Cambodia tests more people for bird flu after death of 11-year-old girl
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[February 24, 2023]
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodia has tested at least 12 people for
the H5N1 strain of avian influenza, the health ministry said, after an
11-year-old girl died this week from the virus in the first known
transmission to humans in the country in nearly a decade.
The victim's father, who was part of a group the girl had been in
contact with in a province east of the capital Phnom Penh, tested
positive for the virus but did not exhibit any symptoms, Health Minister
Mam Bunheng said in a statement on Friday.
The statement did not disclose the test results of others in the group
and did not specify how the victim's father had contracted the virus,
commonly known as bird flu.
The girl's case was the first known human infection with the H5N1 strain
in the Southeast Asian country since 2014, Bunheng had said on Thursday.
The girl from Prey Veng province was diagnosed with bird flu after
falling sick with a high fever and cough on Feb. 16, the statement said.
When her condition deteriorated, she was transferred to the National
Children's Hospital in Phnom Penh but died on Wednesday, the health
ministry said.
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Cambodian authorities tested more people
for the H5N1 strain of avian influenza on Friday (February 24),
after reporting that an 11-year-old girl infected with bird flu died
on Wednesday, in the first known human case since 2014. Diane To
reports.
Since early last year, bird flu has
ravaged farms around the world, leading to the deaths of more than
200 million birds because of the disease or mass culls, the World
Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) recently told Reuters.
The World Health Organization (WHO) earlier this month noted the
spread to mammals of H5N1 influenza, but said the risk to humans
remained low.
H5N1 had spread among poultry and wild birds for 25 years, WHO
Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a briefing, but
recent reports of infections in mink, otters and sealions "need to
be monitored closely".
Cambodian health authorities urged people not to handle dead or sick
animals and birds, and to contact a hotline if anyone suspected they
had been infected by the disease.
(Reporting by Reuters Staff; Writing by Ed Davies; Editing by Jamie
Freed, Martin Petty)
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