Indonesian tests have confirmed that a 25-year-woman who died overnight in a
Jakarta hospital had the bird flu virus, a hospital official said Wednesday.
However, Dr. Ilham Patu said the results had yet to be confirmed in a Hong
Kong laboratory. If they come back positive, her death would bring to eight the
number of human victims in the country, he said.
Indonesian tests are generally reliable, but the World Health Organization
does not recognize cases unless they are confirmed in one of its accredited
laboratories in Hong Kong.
Patu also said that two younger brothers of a 16-year-boy currently being
treated in hospital for bird flu died several days before he fell ill showing
symptoms of the virus.
The 16-year-old is a confirmed case of bird flu.
Patu said the two died before doctors had taken samples from them, so "it
couldn't be proved" whether they had contracted the virus or whether it had been
transmitted directly between the brothers.
Health experts are closely watching possible "clusters" of cases within
families or neighborhoods for signs that the virus is being passed between
humans.
So far, most human cases of the disease have been traced to contact with
infected birds. But experts fear a human flu pandemic if the deadly H5N1 bird
flu virus mutates into a form that passes easily between people.
At least 68 people have died from the H5N1 bird flu virus since it emerged in
Asia in 2003.