January 11, 2012
Experts ruled out the possibility of a large-scale bird flu epidemic in China, after a fatal case caused by H5N1 virus was recently reported in the country.
"Under the current circumstances, there is little chance of a large-scale bird flu epidemic, but there will be individual human cases," said Li Dexin, director of the Institute for Viral Disease Control and Prevention under the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), on Tuesday (Jan 10).
Since the monitoring network and treatment have improved over the past few years, bird flu is not likely to cause a big health crisis, Li said.
On January 2, health authorities in south Guangdong province confirmed that the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus led to the death of a bus driver in Shenzhen, but the source of the virus remained unclear.
Deng Haihua, spokesman of the Health Ministry, said health departments across the country have stepped up monitoring of bird flu infections after the Shenzhen case was identified.
Hospitals will prepare well for the treatment of bird flu infections, he added.
The country has continually emphasised the importance of training medical workers and the build-up of a monitoring network for bird flu, he said.
The bird flue epidemic swept Southeast Asia in early 2005 and spread to China in November 2005.
By August 2006, China reported 21 infection cases of bird flu and 14 deaths from the disease.










