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WHO chief warns of more flu deaths
COUNTRIES should be ready for more serious swine flu infections and more deaths from the newly discovered H1N1 virus, World Health Organization chief Margaret Chan said yesterday.
The highly contagious strain must be closely monitored in the southern hemisphere, where the winter season is beginning, as it could mix with seasonal influenza and mutate in "unpredictable ways," she said.
"In cases where the H1N1 virus is widespread and circulating within the general community, countries must expect to see more cases of severe and fatal infections," she said. "We do not at present expect this to be a sudden and dramatic jump in severe illness and deaths."
According to the WHO's latest tally, the strain has infected more than 11,000 people in more than 40 countries and caused 86 fatalities.
Chan said in her closing remarks to the WHO's week-long annual congress that countries in the developing world need to act quickly to improve their monitoring for the virus, which has caused mainly mild symptoms in most patients so far but could cause more serious effects as it spreads.
"This is a subtle, sneaky virus," she said. "We have clues, many clues, but very few firm conclusions."
She also stressed there is little real difference between the WHO's current pandemic alert level of 5 and the highest of 6 in terms of preparedness measures taken, and said she would consult experts before opting to raise it.
Pressure has been growing for Chan to factor in the severity of the newly discovered disease as well as its geographic spread before sounding the pandemic alarm that several governments said could trigger unnecessary panic.
The WHO's guidelines define a pandemic solely on the basis of the pattern of its spread, and not on the symptoms a virus causes.
Following those rules, Chan would need to raise the alert level to Phase 6 as soon as H1N1 is shown to be spreading in a sustained way in one country outside of North America.
There are large pockets of infections in Japan, Spain and Britain, which have 294, 113 and 112 cases each, respectively, according to WHO figures released yesterday.
The virus which is air-borne like the common flu is also continuing to pop up in new countries on a daily basis.
The highly contagious strain must be closely monitored in the southern hemisphere, where the winter season is beginning, as it could mix with seasonal influenza and mutate in "unpredictable ways," she said.
"In cases where the H1N1 virus is widespread and circulating within the general community, countries must expect to see more cases of severe and fatal infections," she said. "We do not at present expect this to be a sudden and dramatic jump in severe illness and deaths."
According to the WHO's latest tally, the strain has infected more than 11,000 people in more than 40 countries and caused 86 fatalities.
Chan said in her closing remarks to the WHO's week-long annual congress that countries in the developing world need to act quickly to improve their monitoring for the virus, which has caused mainly mild symptoms in most patients so far but could cause more serious effects as it spreads.
"This is a subtle, sneaky virus," she said. "We have clues, many clues, but very few firm conclusions."
She also stressed there is little real difference between the WHO's current pandemic alert level of 5 and the highest of 6 in terms of preparedness measures taken, and said she would consult experts before opting to raise it.
Pressure has been growing for Chan to factor in the severity of the newly discovered disease as well as its geographic spread before sounding the pandemic alarm that several governments said could trigger unnecessary panic.
The WHO's guidelines define a pandemic solely on the basis of the pattern of its spread, and not on the symptoms a virus causes.
Following those rules, Chan would need to raise the alert level to Phase 6 as soon as H1N1 is shown to be spreading in a sustained way in one country outside of North America.
There are large pockets of infections in Japan, Spain and Britain, which have 294, 113 and 112 cases each, respectively, according to WHO figures released yesterday.
The virus which is air-borne like the common flu is also continuing to pop up in new countries on a daily basis.
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