Guest guest Posted March 26, 2004 Report Share Posted March 26, 2004 HIGHLY PATHOGENIC AVIAN INFLUENZA IN CHINA (PEOPLE’S REP. OF ~) Report on the initial stage of disease control Information received on 19 March 2004 from Dr Shen Zhenzhao, General, Bureau of Animal Husbandry and Health, Ministry of Agriculture, Beijing: The first outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in the People's Republic of China (PRC) was confirmed in Long’an County of Guangxi Province on 27 January 2004 (see Disease Information, 17 [6], 31-32, dated 6 February 2004). Thereafter, 49 outbreaks occurred consecutively in 16 mainland provinces, while 143,100 poultry were affected by the disease, 127,600 died and approximately 9 million were culled. As of 19 March 2004, no new outbreaks have been reported in the PRC for 32 consecutive days, and cordons on outbreak areas have been lifted. HPAI has been effectively controlled, no human infection has been reported and the production and living of the people have been restored to normal. All of these factors mark the success of the initial stage of HPAI control in the PRC. The Chinese Government has attached great importance to HPAI prevention and control. The State Council established the National HPAI Prevention and Control Headquarters, which has coordinated and commanded prevention and control activities in a unified manner across the PRC, while local governments also set up the corresponding steering agencies in a timely manner to organise culling, prevention and control operations. The basic experience of HPAI prevention and control in the PRC can be summarised as follows: strong leadership, close coordination, firm reliance on science and laws, prevention and control by mobilising the population and decisive intervention. Major measures adopted include the following: Emergency arrangements were made and a contingency plan was formulated and initiated in a timely fashion. The Chinese Government promulgated the National Contingency Plan for HPAI, which clarified epidemic reporting, confirmation, grading, the contingency commanding system, responsibilities of departments, control measures and guarantee measures. The Technical Standards for Handling HPAI Epidemic were formulated, which regulated the diagnosis of HPAI and culling of poultry, biosafety disposal, sealing off of epidemic areas, disinfection and protection of personnel. The disease was controlled in the outbreaks so as to prevent any further spread of the disease. In areas where the disease occurred, all fowl within a 3-km radius of the outbreak were culled and biosafety disposal was implemented; compulsory vaccination was carried out within of the outbreak area; all trading markets for poultry and poultry products within 10 km around the outbreak areas were closed down; and large-scale disinfection was undertaken in the outbreaks, outbreak areas and areas at risk of the disease. Active prevention work was carried out in areas unaffected by the disease; disinfection was strengthened, and monitoring of the epidemic and quarantine and supervision of live poultry and poultry products were reinforced to prevent importation of the disease. Meanwhile, examination and inspection of related goods at entry/exit ports were strengthened, importation of poultry and poultry products from countries and regions where the disease occurred was suspended, and efforts to prevent smuggling and illicit trade activities in frontier areas were strengthened. Exportation of poultry and poultry products from the outbreak areas was also suspended. Scientific and technological research to tackle the epidemic was stepped up, while science- and technology-based methods were relied upon for successful prevention and control. In 1997, when HPAI broke out in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the PRC, the Chinese Government immediately organised a multidisciplinary group of experts to conduct research into prevention and control technologies. H5N2 low pathogenic virus strain was imported from international reference laboratories. In line with the requirements of the OIE, research on diagnostic reagents and vaccine production technologies was undertaken so as to provide production and technology reserves. This year, since the occurrence of the disease on the mainland, research on and production and approval of new vaccines has been accelerated, and two new vaccines of international advanced level produced through genetic engineering were approved for production. Input was increased and supportive policies were implemented in the poultry industry. The Chinese Government subsidises culling and compulsory vaccination. Disease surveillance and prevention system development has been strengthened, material reserves for epidemic prevention have been increased and the necessary equipment provided. Meanwhile, support for poultry farming and processing enterprises has been strengthened and favourable policies on loans, discount interest rates and taxation have been implemented. Dissemination and popularisation of scientific knowledge has been reinforced to increase public awareness of prevention and control of the disease Expert groups were organised to go to outbreak areas and key production areas to actively engage in technical consultation, exchange and training. Various information dissemination activities were carried out to strengthen public awareness of HPAI prevention. According to surveys, 98.6% of farmers were informed on HPAI, while 77.2% of farm households responded that they were aware of the clinical signs of HPAI, and 90% of farm households knew of the risk of HPAI being transmitted to humans. Through the adoption of various integrated prevention and control measures, HPAI has at present been completely eliminated from Mainland PRC, and success for the initial stage has been achieved. We must, however, clearly recognise that the situation is still grave for disease prevention and control. In light of the pattern of spread of animal epidemics, we may suffer a recurrence of HPAI unless preventive measures are strengthened. This is because: a) of the continuing presence of waterfowl carrying the virus; b) with the weather warming up in most parts of the north, migratory birds will fly northwards on a large scale, which may result in the spread of the pathogen; c) there will be more opportunities for trans-regional spread of the disease as there will be more long-distance transportation of poultry and substantial replenishment of birds in poultry production; d) the disease still exists in some countries or regions surrounding the PRC, hence there is a risk of the disease spreading into the PRC; e) the tremendous difficulty encountered in disease prevention and control has not yet been overcome at the root since poultry production in the PRC is a large industry covering extensive areas and many places suffer from poor conditions for disease control. Therefore, the relevant departments and local governments are closely monitoring the disease, undertaking epidemiological studies in the 49 places where outbreaks occurred and monitoring the situation in key areas so as to prevent any resurgence of the disease. * * * -- Dave Neale UK Director Animals Asia Foundation Find out more about our historic China Bear Rescue and Friends or Food? projects by visiting the Animals Asia Foundation website at http://www.animalsasia.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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