Avian Influenza in Humans Flashcards

1
Q

What is the public health priority of avian influenza?

A

Urgent - respond to cases immediately. Refer to jurisdictional CDB within an hour and CDB to refer to National Incident Room.

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2
Q

How are cases of avian influenza managed?

A

Single room (negative pressure of available). Treat with neuraminidase inhibitor within 48 hours of onset.

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3
Q

How are contacts of avian influenza managed?

A

Contacts of infected humans or birds must be rapidly identified, counselled on their risk, provided with neuraminidase inhibitor (if indicated) and placed under surveillance for 10 days after their exposure.

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4
Q

What is the infectious agent of avian influenza?

A

Influenza A virus. Highly pathogenic (HPAI) and low pathogenic (LPAI).

H5N1 (HPAI) has caused seriously illness and deaths in humans in outbreaks in poultry overseas.

H7N9 (LPAI) has caused serious illness and deaths in China but not linked with clinical disease in birds.

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5
Q

What are the reservoirs of avian influenza?

A

Waterbirds in general. More specifically, Anseriformes (ducks, geese, swans) and Charadiiformes (shorebirds, waders, gulls).

However reasonable to assume all birds susceptible to avian influenza.

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6
Q

How is avian influenza transmitted?

A

Bird-to-bird - via saliva, nasal secretions, faeces. Faeces have high viral load. Waterbirds can directly or indirectly introduce AI to poultry via contaminated faeces or environments.

Bird-to-person - rare. Need very close contact. AI can survive on poultry products (blood, eggs) but no documented transmission from cooked products.

Human-to-human - very rare. Reported following prolonged, unprotected, close contact but inefficient and unsustained.

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7
Q

What is the incubation period for AI?

A

1-10 days depending on the strain. Typically longer than normal seasonal influenza (2-3 days)

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8
Q

What is the clinical presentation of avian influenza?

A

Depends on haemagglutinin subtypes. Flu-like symptoms in general but range from no symptoms to viral pneumonia, ARDS with high case-fatality ratio.

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9
Q

Who is at risk of avian influenza?

A

Close contact:
- overseas: infected material from birds or human case
- in Australia: contact with infected bird e.g. poultry worker
- laboratory worker

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10
Q

Public health significance of avian influenza

A

List outbreaks on bird farms and human cases

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11
Q

Routine prevention activities for avian influenza

A
  • overseas travellers: hand hygiene, avoid close contacts with birds in countries where AI is enzootic
  • good OHS for people working closely with birds
  • communication and collaboration between jurisdictional agencies responsible for human and animal health
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12
Q

Risk mitigation for avian influenza

A

Biosecurity measures have been put in place however some premises (e.g. free range poultry farms) may be at increased risk of contamination from waterbirds.

Strict quarantine rules / inspections at seaports and airports.

AUSVETPLAN

Vaccination so that co-infection with seasonal influenza is less likely to occur - reduced likelihood for gene reassortment and pandemic influenza potential.

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13
Q

What isolation and restriction is required for cases of AI?

A

Cases must be isolated (single, negative pressure room if available) until no longer infectious. HCWs - airborne, droplet, contact, standard IPC precautions.

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14
Q

How are contacts of AI identified?

A

Human-to-human transmission is rare and probably requires close, prolonged contact. Case-by-case basis based on expert panel judgement.

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15
Q

How are contacts of a case managed?

A

Define contact explicitly. Experts - virology, animal health, influenza, poultry and influenza experts, IDP, PHU.

May require treatment with neuraminidase inhibitor.

No isolation/restriction but education and monitor during incubation period. 10 days daily monitoring.

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16
Q

How are cases managed?

A

Isolate until no longer infectious.
Single negative pressure room with airborne, droplet, contact and standard IPC precautions.

Treatment by clinician in consultation with expert in virology. Neuraminidase inhibitor e.g. oseltamivir.