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Скачать с ютуб Bird flu: Russia detects first case of H5N8 bird flu in human. Avian Influenza is back! в хорошем качестве

Bird flu: Russia detects first case of H5N8 bird flu in human. Avian Influenza is back! 3 года назад


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Bird flu: Russia detects first case of H5N8 bird flu in human. Avian Influenza is back!

Russia has reported the first case of a bird flu strain, H5N8, being passed from poultry to humans. Officials said seven workers at a poultry plant in the south of the country had been infected following an outbreak there in December. https://www.eudebates.tv/ "All seven people... are now feeling well," said the head of Russia's consumer health watchdog, Anna Popova. #eudebates #Birdflu #Russia #H5N8 #AvianInfluenza She said that adequate measures had been quickly taken to stop the spread of infection. There was no sign of transmission between humans, Ms Popova said, adding that the case had been reported to the World Health Organization. What's the threat of bird flu to humans? She praised "the important scientific discovery" by Russia's Vektor laboratory, which had isolated the strain's genetic material from the infected workers. "The discovery of these mutations when the virus has not still acquired an ability to transmit from human to human gives us all, the entire world, time to prepare for possible mutations and react in an adequate and timely fashion," Ms Popova said. She said Russian scientists could now start working on developing test systems. Other strains of bird flu occasionally infect humans and have led to deaths - but this is the first report of the H5N8 strain being passed on. Russia reports first human H5N8 avian flu cases Russia over the weekend reported cases of the first known H5N8 avian flu infection in humans and said it has reported the findings to the World Health Organization (WHO). The cases were announced on Feb 20 by Anna Popova, who leads Russia's consumer health watchdog, according to Reuters. On state TV, she said the country reported the cases to the WHO several days ago after it was sure of the results. The cases involve seven workers at a poultry plant in the south of the country. WHO gathering more information The WHO's European regional office told Reuters that Russia had notified the WHO about a human H5N8 case and that, if confirmed, the event would mark the first known infection in humans. It added that early information says the cases involve seven workers exposed to bird flocks who were asymptomatic, with no onward transmission reported. The office said it was working to gather more information and assess the health impact. In a December update on H5N8, the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) said H5N8 has been reported in birds since the 1980s, and the virus has been reported in the Northern Hemisphere every year since 2014. The first wild bird outbreaks in 2020 were reported by Russia in August and were followed a few months later by reported outbreaks in poultry. The outbreaks were rapidly followed by similar events in other countries in Europe, along with China, Iran, Japan, and South Korea. Recent H5N8 outbreaks have also been reported from Africa. Earlier assessments put threat to humans as low The risk of human infections can't be ruled out, though the likelihood is low, the OIE said. In a January outbreak update, the OIE said H5N8 viruses have reassorted with other wild bird influenza viruses to form new strains of H5N5 and H5N1, which have also been reported in countries that experienced recent H5N8 outbreaks. The WHO said in a 2016 risk assessment that human infections with H5N8 can't be excluded, but the likelihood is low, based on limited information. However, it noted that human infections with H5N6 involving the related H5 clade 2.3.4.4 have been reported from China. It also said ferret studies of earlier H5N8 viruses showed that it doesn't transmit efficiently. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) influenza risk assessment tool, used to assess potential pandemic risk, puts H5N8 in the low-moderate range, based on an H5N8 sample collected at the end of 2014 in a falcon. The virus—in the same clade and similar to Eurasian lineage viruses—was also detected in wild birds, backyard birds, and commercial flocks in the United States. One candidate vaccine virus has been developed against the earlier H5N8 strain, according to the WHO's list of vaccine viruses that are available for pandemic preparedness. https://www.eudebates.tv/ #eudebates

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