Friday, April 28, 2006
The SUN
A poultry worker has caught the H7 strain of bird flu in the form of
conjunctivitis, the Health Protection Agency confirmed tonight.
The affected person is thought to have contracted the infection via close contact with poultry on a Norfolk farm.
An HPA spokeswoman said the worker’s symptoms were limited to an eye infection and would not release any further details about the age or gender of the sufferer.
Experts say that tests have shown that the virus detected at the farm is the milder H7 strain of avian flu - not the deadly H5N1 strain that has claimed the lives of hundreds of people in Asia.
Vets were tonight continuing to slaughter 35,000 chickens at the farm in Hockering, Norfolk, following the outbreak detected earlier this week.
Hundreds of people living near the farm were tonight being given letters of “reassurance” by local councils.
Officials at Norfolk County Council and Breckland District Council said letters were being delivered to 1,800 homes in villages around the farm.
“We want to reassure residents that all agencies are working together to minimise the impact of the outbreak of the form of avian flu on the local community,” said a spokesman for Norfolk County Council.
“A joint letter from the two Chief Executives of the councils is being
delivered to about 1,800 homes tonight and over the weekend in North and East Tuddenham, Hockering and Mattishall to reassure local people.”
Workers at Witford Lodge Farm in Hockering, Norfolk, were earlier offered antiviral drugs and were monitored by doctors.
There are concerns that an avian flu strain could mutate into a form which is easily spread from person to person, resulting in a global flu pandemic with a death toll of millions.