China bird flu death toll
rises to 161 in worst outbreak since 2009
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[March 13, 2017]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China reported 61 fatalities and 160
cases of human infection from H7N9 bird flu in February, the government
said on Monday, much higher than in previous years and bringing the
death toll in this winter's outbreaks to 161 since October.
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While the total for last month was lower than January's 79, it was
the highest number for the month of February since the deadly strain
was first identified in 2013, according to data from the National
Health and Family Planning Commission.
The death toll from bird flu infections tends to drop towards the
end of the winter.
The data highlights the scale of the spread of the virus among
humans, even after Chinese disease control experts have warned the
public to stay on alert. South Korea and Japan are also battling
their own major outbreaks and have culled millions of chickens.
The H7N9 strain shows little or no symptoms in poultry, a factor
which has limited the number of birds culled in the world's
third-largest producer of broiler chickens and the second-biggest
consumer of poultry.
The total of 140 for first two months of 2017 alone already
surpasses the annual totals for avian flu in China in recent years.
In 2010, 147 people died of the H1N1 strain of the virus.
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(Reporting by Josephine Mason and Beijing newsroom; Editing by
Kenneth Maxwell)
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