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S. Korea raises alert against bird flu

by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Jan 11, 2011
South Korea has raised its alert against bird flu to reflect the rapid spread of the disease across the country, the government said Tuesday.

The agriculture ministry said the alert was lifted to the second highest level because the virulent strain of avian influenza has spread to four provinces since the first outbreak was confirmed on December 31.

There have been 16 confirmed cases in birds so far this winter.

"In light of the rapid spread of the disease there is a need to take more stringent measures," a ministry official told Yonhap news agency.

Under the new alert level all birds within a three-kilometre (two-mile) radius of an outbreak will be culled as a precautionary measure, up from 500 metres previously.

Quarantine authorities will press poultry farmers to carry out daily decontamination measures and limit contact with wild birds.

The ministry said six new bird flu cases have been reported in South Jeolla province in the southwest. It said all 134,900 ducks on affected farms have been ordered culled, along with other birds in the immediate vicinity.

South Korea has been hit by avian influenza three times before, with the last outbreak in April 2008.

The renewed bird flu scare came as farmers and health authorities struggle to curtail the country's worst-ever outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease.

Authorities have ordered the culling of more than 1.4 million livestock since late November.



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EPIDEMICS
Japanese firm invents mirror to spot the flu
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 11, 2011
As Japan's flu season gets into full swing, a local technology firm Tuesday unveiled a mirror-like thermometer that can detect and identify a person who is feverish. "Thermo Mirror," which looks like a table mirror, measures the skin temperature of the person looking into it, without the need for physical contact, said the firm, NEC Avio Infrared Technologies. The person's temperature is ... read more







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