1 / 27

Avian Influenza H7N9 Situation Analysis and Prevention

Avian Influenza H7N9 Situation Analysis and Prevention. Dr. Tong Ka Io 2013.04.18. Spatial distribution. Shanghai municipality Zhejiang province: Hangzhou, Huzhou, Jiaxing Anhui province: Xuzhou, Haozhou

louise
Télécharger la présentation

Avian Influenza H7N9 Situation Analysis and Prevention

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Avian Influenza H7N9Situation Analysis and Prevention Dr. Tong Ka Io 2013.04.18

  2. Spatial distribution Shanghai municipality Zhejiang province: Hangzhou, Huzhou, Jiaxing Anhui province: Xuzhou, Haozhou Jiangsu province: Nanjing, Suqian, Suzhou, Wuxi, Rugao, Zhenjiang, Yaozhou, Changshou, Jiangying, Yancheng, Kunshan Henan province: Kaifeng, Zhoukou, Zhengzhou Beijing municipality

  3. Spatial distribution

  4. Spatial distribution Beijing 04.11~ 1 case 0 death Henan 04.06~ 3 cases 0 death Jiangsu 03.19~ 21 cases 3deaths Anhui 03.09~ 3 cases 1 death Shanghai 02.19~ 32 cases 11 deaths Zhejiang 03.07~ 27 cases 2 deaths

  5. Interpersonal distribution Of the first 87 cases ŸAge range = 2~87y, median = 63y, elder people more common, only 3 child cases with milder clinical presentations M:F = 2.4:1 Occupational exposure to birds in at least 19 cases, retired people account for 44 cases, none HCW It was said that most fatal cases were male smokers

  6. Suspect clusters • Shanghai Li’s family • 55y son became ill on 11th Feb, with severe pneumonia, died on 28th Feb, no sample collected for H7N9 testing • 87y father became ill on 19th Feb, with severe pneumonia, died on 4th Mar, H7N9 PCR positive • 69y son became ill on 19th Feb, with milder clinical course, H7N9PCR negative, retrospective serological test positive

  7. Suspect clusters • Jiangsu Zhang’s family • 32y daughter became ill on 21st Mar, H7N9 PCR positive • Her father had been ill before, H7N9 tests negative

  8. Suspect clusters Shanghai Gu’s family 52y wife became ill on 27th Mar, died on 3rd Apr, H7N9 PCR positive 56y husband became ill on 1st Apr, H7N9 PCR positive

  9. Hypothetical mixing of avian flu viruses from east Asia migratory birds and east China ducks and chickens.

  10. Animal and environment testing Since 20th Mar, animal facilities around human cases in Anhui, Jiangsu and Shanghai had been checked, with no animal illness found. Until 3rd Apr, agricultural departments of Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Anhui did not have specific testing agents for H7N9.

  11. Animal and environment testing As of 16th Apr, provincial and national AI reference laboratories had collected a total of 84444 samples, covering 473 live poultry markets, 32 slaughterhouses, 896 farms, 79 wild bird habitats, 36 pig slaughterhouses, and 137 environmental sampling spots. Tests for 47801 samples had been concluded, yielding only 39 positive results (0.05%), of which 38 were poultry and environment samples from live markets of Shanghai, Anhui, Zhejiang and Jiangsu, 1 was from wild pigeon from Nanjing, Jiangsu.

  12. Positive tests

  13. Negative tests

  14. Ducks along the bank of Changjiang river may be all infected Source of H7N9 virus may be the migratory birds in Changjiang river mouth

  15. H7N9 continuously evolves, hard to predict risk The virus is still searching for a more compatible combination

  16. Risk assessment The reassortment of avian influenza viruses had occurred, probably in East China The reassorted virus massively go across the animal-human boundary to infect human The virus is low pathogenic for birds and highly pathogenic for human Up to the moment, there is no evidence that the virus further go across the boundary to sustained human-to-human transmission, though limited human-to-human transmission can not be excluded

  17. Avian influenza dynamics

  18. Phase 1 Bird-to-bird transmission Phase 2 Bird-to-human transmission & limited human-to-human transmission Phase 3 Widespread human-to-human transmission H7N9 H1~H16 Avian disease surveillance, prevention and control Minimizing human exposure Detection and isolation of human cases Ensuring care for patients Slowing down spread

  19. Risk assessment It is probably that the virus spreads beyond East China to Central and North China by migratory birds, which infect local Poultry and the latter infect human Comparing with H5N1, H7N9 infection in poultry seems more widespread and persistent, constituting a greater threat for human At this moment, it is impossible to precisely predict if the virus will come to Macao, or how (birds or human?), but preparedness is necessary

  20. Animal-animal line of defense Separate poultry with migratory birds and wild birds Separate water fowls and land fowls Separate poultry from different regions Separate infected poultry with other poultry

  21. Significant measures taken in Macao • All local poultry farms eliminated • Raising poultry prohibited • Importation of live water fowls prohibited • Management in the source, surveillance, separation, and double quarantine for poultry provided from inland to Macao • Culling of all live poultry before the live markets close everyday

  22. Animal-human line of defense Biosafety measures for poultry industry. In case of animal epidemic, handling infected poultry under strict protection General people avoiding contact with live poultry or presenting in places with live poultry, washing hands after contact with raw poultry meat or egg, eating poultry meat or eggs thoroughly cooked According to situational, government adopting appropriate risk management measures in sites for poultry wholesale, sale, or watching

  23. Human-human line of defense Raising people’s alert for prompt seeking medical advice if severe acute respiratory illness develops Raising HCW alert, strengthening surveillance system, building laboratory capacity, testing acute respiratory patients with travel, poultry or patient contact history, and patients with pneumonia of unknown cause, for early detection of cases Strengthening infection control in medical facilities. Early isolation and treatment of detected cases Tracing and health management of close contacts of cases

More Related