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Bangladesh
reported on Thursday that a child infected with bird flu had recovered after
treatment.
It was the country’s first human case since bird flu was
first detected there in March last year. Mahmudur Rahman, director of the
Dhaka-based Institute
of Epidemiology and
Disease Control and Research told Reuters that the boy “is now doing well.”
Bangladesh’s
poultry industry is one of the world’s largest. The country has slaughtered
hundreds of thousands of birds in recent months leading to the closure of more
than 40 percent of the nation's farms and leaving the economy crippled. The virus
was found in at least 47 of the country’s 64 districts. Therefore, more than
half a million people were left unemployed.
Bird flu was also detected in neighboring India's
West Bengal state earlier this year. No human
cases have been detected there so far.
Health experts fear that H5N1 strain of bird flu could
mutate into a form that could be spread among humans, threatening millions of
people.
The bird flu virus began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in
late 2003. According to the World Health Organization, there have been 382
human cases worldwide since 2003, 241 of them fatal. Indonesia
is the hardest hit regions of all, with 108 of the deaths and is seen by health
experts as a potential hotspot for a pandemic.
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