CHINA / National

More H5N1 samples to be sent worldwide
By Zhang Feng and Zhao Huanxin (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-03-24 06:30

A new batch of Chinese avian flu virus samples will within weeks be delivered worldwide to laboratories designated by the World Health Organization (WHO), China Daily has learned.

The batch, as agreed between the Chinese Government and the WHO at the end of 2005, will consist of 20 samples, much more than the five samples delivered in 2004.

"China has done a very, very good job," said Shigeru Omi, regional director of WHO Western Pacific, when he announced the new shipment at a two-day conference in Beijing that ended yesterday.

According to Julie Hall, co-ordinator of communicable disease surveillance and response at the WHO Beijing office, regular sharing of information among all countries, the global health body and other international organizations is an effective weapon to fight the disease, whose virus is fast mutating.

Such sharing of information is vital for research, including developing a vaccine against a possible pandemic.

Because there have been regular outbreaks among poultry as well as human infections in China, samples, laboratory results and knowledge of field practices would be useful for the rest of the world, she added.

The scheduled delivery, however, will contain only virus samples from bird flu outbreaks in poultry, as was the case in 2004. All samples of the avian flu virus are kept under tight surveillance at the National Avian Influenza Reference Laboratory in Harbin, capital of Heilongjiang Province in Northeast China.

Mao Qun'an, spokesperson for the Ministry of Health, told China Daily that China had provided two virus samples from human infections in December 2005, after the cases were first reported in the country in October.

(China Daily 03/24/2006 page5)