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WHO wants Asian bird flu planHANOI, Vietnam (AP)--Vietnam Jan. 15 reported four more suspected human cases of the bird flu that has infected poultry in three Asian countries, while China banned imports of chicken and the World Health Organization warned of an increasingly urgent situation. Vietnam already has 14 confirmed human cases of avian flu, with three deaths. One of the four suspected new cases has died. WHO experts and Vietnamese health ministry officials are discussing how to contain the outbreak. WHO lab tests have confirmed that the three people who died were infected with Influenza A, or the H5N1 flu strain. Bird flu has infected millions of chickens in Vietnam, South Korea and Japan, prompting those nations to order huge slaughters at poultry farms. Beijing halted poultry imports from the three affected countries to the Chinese mainland, following similar measures by its Hong Kong territory and by Cambodia in mid-January. "We are moving to a phase of greater urgency," said Pascale Brudon, the WHO representative in Hanoi. "There was a lot of awareness about the strong need to work quickly. Vietnamese officials are taking the matter very seriously." The virus--highly contagious among chickens--is believed to spread to humans through contact with infected birds. There have been no reports of the disease being transmitted from one person to another. The same strain of bird flu killed six people in Hong Kong in 1997, when more than 1 million chickens and ducks were culled in the territory. Officials also have said they believe there is no danger from eating properly cooked meat and eggs from infected birds. Regional WHO officials have warned, however, that if human-to-human transmission occurs, it could turn avian flu into a deadlier epidemic than SARS. Jan. 15, officials at Bach Mai Hospital in Hanoi said a 31-year-old man from northern Thai Binh province, 60 miles southwest of Hanoi, died after contracting what doctors suspect was bird flu. Three of his relatives were admitted to the tropical disease unit's isolation ward. Vietnam is spending an estimated $2.7 million to cull 1.4 million infected birds, agriculture officials said. "I've lost everything. I'm more worried about my lost money than my health, even though I'm also afraid of contracting the disease," said Nguyen Van Giang, 30, of Phu Nghia Tri village in southern Tien Giang province, some 45 miles southwest of Ho Chi Minh City. Giang said a third of his 2,100 chickens have died. The provincial government is giving farmers 30 cents for each slaughtered chicken, but farmers say their market value is about $2 each. "I'm trying where I can to keep the remaining chickens, but I'm not sure whether they can survive," he said while incinerating his dead birds. In Japan, officials prepared Jan. 15 to bury 36,400 dead chickens confirmed to have the virus. The affected chickens were raised at a poultry farm in the town of Ato, about 500 miles southwest of Tokyo. Date: 1/22/04
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