Retailer unloads chickens to sell in Orussey market in Phnom Penh. Photograph: Vireak Mai/Phnom Penh Post |
29 January 2013
By Justine Drennan and Mom Kunthear
The Phnom Penh Post
Two more children died from avian influenza yesterday, bringing the total to four deaths and five confirmed cases in the past month’s outbreak.
A two-year-old girl from Kampong Speu province, first confirmed on
Saturday to be infected with the virus, and an eight-year-old girl from
Kampot province had both died from H5N1 at Phnom Penh’s Kantha Bopha
Hospital yesterday, hospital officials confirmed last night.
In response to the spike in cases, the government had sent out a rapid
response team and was ramping up surveillance and investigation of the
virus as the World Health Organisation worked with the Ministry of
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries to control the movement of poultry,
Sonny Krishnan, communications officer for the WHO in Cambodia, said.
“The National Committee on Information, Education and Communication is
holding an emergency meeting tomorrow to increase radio and TV spots
with preventative messages,” Krishnan said yesterday.
“We are insisting all chickens and eggs be well cooked, and that people
wash their hands and don’t let children play with chickens and ducks.”
Krishnan noted that ducks, in particular, could be infected with the
disease without showing symptoms for a very long time, “so when ducks
die, it’s a serious situation”, as was the case in the Takeo province
village of the 15-year-old girl who died from the virus last week.
Seng Thoung, the chief of Thmey commune in Kampot’s Teuk Chhou district,
the home of the eight-year-old who died yesterday afternoon, said the
girl had fallen ill about 10 days ago and was sent for treatment at the
Kantha Bopha after local doctors and Kampot’s provincial hospital staff
were unable to identify the disease.
The girl’s parents had kept a lot of chickens, most of which were sick,
but they allowed the girl to play with the birds anyway, Thoung said.
“This is a new disease in our commune, so that’s why they did not worry
much when they saw the sick chickens,” he said. He added that health and
agriculture officials had killed and burned the chickens at the girl’s
house, sprayed the village to kill the virus and told the villagers not
to eat or touch sick or dead poultry, but instead to burn and bury them.
Officials also took samples of the neighbours’ birds to test them for the virus, he said.
Meanwhile, he said, the girl’s body was returned from Phnom Penh to the
village for her funeral yesterday evening, which was attended by many
villagers. “All the villagers who attended the girl’s funeral were
distributed face masks to protect them,” he said.
A security guard at Phnom Penh’s Kantha Bopha Hospital said the body of
the two-year-old who succumbed to the virus there yesterday also had
been sent home.
On Sunday, Kantha Bopha’s Dr Denis Laurent told the Post that the
hospital’s staff was “looking every day” for suspected cases of the
virus and frequently sent samples to Institut Pasteur to be tested for
H5N1, although most samples came back negative.
Specific reasons for the increase in cases, compared with the three seen
in all of 2012, are so far unclear, Krishnan said, though he noted that
flu cases tend to rise during the colder parts of the year and that
Cambodia was experiencing a “relatively cool spell”.
Health officials were working with the Institut Pasteur du Cambodge to understand the causes of the new outbreaks, he said.
He added that the spread of the virus would be of particular concern
with the increased movement of people into Phnom Penh for the coming
week’s funeral procession and cremation of the late King Father Norodom
Sihanouk.
“Poor people coming from the provinces normally bring their own food,”
he said, noting that live poultry would be among the food they would
bring.
A study to be published in the US medical journal Emerging Infectious
Diseases in February links increased movement of poultry to a rise in
contamination by avian flu and has found contamination in markets
reached particularly high levels in the weeks before Khmer New Year,
when movement of poultry across the country rose.
Of the 26 cases of H5N1 seen in Cambodia since the virus emerged in
2003, 17 have been children under 14, and Minister of Health Mam Bunheng
has said that “children still seem to be most vulnerable”.
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