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home :: bird flu movement
How Does The Bird Flu Move?
One of the most important things that scientists are working on is learning
just how the Bird Flu moves from one bird to the next and how and why it
goes from the infected bird to humans. Like any other type of virus, it is
hard to tell the specifics about it because it is continuously mutating.
But, it is encouraging that this mutation is being better understood by
those that are studying it closely. The good news is that they are learning
quite a bit about this possible pandemic before it becomes anything close to
that. Hopefully, that is a good sign.
Birds that have been infected with the Bird Flu, also known as the Avian Flu
and scientifically as the H5N1 strain of influenza A, can pass it on easily
to other birds. It can be passed from their saliva, their nasal discharge or
their feces. Not only do they get this from ingesting these materials
directly, but they also get it by ingesting contaminated materials. One of
the worst problems for the human population is that the Avian Flu is a
heavily migratory bird infester. That means that birds that migrate are
susceptible to the flu. That means that the flu can easily be spread from a
bird that is in China to a bird that is in Europe easily, if it follows
their migratory pattern.
The Bird Flu has spread throughout parts of Africa and Asia. It has been
found in several countries including China, Egypt, Iraq, Turkey, Vietnam,
Indonesia, and others. The Avian Flu seems to be spreading rather quickly
throughout these locations. While most of the transmissions have been from
bird to bird resulting in many birds that have been sick and contaminated,
the results also show that the spread to humans in increasing. In the
majority of the known cases the Bird Flu can only be gotten from an infected
bird. The virus can not, as of yet, be widely spread from one human that is
infected to another. In birds, the mortality rate for the Bird Flu is 100%.
In humans, it is about 57%, but this number is continuously changing as new
cases are being found. Less than 200 people have been infected with the
Avian Flu in the years of 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006.
Should the Bird Flu mutate into a deadlier virus that can move from one
person to another person, this could trigger even more cases of the Avian
Flu worldwide. In a worst case scenario, it is estimated that 2% of the
world’s population, or about 150 million people could potentially become
infected with and die from the Bird Flu. As of yet, this has not happened
because of the lack of known and verifiable mutation.
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