The death of a 29-year-old woman, Ni Putu Sri Windiani, from West Bali
has been formally confirmed as Indonesia's 82nd fatality attributed to
the H5NI virus - more commonly known as Bird Flu.
The
woman, who lived in an agricultural setting nearly 3 hours drive from
Bali's capital, died on Sunday, August 12, 2007, in the Denpasar
Sanglah General Hospital in a special isolation unit.
The
woman's 5-year-old daughter preceded her Mother in death on August 5,
2007, after being hospitalized for two weeks in Negara with "flu-like"
symptoms. While the woman's infection with the H5N1 virus has now been
clinically confirmed, no tissue samples from her dnow deceased aughter
exists that would permit a definitive diagnosis.
Meanwhile, a
3-year-old girl, who is a neighbor of both victims, is being treated in
the isolation war of the same hospital. Doctors, however, report that
the child's condition is steadily improving and tests thus far for the
bird flu virus have been negative.
The Bali victims both lived
in a farming village where a large number of poultry have recently died
from the H5N1 virus. Doctors suspect the cases do not represent
human-to-human contagion, but, instead, are attributable poor hygeine
practice by people living in close proximity to an infected bird
population.
Local press reports in Bali indicate that local
villagers may have contributed to the latest infections by failing to
properly dispose of the diseased bird and, in some instances, fedding
the bird's carcasses to their swine stock.
Special teams trained to deal with bird flu
are on the scene in the West Bali village where all poultry within a 1
km radius of the home of the Bali victims have been culled. Health
screening and health monitoring protocols have also been introduced for
villagers from the affected areas.