The WHO has sent a team to the area near Medan. The agency said it was on alert for signs the virus is mutating into one that can be easily transmitted between people, a development that could signal the start of a pandemic in which millions could die.
Such a mutation could occur anywhere there is bird flu, the WHO says.
Mr Kandun said authorities were still trying to identify the source of the virus in the cluster case in Kubu Simbelang village in Karo regency, about 50km south of Medan.
But an Indonesian agriculture official who declined to be named told Reuters tests had shed no light on the case.
"There is a big question mark. Blood samples from all kinds of animals from chickens, ducks, geese, birds, pigs, cats and dogs turned out negative so far. Manure has also been checked.
The result is negative," the Jakarta-based official said.
Thursday, May 18, 2006
Bird Flu on the Move
Via ProMED-mail: Although the suspected Romanian case has been disproved, avian influenza has recently been confirmed in Djibouti, the first human case in the Horn of Africa, and in 5 members out of eight suspected cases in one family in Indonesia.
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