Two Bird Flu Cases in Cambodia Did Not Spread Person to Person
THURSDAY, March 2, 2023 (HealthDay News) -- Two cases of bird flu in Cambodia, in a girl and her father, were not spread from one to the other. Both got the virus from poultry, according to health officials, easing concerns about a potential public health crisis, the Associated Press reported.
The 11-year-old girl died Feb. 22 at a hospital in the capital, Phnom Penh. She was from the southeastern province of Prey Veng. Shortly before her death, the girl tested positive for type A H5N1 bird flu. Her father tested positive the day after her death. The AP reported that he was isolated until he had no strong symptoms and three negative tests and was then released.
The Cambodia Health Ministry said both had "been infected from poultry at their village, and there is no indication or evidence that there was infection from father to daughter." The World Health Organization, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and health officials in Cambodia concluded the infections were spread by poultry, said Health Ministry spokesman Ly Sovann.
The strain that killed the girl was different from the bird flu circulating worldwide among wild and domestic birds, virologist Erik Karlsson, Ph.D., of the Pasteur Institute of Cambodia in Phnom Penh, told the scientific journal Nature in an interview. The strain is, instead, part of a virus group that has been found in chickens and ducks in the region for at least a decade, the AP reported.
The girl was the first person known to contract the virus in Cambodia since 2014. Karlsson said it was unclear why the girl would have caught the virus after such a long time with no cases. It may be due to "a lot of global changes in agricultural practices owing to the COVID-19 pandemic that could have created the conditions for a spillover," he said.
While Cambodian health officials tested more than two dozen villagers, no others were found to carry the virus, the AP reported.
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