AI Article Synopsis

  • A study in Guangzhou in 2006 investigated a human case of avian influenza to determine if it could be transmitted to close contacts.
  • The patient had no recent travel or contact with infected poultry, and 56 close contacts were monitored for 7 days without any signs of infection.
  • The findings suggest that, unlike SARS, avian influenza does not easily spread from human to human, indicating limited transmission potential.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Study on human case of avian influenza in Guangzhou 2006 without causing human-to-human transmission

Objective: To explore the possibility of transmission from a human case of avian influenza to his close contacts.

Methods: Close contacts of the human case of avian influenza in Guangzhou 2006 were found out according to the definition and methods publicized by the Ministry of Health, People's Republic of China. Epidemiological investigation and medical observation were carried out. Serum antibodies were tested in some of the close contacts.

Results: The avian influenza patient had never left Guangzhou in the month prior to disease onset. No contact history with dead or diseased poultry was found. A total of 56 close contacts, including his girl friend, relatives, friends and medical staff who had taken care of him, were brought under medical observation for 7 days but none of them showed signs of infection.

Conclusion: Unlike SARS, direct contact with patient contracted with avian influenza at the end of incubation period and in the stage of illness through flying droplets, saliva, mucous membrane and skin injuries will not lead to human-to-human transmission, indicating the virus' ability to pass from human to human is limited.

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