Step up surveillance to stop bird flu spread from china: un
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN

Play all audios:

By Umberto Bacchi ROME, March 17 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Countries trading in Chinese poultry should step up surveillance at farms, markets and border checkpoints to prevent the
spread of H7N9 bird flu from China after a more severe strain of the virus was detected in chickens, a U. N. agency said on Friday. By Umberto Bacchi ROME, March 17 (Thomson Reuters
Foundation) - Countries trading in Chinese poultry should step up surveillance at farms, markets and border checkpoints to prevent the spread of H7N9 bird flu from China after a more severe
strain of the virus was detected in chickens, a U.N. agency said on Friday. H7N9 has killed almost 500 people in China since it was first reported in 2013 but until recently had shown little
or no clinical symptoms in birds, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). But in February Beijing reported it detected an evolution in the virus that caused severe
disease and death in poultry within 48 hours of infection. "It now goes beyond being primarily a public health concern," said FAO's veterinary epidemiologist Sophie von
Dobschuetz, adding the new strain heightened the risk for farmers to lose animals and livelihoods. The highly pathogenic variant has only been reported in China's southeastern Guangdong
province and will become more apparent in some flocks if birds begin to die off, making detection and control easier, FAO said. "The earlier you pick up the incursion of the virus the
more chance you have to control it," von Dobschuetz told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone. The new strain has raised concerns that the infection could pass from chickens to other
birds, increasing the risk of it spreading across borders, the FAO said in joint statement with the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE). The FAO said the new H7N9 strain maintained
its capacity to cause severe illness in people, but the World Health Organization said there was no evidence of changes in the virus' ability to spread between humans. Von Dobschuetz
said China was assessing the virus' prevalence and results were expected in the coming weeks. Since the virus was first identified in 2013, 1,320 human cases have been recorded in
China, including 492 deaths, according to FAO figures. (This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)