| Literature DB >> 18258019 |
Ran D Balicer1, Shmuel Reznikovich, Elyakum Berman, Michael Pirak, Amnon Inbar, Shimon Pokamunski, Itamar Grotto.
Abstract
During March 2006, an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza (H5N1) occurred in multiple poultry farms in Israel. The epidemiologic investigation and review of outbreak mitigation efforts uncovered gaps in planning for and containing the outbreak, thus affording valuable lessons applicable to other countries in similar settings.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18258019 PMCID: PMC2851505 DOI: 10.3201/eid1310.070558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Confirmed highly pathogenic avian influenza (H5N1) outbreaks in Israel*
| Focus ID | District | Poultry type | Biosecurity standards | Date (2006) | Epidemiologic links (identifiers) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increased no. deaths | Report | Diagnosis | Culling | FS | SH | Vet. | |||||
| A | Southern | Meat type turkeys | Normal | Mar 14 | Mar 15 | Mar 16 | Mar 17 | A | A,B | A | |
| B | Southern | Meat type turkeys | Normal | Mar 14 | Mar 16 | Mar 16 | Mar 18 | B | A | B | |
| C | Southern | Meat type turkeys | Normal | Mar 15 | Mar 16 | Mar 17 | Mar 20 | A | B | A | |
| D | Jerusalem | Meat type turkeys | Normal | Mar 15 | Mar 16 | Mar 17 | Mar 18 | A | A | D | |
| E | Southern | Broilers | Normal | Mar 13 | Mar 19 | Mar 19 | Mar 21 | A,C | C | E | |
| F | Southern | Heavy breeders | High | Mar 19 | Mar 19 | Mar 19 | Mar 21 | D | * | F | |
| G | Jehuda and Samaria | Meat type turkeys | Normal | Mar 21 | Mar 21 | Mar 22 | Mar 23 | D | * | G | |
| H | Jerusalem | Heavy breeders | High | Mar 28 | Mar 28 | Mar 28 | Mar 30 | A | * | E | |
| I | Southern | Meat type turkeys | Normal | Mar 30 | Mar 31 | Mar 31 | Apr 1 | A | * | B | |
*No slaughtering took place in the 30 days before or during the outbreak period. ID, identifier; FS, feed supplier; SH, slaughterhouse; Vet., veterinarian.
Veterinary and public health measures taken during the highly pathogenic avian influenza (H5N1) outbreak in Israel, by proximity to infected poultry
| Measure taken | Location by proximity to outbreak focus | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infected flock | Protection zone (<3 km) | Surveillance zone (3–10 km) | Outside outbreak area (>10 km) | |
| Management of poultry | Stamping out | Stamping out | Active surveillance: transportation of poultry and hatching eggs allowed only following PCR testing of samples within the previous 72 h | Passive and active surveillance |
| Poultry products management | Destroyed | Destroyed | Released for consumption after clinical examination of the laying flocks proved negative | No restrictions |
| Poultry contacts monitoring | Self-monitoring | Self-monitoring | None | None |
| Case definition of human suspected avian influenza | Close contact with poultry and any ILI* | Close contact with poultry and severe ILI† | None | None |
| Oseltamivir prophylaxis to poultry contacts | All poultry contacts (including all culling and burial teams) | All poultry contacts (including all culling and burial teams) | None | None |
*ILI, influenza-like illness: respiratory symptoms and fever (>37.5oC). †ILI as defined above, in severity that requires hospitalization.