Wednesday, April 24, 2013

H7N9: WHO Team Completes China Visit

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Joint Mission Briefing – Credit WHO


# 7181

 

Last Friday, in WHO: H7N9 Team Lands In China, we saw the arrival of a  team of International experts from the World Health Organization, who were invited to assess and provide input on the outbreak of H7N9 in Eastern China.

 

While a  CDC response team has arrived and remains in China, today it was announced that WHO’s team of experts have completed their mission.

 

We’ve two statements this morning. 

 

First up, a press release from the WHO WPRO office, that thanks the Chinese government for their cooperation and summarizes the situation in China, and a press statement from Dr Keiji Fukuda (which I’ll feature in my next blog) on their findings.

 

 

 

International H7N9 assessment team completes mission to China

Beijing, 24 April 2013 - A team of international and Chinese experts has completed its mission to visit Shanghai and Beijing and assess the avian influenza A (H7N9) situation, and to make recommendations to the National Health and Family Planning Commission (NHFPC).

 

"China's response has been exemplary," said Dr Keiji Fukuda, WHO's Assistant Director-General for Health Security. "Government agencies such as Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and local authorities of affected areas acted quickly, and have shared critical information such as genetic sequence and virus needed to analyze the situation and to be ready to make vaccine if needed in the future."

 

"The risks of such an outbreak situation are shared in a globalized world where we are all interconnected. This underlines the importance of the example set by China in following the International Health Regulations." Dr Fukuda added.

 

The team, which is jointly led by NHFPC and WHO, is comprised of international and Chinese experts in epidemiology, virology, clinical management, public health, and health policy. The purpose of the mission was to assess H7N9 situation and to provide recommendations.

 

During 19-23 April in China, the team met with those involved in the response, in both Beijing and Shanghai. In Beijing, the team met with staff from China CDC and Beijing CDC. In Shanghai, they met members of the city's H7N9 working group. They also met with the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center, Shanghai Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Shanghai Center for Animal Disease Control and Prevention. The team visited a wholesale poultry market where they learned first hand about the effectiveness of the shut-down of these markets.

 

"China has experienced extraordinary diseases such as SARS and the 2009 influenza H1N1 Pandemic," said Dr Liang Wannian, Director General, Office of Health Emergency, NHFPC. "We are in new territory again with H7N9, but our experience has taught us how to face it."

 

The team noted the strong reporting systems and awareness in clinicians, municipal health and agricultural authorities in Shanghai, and the support offered by China CDC.

 

"The response reflects earlier and strong investments in health and preparedness made by China," said Dr Fukuda.

 

The team estimates that steps taken so far, such as the suspension of live bird markets in Shanghai, were timely and sound. In Shanghai, it appears that so far poultry infections are limited to live markets. However, they cautioned that experts still have only a limited understanding of the full extent of the disease.

 

The elements that warrant particular concern include the fact that the virus does not seem to cause visible illness in poultry, making it harder to track and control.

 

Almost all cases have been sporadic cases, but a few family clusters have been identified. However, we are not sure if the clusters were caused by common exposure to a source of virus or due to limited person to person transmission. Evidence so far is not sufficient to conclude there is person to person transmission. Moreover, no sustained person to person transmission has been found.

 

The disease has now caused sporadic infections in over 100 people, with the majority developing serious disease including over 20 deaths. It is as yet unclear how many people might have carried the disease without showing any signs of illness. What also remains unclear is whether the virus could gain the ability to become transmissible between people.

 

The potential development of human-to-human spread cannot be ruled out, which is why this virus and outbreak is being taken extremely seriously and followed so closely.

 

In light of this, the team highlighted the need for continued cooperation at the national and international level. At the national level, there is a need for the health and agricultural sectors to continue working closely together. Internationally, the continued sharing of information, guidance, findings, and the viruses themselves is critical.