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FACTBOX-WHO figures for bird flu cases in humans
05 Sep 2007 10:25:26 GMT
Source: Reuters
Sept 5 (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation has confirmed on its Web site that four people have died of bird flu in Vietnam since June. For Reuters story click on [ID:nB577090]. Of the 100 cases confirmed to date in Vietnam, 46 have been fatal. Worldwide, the virus has killed 199 people out of 327 known cases since it re-emerged in Hong Kong in 2003.

Hundreds of millions of birds have died or been culled.

Following is a list of confirmed human cases of H5N1. Total cases include survivors.

Deaths Total cases AZERBAIJAN 5 8 CAMBODIA 7 7 CHINA 16 25 DJIBOUTI 0 1 EGYPT 15 38 INDONESIA 84 105 IRAQ 2 3 LAOS 2 2 NIGERIA 1 1 THAILAND 17 25 TURKEY 4 12 VIETNAM 46 100 ------------------------------------------------- TOTAL 199 327 -------------------------------------------------

Initial tests usually take a day or two to confirm if someone has H5N1. More detailed testing by government laboratories or those affiliated with the WHO can take a week or more.

The H5N1 virus remains mainly a virus of birds, but experts fear it could change into a form easily transmitted from person to person and sweep the world, killing millions.

So far, most human cases can be traced to direct or indirect contact with infected birds.
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An Iraqi teenager stands in front of billboards in an amusement park in the northern Iraqi city of Dahuk, 50km (40 miles) from the Turkish border, October 26, 2007. For people to the south in Iraq's capital Baghdad -- where people scurry home in the late afternoon to endure nights of crackling gunfire, thudding mortars, wailing sirens and the thunder of helicopters overhead -- such a scene is but a dream. But as Turkey gears up for a potential attack on separatist PKK rebels hiding in Iraqi Kurdistan's mountains, fear is rising here that this region's stability too may crumble. To match feature TURKEY-IRAQ/KURDISTAN REUTERS/Ceerwan Aziz (IRAQ)



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