|
The
international scientific community has been monitoring the bird flu virus
(known as H5 N1) since 1997 when seven people died in Hong Kong. The victims
all had had contact with live bird markets there. Dr. Guan Yi, a professor
at the University of Hong Kong, explains the path of infection in Southeast
Asia (Vietnam was the "epicenter") in 2003 and 2005 when wild birds infected
poultry on small farms. The poultry was then handled by humans who became
infected.
Bird Flu Wars recounts the diverse plans explored at the emergency meetings
held in 2006 at the WHO (World Health Organization) headquarters in Geneva
to prevent the virus from becoming a pandemic. Some of these plans call
for the massive destruction of areas infected by the virus, preventive
vaccinations of poultry and the industrialization of breeding. Many countries
are stockpiling Tamiflu, the only recommended anti-viral medication. Unfortunately,
some countries like Vietnam cannot cope economically with what is required
to suppress H5 N1. For now, the Swiss pharmaceutical company La Roche
is producing Tamiflu vaccine in huge quantities in their thirteen closely
guarded factories. To date, they refuse to release the formula so that
the vaccine can be produced generically.
If in the future the virus mutates to a human flu; it then could be easily
transmitted from human to human, endangering a huge population. At that
point, the world would have to wait for a vaccine that could be put into
production quickly. Would there be enough anti- viral medicine for everyone
in need?
52 min. Video or DVD Sale $325. Video Rental $85.
|