only when they were in critical condition. Data from confirmed H5N1 cases showed that “no patients received their first dose of oseltamivir within the recommended 48 hours from the onset of symptoms.”

Advertisement

The study found excessive use of antibiotics and corticosteroids, despite the World Health Organization recommending against the routine use of these drugs for avian influenza. Further, none of the patients received mechanical ventilation, which could have saved lives. In the under-18 age group, the mortality rate was 100 percent.

The authors went on to conclude that Cambodia had “the largest resource gaps” and “potentially the highest rate of avoidable deaths” in Southeast Asia. In Cambodia, 44 percent of patients died on the day of admission to the hospital, compared to 12 percent in Indonesia. Fewer patients (28 percent) were treated with antivirals compared to neighboring Vietnam, where 82 percent of bird flu cases received oseltamivir. Only two people in the study, those who traveled to Vietnam, had access to ventilators.

The 11-year-old girl from Prey Veng was another case of delayed hospitalization. She was treated in a health center in her village for three days before being transferred to the National Pediatric Hospital in Phnom Penh on February 21. She died the following day.

A week later, the spokesperson for the Ministry of Health shared a sobering statistic: “bird flu is even deadlier than COVID-19. The mortality rate of those who contract H5N1 is as high as 50 or 60 per cent, globally.” Cambodia’s fatality rate currently stands at 67 percent, inflated by the high number of deaths among children.



Source link

Tags: birdDiplomatflusVictimsyoung
ShareTweetSend

Related Posts

LIFESTYLE

Twitter User Spins A Story Post ‘Rahul’ And ‘Anjali’s’ Marriage In ‘Kuch Kuch Hota Hai’

March 25, 2023
LIFESTYLE

The Dos And Don’ts While Observing Roza

March 25, 2023
LIFESTYLE

Chaitra Navratri 2023, Day 4: Worship Goddess Kushmanda, Puja Vidhi, and Mantra

March 25, 2023
LIFESTYLE

From playtime to bedtime: Outfits for kids

March 24, 2023
LIFESTYLE

Chaitra Navratri 2023 Day 3: Worship Maa Chandraghanta; Know time, Puja Vidhi, and Mantra

March 24, 2023
LIFESTYLE

Soccer is Empowering Burmese Migrant Girls on the Thai Border – The Diplomat

March 24, 2023
Load More
Next Post

Tcs: TCS CEO quits 4 years before term ends

Key Takeaways for Domestic Politics and Foreign Relations – The Diplomat

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Pharma industry: Domestic pharma industry revenues expected to grow 6-8 pc next fiscal: Icra

March 16, 2023

Chainsaw Man Chapter 124: Chainsaw Man Chapter 124: Check release date, where to read

March 16, 2023

Rani Rampal Becomes First Woman Hockey Star To Get Stadium Named After Her

March 21, 2023

Delhi Corona Guidelines Mask Mandatory Amid Rising Covid-19 Cases Rs 500 Fine For Not Wearing Facemasks

August 11, 2022

Rohit Shetty makes Marathi cinema debut with Tejasswi Prakash’s ‘School College Ani Life’; Trailer out

March 20, 2023

Ramadan 2023: Moon sighting, sehri and iftar timings in Delhi, Mumbai and other states of India

March 20, 2023

netherlands: France vs Netherlands: Date, time, live channel, where to watch Kylian Mbappe’s EURO 2024 qualification match

March 24, 2023

TV actress Tunisha Sharma’s last rites performed in Mumbai; accused’s mother, sister attend funeral

December 27, 2022

China’s trust assets expand in 2022

March 26, 2023

Odisha CM Patnaik inaugurates, lays foundation for Rs 2,000-cr projects

March 26, 2023

397 New Cases in Maharashtra, No Death

March 26, 2023

The Guardian view on how Covid began: look to the future | Editorial

March 26, 2023

NTPC’s CSR initiative: Screening camp for birth/physical deformities held in tribal dominated district

March 26, 2023

png: Having problem saving WebP Images as JPEG, PNG? Here’s how to do it

March 26, 2023

Akanksha Dubey death: Video of Bhojpuri actor crying inconsolably goes viral

March 26, 2023

Boxing Worlds: Nikhat bags second gold

March 26, 2023
Asia Post

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of breaking news, local news, national, politics, and more from the Asia's top trusted sources.

Categories

  • BUSINESS
  • CHINA
  • DEFENSE
  • ENTRTAINMENT
  • HEALTH
  • INDIA
  • INDIA-NORTHEAST
  • LIFESTYLE
  • POLITICS
  • SPORTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • TRAVEL
  • WORLD

Recent News

  • China’s trust assets expand in 2022
  • Odisha CM Patnaik inaugurates, lays foundation for Rs 2,000-cr projects
  • 397 New Cases in Maharashtra, No Death
  • Home
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Our Team
  • Contact

Copyright © 2021 Asia Post.
Asia Post is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • INDIA
    • CHINA
    • WORLD
  • DEFENSE
  • POLITICS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • SPORTS
  • ENTRTAINMENT
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE
  • TRAVEL
  • OUR TEAM

Copyright © 2021 Asia Post.
Asia Post is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In