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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 7:39 am 
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Science journal editor inflames controversy by saying it is his duty to publish details of lethal man-made flu 'in complete form'
H5N1 bird flu virus kills half of humans that contract it
Research into more contagious forms of virus

Editor says 'we have to publish in complete form'
Insists publication is essential to create vaccine

By Damien Gayle

Last updated at 8:01 AM on 17th February 2012

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The editor of a leading science journal has said that it is hi duty to publish details of controversial research into a mutant H5N1 bird flu virus.
Far deadlier than normal flu, the H5N1 strain kills roughly half of humans that contract it, but so far the virus has been mainly restricted to poultry. Scientists have researched mutations which make it more contagious.
Dr Bruce Alberts, editor of Science, did not publish after officials from the U.S. National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity intervened, in an unprecedented move, warning of the risks if the virus fell into the hands of 'those who would seek to do harm.'
Alberts says, 'Our position is we have to publish in complete form.'

Deadly: The new man-made genetic mutation of the lethal H5N1 virus can be transmitted by coughs and sneezes
Alberts says, 'In the absence of any mechanism to get the information to those scientists who need to protect their populations and to design new treatments and vaccines, our default position is that we have to publish in compete form.'

Scientists believe that publishing the details of the research is essential to developing flu vaccines.

Alberts says creating a vaccine is essential in case the strain evolved in the wild.

'This is likely to happen at some point in the wild because these viruses are mutating very actively in the wild,' says Alberts.
A World Health Organisation summit in Geneva this week is discussing the problem.

Experts warn that whatever the outcome of the meeting, censorship will not stop scientists getting the tools to create and release a pandemic H5N1 virus if they were intent on doing so.
'It doesn't matter how much you restrict scientists from doing good, bad people can still do bad things,' said Wendy Barclay, an expert in flu virology at Imperial College London.
The WHO called the 'closed door' meeting, set to begin Friday in Geneva, to break a deadlock between scientists and U.S. biosecurity chiefs.
American officials want to censor the work of two research teams, one in the Netherlands and one in the U.S., who have found that just a small number of mutations would allow deadly H5N1 to spread between mammals like ordinary flu.
The United Nations health body has said it is 'deeply concerned about the potential negative consequences' if the findings were to make their way into the public domain.

Details of secret experiments on deadly man-made bird flu that kills over half of the people it infects WILL get out, says bioterrorism watchdog

On January 20, flu scientists from around the world declared a 60-day moratorium on any research involving H5N1 that could produce more contagious forms of the virus.
At this week's meeting, the researchers who made the findings and the editors of Science and Nature, the two journals asked to withhold publication, will meet officials from the U.S. National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) which asked for the papers to be censored.
Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's Assistant Director-General for Health Security and Environment, who will chair the meeting, says he would like to secure agreement on whether the studies should be published, in full or part, and who should have access to them.
The findings are seen as vital for scientists to be able to develop vaccines, diagnostic tests and anti-viral drugs that could be deployed in the event of an H5N1 pandemic.
'It is important that research on these viruses should continue,' Mr Fukuda told Reuters. 'They do pose a risk. There's a lot of things we don't know about them.
'The question is not really should we continue to do research ... but under what conditions can we do it so we don't unnecessarily create fears and risks.'
First detected in Hong Kong in 1997, the H5N1 virus remains entrenched among poultry in many countries, mainly in Asia, but so far remains hard for humans to catch.
It is known to have infected nearly 700 people worldwide since 2003, killing half of them, making it far more deadly than the H1N1 swine flu which caused a pandemic in 2009/2010.
Ron Fouchier, the scientist leading the Dutch team that gave H5N1 various genetic mutations and made it transmissible in mammals, argues the research must be published.
Bring out your dead: A Pakistani health official removes chickens from an H5N1 infected farm in Gadap, Pakistan
He says it could help public health officials better prepare for a scenario where the virus mutates and becomes more deadly, spreading from person to person via coughs and sneezes.
He has also said other research teams around the world are close to the same findings, some of them inadvertently, and should be warned in advance how the virus could become airborne.
In the short term, most scientists agree the moratorium is 'a good gesture,' as flu expert and former WHO health security adviser David Heymann describes it, one that offers the research community space to think.
Still, Mr Heymann, Ms Barclay and many other scientists argue that stopping this type of research into flu viruses and other potentially lethal pathogens would set a dangerous precedent.
'This flu strain has the potential to cause such enormous damage, and it's important to know how far away we are from a horrible event like that' John Edmunds, London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineAlthough adding and deleting genes can create super-strains that put the entire world at risk, Heymann said, the work is vital to developing effective vaccines and diagnostic tests which will be needed quickly if a pandemic hits.
Stopping the research would prevent researchers from using all possible scientific options to prepare for naturally occurring, or deliberately caused, outbreaks.
John Edmunds, head of infectious disease epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, says studies on mutations of H5N1 are 'important work' that must go on.
'This flu strain has the potential to cause such enormous damage, and it's important to know how far away we are from a horrible event like that,' he said.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... z1mddUZtzo

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 8:19 am 
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niman wrote:
Dr. Henry Niman PhD
Flu Season

Interview tonight at 10 PM EST
H3N2v and NSABB censorship will be discussed.

http://www.renseradio.com/listenlive.htm

Interview now available at

http://rense.gsradio.net:8080/rense/spe ... 021612.mp3

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 8:47 am 
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niman wrote:
niman wrote:
Dr. Henry Niman PhD
Flu Season

Interview tonight at 10 PM EST
H3N2v and NSABB censorship will be discussed.

http://www.renseradio.com/listenlive.htm

Interview now available at

http://rense.gsradio.net:8080/rense/spe ... 021612.mp3

Discussion of H5N1 transmission studies begins at the 20 minute mark of the above interview.

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 9:58 am 
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In addition to dozens of dead birds from bird flu, five residents Petamanan Village, District of South Bugul, Makati City allegedly infected with bird flu virus.

"There were five people suspected of being infected and we took blood samples to be tested," said Kartika, officers Avian Veterinary Services Makati City, Friday (02/17/2012).
Image
Positive or not to-5 people are infected with bird flu virus by Kartika is still awaiting test results. "Waiting for test results this afternoon," said the bespectacled woman.

Ponimah, one citizen who allegedly confessed his infected with bird flu fever, chills and shortness of breath. He admitted to reporters that otherwise consume chicken egg had been infected with bird flu.

"My body fever, chills and had to breathe. I also ate chicken egg," he said to reporters at his home.

http://us.surabaya.detik.com/read/2012/ ... uan-diduga

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 10:54 am 
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Yesterday (February 16) in Geneva, 22 experts sat down at the behest of the World Health Organization to debate whether and how to publish research in which scientists made the H5N1 avian influenza virus transmissible between ferrets. The 2-day meeting is closed to journalists and the public, but WHO released the participant list today, ScienceInsider reported.

In December, the US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) recommended that two manuscripts detailing the transmission procedure be redacted prior to publication, so that the potentially dangerous research could not fall into the hands of terrorists. A month later, Science and Nature published a letter, signed by 39 influenza researchers around the world, calling for a voluntary 2-month suspension of research into H5N1 transmission.

One of the scientists involved in the controversial research has argued that although there is a risk that such research could be used for bioterrorism, there’s an even larger risk that naturally existing strains of the virus may acquire mutations that could result in devastating human pandemics.

Participants at the WHO meeting include Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, Paul Keim, acting chair of the NSABB, numerous virologists, and ethicist Jerome Singh of the Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine in South Africa. Also present are the authors of the two studies, who want to publish their data in full.

http://the-scientist.com/2012/02/17/exp ... -research/

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 11:39 am 
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Preliminary Consultation on H5N1 Research Issues

Place: Geneva, Switzerland
Date: 16–17 February 2012

Recently, two unpublished research studies on the transmissibility of influenza A H5N1 viruses have raised urgent questions related to the two studies, as well as broader concerns related to the balance between scientific research and public concerns about safety.

Given the global relevance of these issues, WHO has been asked to facilitate a process to address the issues. WHO will hold a first technical meeting on 16 - 17 February to clarify key facts about the two research studies and the most urgent related issues.

Invited participants in this meeting will be people who have direct involvement or knowledge about these two studies, their review or oversight, or potential dissemination of results. Participants will discuss the specific circumstances and results of the two studies and will try to reach a consensus about ad hoc, practical actions to resolve the most urgent issues, particularly related to access to and dissemination of the results of this research.

Because many broader concerns that have been raised will not be addressed at this meeting, further consultation with wider input is anticipated at a later date to be determined. More details will be provided as they become available.

Related links
WHO statement on new H5N1 influenza research

http://www.who.int/mediacentre/events/m ... index.html

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 1:36 pm 
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As WHO meeting tries to solve flu studies dispute, journal says it will publish

By: Helen Branswell, The Canadian Press

Posted: 02/17/2012 9:40 AM | Comments: 0 (including replies) | Last Modified: 02/17/2012 10:58 AM

The editor of the journal Science is suggesting he may publish in full a controversial bird flu study the U.S. government has asked him to put out in abbreviated fashion only.

Dr. Bruce Alberts says unless progress can be made on figuring out how to share the details of the study with those who need to see them, he will push ahead.

Alberts made the statement at the meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Vancouver.

His comments surfaced as an international group of scientists approached the end of a two-day meeting on the issue at the World Health Organization in Geneva.

The study is one of two that show how research teams in the U.S. and the Netherlands mutated an H5N1 flu virus to the point where it transmitted easily among ferrets, the best animal model for flu in humans.

On the advice of a panel of biosecurity experts, the U.S. governments asked both Science and Nature, which is supposed to publish the second paper, to hold back details of how the work was done.

The journals and the scientists initially agreed, with the proviso that a system be set up to share the full studies on a need-to-know basis. That system has not yet been devised.

"Our position is that, in the absence of any mechanism to get the information to those scientists and health officials who need to know and need to protect their populations and to design new treatments and vaccines, our default position is that we have to publish in compete form," Alberts was quoted as saying by the BBC.

The controversy, which has raged since November, has raised questions about whether work aimed at seeing how the dangerous virus might adapt to humans should have been done in the first place.

And questions remain about whether further work in this field should be undertaken and if it is, in what level of laboratory biosecurity. These studies were done in biosecurity level 3-plus, but some experts are arguing any future work with these viruses should be restricted to BSL4 labs, the facilities with the highest level of biosecurity and biosafety.
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-a ... 15278.html

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 2:05 pm 
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Deadly bird flu studies to stay secret for now - WHO

By Stephanie Nebehay and Kate Kelland

GENEVA/LONDON | Fri Feb 17, 2012 5:43pm GMT
Image
GENEVA/LONDON (Reuters) - Two studies showing how scientists mutated the H5N1 bird flu virus into a form that could cause a deadly human pandemic will be published only after experts fully assess the risks, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Friday.

Speaking after a high-level meeting of flu experts and U.S. security officials in Geneva, a WHO spokesman said an agreement had been reached in principle to keep details of the controversial work secret until deeper risk analyses have been carried out.

The WHO called the meeting to break a deadlock between scientists who have studied the mutations needed to make H5N1 bird flu transmit between mammals, and the U.S. National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB), which wanted the work censored before it was published in scientific journals.

Biosecurity experts fear mutated forms of the virus that research teams in The Netherlands and the United States independently created could escape or fall into the wrong hands and be used to spark a pandemic worse than the 1918-19 outbreak of Spanish flu that killed up to 40 million people.

"There must be a much fuller discussion of risk and benefits of research in this area and risks of virus itself," the WHO's Gregory Hartl told reporters.

HIGH FATALITY RATE

The H5N1 virus, first detected in Hong Kong in 1997, is entrenched among poultry in many countries, mainly in Asia, but so far remains in a form that is hard for humans to catch.

It is known to have infected nearly 700 people worldwide since 2003, killing half of them, a far higher death rate than the H1N1 swine flu which caused a flu pandemic in 2009/2010.

Last year two teams of scientists - one led by Ron Fouchier at Erasmus Medical Center and another led by Yoshihiro Kawaoka at the University of Wisconsin - said they had found that just a handful of mutations would allow H5N1 to spread like ordinary flu between mammals, and remain as deadly as it is now.

In December, the NSABB asked two leading scientific journals, Nature and Science, to withhold details of the research for fear it could be used by bioterrorists.

They said a potentially deadlier form of bird flu poses one of the gravest known threats to humans and justified the unprecedented call to censor the research.

The WHO voiced concern, and flu researchers from around the world declared a 60-day moratorium on January 20 on "any research involving highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 viruses" that produce easily contagious forms.

Fouchier, who took part in the two-day meeting at the WHO which ended on Friday, said the consensus of experts and officials there was "that in the interest of public health, the full paper should be published" at some future date.

"This was based on the high public health impact of this work and the need to share the details of the studies with a very big community in the interest of science, surveillance and public health on the whole," he told reporters.

In its current form, people can contract H5N1 only through close contact with ducks, chickens, or other birds that carry it, and not from infected individuals.

But when H5N1 acquires mutations that allow it to live in the upper respiratory tract rather than the lower, the Dutch and U.S. researchers found a way to make it can travel via airborne droplets between infected ferrets, which are considered good models of how flu viruses behave in people.

Asked about the potential bioterrorism risks of his and the U.S. team's work, Fouchier said "it was the view of the entire group" at the meeting that the risks that this particular virus or flu viruses in general could be used as bioterrorism agents "would be very, very slim".

"The risks are not nil, but they are very, very small," he said.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/02/1 ... BD20120217

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 2:25 pm 
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Public health, influenza experts agree H5N1 research critical, but extend delay

WHO to convene additional meeting to discuss future protections


News release

17 February 2012 | Geneva -A small group of global public health and influenza experts at a WHO-convened meeting reached consensus on two urgent issues related to the newly created H5N1 influenza viruses: extending the temporary moratorium on research with new laboratory-modified H5N1 viruses and recognition that research on naturally-occurring H5N1 influenza virus must continue in order to protect public health.

“Given the high death rate associated with this virus -- 60% of all humans who have been infected have died -- all participants at the meeting emphasized the high level of concern with this flu virus in the scientific community and the need to understand it better with additional research," says Dr Keiji Fukuda, Assistant Director-General of Health Security and Environment for the World Health Organization. “The results of this new research have made it clear that H5N1 viruses have the potential to transmit more easily between people underscoring the critical importance for continued surveillance and research with this virus.”

WHO convened the meeting as a first step to facilitate the discussion of differing opinions that have arisen in recent months after two research groups, one in the Netherlands and the other based in the United States, have created versions of the H5N1 influenza virus which are more transmissible in mammals than the H5N1 virus that occurs naturally.

The experts at the meeting included lead researchers of the two studies, scientific journals interested in publishing the research, funders of the research, countries who provided the viruses, bioethicists and directors from several WHO collaborating-center laboratories specializing in influenza.

Consensus to delay publications

The group also came to a consensus that delayed publication of the entire manuscript would have more public health benefit than urgently partially publishing.

“There is a preference from a public health perspective for full disclosure of the information in these two studies. However there are significant public concern surrounding this research that should first be addressed,” says Fukuda.

Two critical issues are to increase public awareness and understanding of this research through communications and the review of biosafety and biosecurity aspects raised by the new laboratory-modified H5N1 influenza virus. WHO will continue discussion with relevant experts to move this forward.

Broad issues raised, but not limited to, these research studies will be discussed at future meetings convened by WHO soon with participation by a broader range of experts and interested parties relevant to these issues.

For more information, please contact:

Gregory Härtl
WHO Media coordinator
Telephone: +41 22 791 4458
Mobile: +41 79 203 6715
E-mail: hartlg@who.int

Christy Feig
WHO Director of Communications
Mobile: +41 79 251 70 55
E-mail: feigc@who.int

http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/rel ... index.html

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PostPosted: Fri Feb 17, 2012 2:37 pm 
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Go-ahead for bird flu study publication after security check
February 17, 2012

Bird flu experts meeting in Geneva on Friday ruled that controversial research on a mutant form of the virus potentially capable of being spread among humans should be made public.

Security assessments must however be carried out first before the two studies can be published and the research can continue, scientists agreed at a two-day meeting at the World Health Organization.

"The consensus was that in the interest of public health the full papers should be published," said Professor Ron Fouchier from the Institute of Virology in the Netherlands, the scientist behind one of the studies.

US bio-security chiefs urged in November that key details of the papers remain unpublished, citing fears of a pandemic should a mutated H5N1 virus escape the laboratory.

Scientists agreed on January 20 to a 60-day moratorium on further studies.

That deadline will now be extended for an unspecified time to allow for a wider group of scientists to examine security issues and allow for public discussion, Fouchier said at a conference following the meeting.

"This is very important research that needs to move forward," he said.

"The question is, how can it be done safely, what about bio-security, how do we prevent access to bad people?"

"Once there's agreement on all those issues then we can continue our work."

The 22 participants included the two teams of researchers and representatives of the scientific journals Science and Nature who were asked to withhold publication.

Avian influenza H5N1 is primarily transmitted between birds and very rarely to humans.

The Dutch team and another from the University of Wisonsin in the United States found ways late last year to engineer the virus so that it could be transmitted among mammals.

The breakthrough raised alarm that the method could fall into the wrong hands and unleash a massive flu pandemic that could cost millions of lives.

http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-go- ... d-flu.html

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