| WHO suspects human bird flu transmission in Indonesia (Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-05-24 10:56
 An Indonesian man who died of bird flu after nursing his sick son may have 
caught the virus in a case of direct human-to-human transmission, but the virus 
did not spread very far if this did happen, the World Health Organization said 
on Tuesday. 
 
 
 
 |  Children ride their 
 bicycles near a sanitary worker guarding an entrance to a bird flu 
 quarantined area on the outskirts of Bucharest, May 22, 2006. 
 [Reuters]
 |  It would not be the first case of human-to-human transmission of H5N1. WHO 
believes some limited human-to-human transmission has occurred before in other 
countries, but as in the Indonesian case, it did not last for long. 
 Nonetheless the news affected some Asian markets and helped the dollar edge 
up against the Japanese yen and the Taiwan dollar. 
 WHO gave its first details of the case of a family cluster of H5N1 avian 
influenza infections in which six people have now died, and said it was still 
looking for the source of the outbreak. It also said genetic sequencing of the 
virus that killed them showed nothing unusual. 
 The 32-year-old man from Kubu Sembelang village in the Karo District of North 
Sumatra is the latest to die and WHO said Indonesian health officials had 
confirmed he was infected with the virus. 
 "The father was closely involved in caring for his son, and this contact is 
considered a possible source of infection," WHO said in a statement posted on 
its Web site at http://www.who.int. 
 Investigators have had trouble finding out just what happened in the village, 
where a woman appears to have been the first to become ill at the end of April. 
 "Preliminary findings indicate that three of the confirmed cases spent the 
night of 29 April in a small room together with the initial case at a time when 
she was symptomatic and coughing frequently," the WHO statement reads. 
 "All confirmed cases in the cluster can be directly linked to close and 
prolonged exposure to a patient during a phase of severe illness. Although 
human-to-human transmission cannot be ruled out, the search for a possible 
alternative source of exposure is continuing." 
 |