Settings

Theme

China reports human case of H3N8 bird flu

bnonews.com

147 points by _njuy 3 years ago · 133 comments

Reader

chatmasta 3 years ago

BNONews has been making a dashboard for every maybe-virus the past year (recently they had Monkeypox and some other one, Marburg maybe)? None of those turned into any major problem. They're pandemic profiteering, so while I appreciate the data they're collecting, I'm not quite ready to start freaking out about it.

  • OJFord 3 years ago

    Monkeypox was(/is? Idk) not a non-event, it was very real and relevant professionals were concerned about it. I don't know where 'BNONews' is based, but since China's in the title of this one I'll point out there were 'monkeypox' cases in the UK too for example.

    Just because it fortunately didn't go (/hasn't gone!) like SARS-nCoV-2019 doesn't mean it wasn't worth reporting.

    • loeg 3 years ago

      Monkeypox was pretty clearly a non-event for the vast majority of the population pretty early on. There continued to be misleading and fearmongering reporting for weeks and months after that was obvious, because of the well-known phenomenon where media gets more clicks and eyeballs if the "news" is bad. Also, Covid doomers really wanted a 2nd thing to be depressed about.

      • gruez 3 years ago

        >Monkeypox was pretty clearly a non-event for the vast majority of the population pretty early on

        Just like how it's pretty clear that the coronavirus wasn't "a global emergency"?

        https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/23/health/china-virus-who-em...

      • arisAlexis 3 years ago

        No it wasn't but because your gamble won and with hindsight bias you can state that now.

        • loeg 3 years ago

          If you think that is responsive to my comment, you're thinking of a much earlier point in time than I am.

      • mustacheemperor 3 years ago

        It remained a non-event for the vast majority of the population because the most vulnerable proportion of the population participated in a widespread vaccination campaign. If a little extra screen time in the media made that campaign successful it paid dividends for public health, imo.

  • Izkata 3 years ago

    In the mid-2010s both Ebola and Zika got a media boost as well, and Candida auris in 2019 or so.

    • Melatonic 3 years ago

      The difference with Ebola though is just how insanely bad it is - I cannot think of a virus I would NOT want more than Ebola.

      Thankfully the fact it is so damn destructive also means it is harder to spread en masse.....

  • bpp 3 years ago

    I wouldn't call Monkeypox a maybe virus, especially along with these. Its spread was mostly limited to a single community (sexually active gay men), and it absolutely would have spread out of control had there not been a very strong vaccination campaign with high rates of compliance. Within that community, there were many people who were impacted and many others who changed their behavior to help mitigate to spread.

  • behnamoh 3 years ago

    Why do these viruses often appear in China first? Has there been any study to find out any common patterns? Is it the food? Culture? Living environment?

    • clnq 3 years ago

      One possible reason for delayed virus detection in the West is our sluggish response to identifying new strains (in some of our largest countries, not all). But I think the emergence and spread of serious viral infections is largely influenced by population density, rather than geographical location. And the population density in China has gone up a lot in about the last decade, making more serious transmissible diseases come out of China recently.

      When Covid's first wave saw exponential infection growth, statistics and graphs demonstrated striking similarities among urban areas worldwide. In contrast, rural regions consistently exhibited lower infection rates throughout the pandemic.

      To illustrate this with a personal anecdote, I know someone who lives in a tiny village on a ranch (population: ~30), and they have reported seeing zero Covid cases, having interacted with around 50 other people over the last four years. I think this underscores the role of population density in virus transmission.

      • prewett 3 years ago

        People in China also interact more closely with animals, and with a wider variety, than in the West. The West does not have any wet markets or nor the wide variety of species available for consumption. This helps in the virus jumping species. Once it jumps, the population density helps it spread.

        • sgent 3 years ago

          Ever been to a county fair?

          • prewett 3 years ago

            Once or twice, although it wasn't a major sort of fair. There were a lot of animals, and now that I think about it, quite a wide variety of chickens. But it's only a few weeks out of the year, and in summer. And not very much blood. (Don't know if blood makes a difference in this case, though) I'm still a little shocked by the (large) fish gills I saw hanging up on a wall in a market in Hong Kong some years ago, looked like it was still breathing.

    • graphe 3 years ago

      When I visited South China, everything was crowded. Sick building syndrome is probably more common due to the common use of AC and large shopping malls people hang out at as well as recirculating air. My friend in India said that she did not get constant electricity in Gujarat so AC wasn't as common everywhere.

    • andrewflnr 3 years ago

      Don't forget sheer number of people.

      • behnamoh 3 years ago

        India is almost the same size but doesn’t seem to have this pattern.

        • projectazorian 3 years ago

          China is much more urbanized, India's population is still majority rural. And China also has a more robust public health system, which means that more cases get detected in the first place.

        • andrewflnr 3 years ago

          Yeah, probably not sufficient on its own, but I bet it's a factor. It amplifies the others.

          • dmix 3 years ago

            The big question is why doesn’t it happen more often via India?

            • schoen 3 years ago

              Quick guesses:

              Maybe Indians have less contact with wildlife (due to different settlement patterns, or religious or cultural restrictions on eating wild animals?), or less average physical mobility (more expensive and inconvenient long-distance transportation), or a climate less conducive to certain modes of virus transmission?

              A smaller fraction of the population working or commuting in huge indoor spaces?

              Maybe (contrary to Americans' intuition) Chinese public health surveillance is both more effective and more transparent than Indian, leading to a measurement bias because some disease outbreaks that arise in China get better-documented?

    • gtop3 3 years ago

      The viral jump from animals to humans is a common mechanism in many of the worst pandemics, with covid-19 and hiv being prime recent examples. There's some evidence "the spanish flu" of 1918 came from swine.

      If I were working on the problem "how can we reduce the frequency new very dangerous viruses are introduced" I would pay attention to this aspect.

      • bmitc 3 years ago

        The solution to this problem is the same as nearly every other problem humans create: stop destroying ecosystems and animal habitats, stop expansion, reduce meat eating, etc. These things increase the transmission of zoonotic diseases. There was a really good article in 2020 that I can now not find where an expert discussed how these things are not new, COVID was not a surprise, and that these transmissions will do nothing but increase in frequency if we don't systematically tackle these problems.

      • prottog 3 years ago

        > The viral jump from animals to humans

        I thought the most likely origin of Covid-19 is a lab leak (at least according to the latest from the DOE and the FBI), likely from gain-of-function research gone wrong?

        • acdha 3 years ago

          No – even that DOE report gave it a low probability ranking. It’s perfect for conspiracy mongers because you can’t completely rule out the possibility but the evidence has pretty consistently pointed at a non-lab jump, possibly in the wet market, and that’s not surprising since it’s a common scenario scientists have been warning about for decades.

          See for example this recent analysis:

          https://zenodo.org/record/7754299

          • prottog 3 years ago

            > even that DOE report gave it a low probability ranking

            Well, specifically, they assessed with "low confidence" that the "most likely" source was a lab leak. Meaning they think the wet market theory is less likely, though also with low confidence.

            I do note in the analysis you linked that the authors admit to unusual circumstances around the data they used, and that the source of the data is the Chinese CDC. Given the obvious incentive on the part of the Chinese government to disclaim a lab leak, I'm hesitant to take this as conclusive evidence.

    • taneq 3 years ago

      The sheer size and population of China?

cellis 3 years ago

Note: this is the 3rd case since 2022. Doesn't appear to be spreading that fast...

[1] https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/...

radicaldreamer 3 years ago

Had exposure to poultry before falling ill... so no confirmed human-to-human spread.

  • wing-_-nuts 3 years ago

    The problem is, I'm not sure you can trust any news out of china to be the 100% unvarnished truth anymore. Seems the only way you hear any bad news out of china is when it gets 'too big to hide'.

    • __d 3 years ago

      And you'd trust the news out of ... where, exactly?

      I think it's pretty clear from the last decade that the major journalism providers in the US (for example) are also corrupt, and that's true of every country I've experienced.

      Which is not to say that everywhere suffers this problem to the same degree, but just that the notion of a "trusted source of news" is demonstrably naive.

      • ericmay 3 years ago

        Nah, that’s a false equivalency because you’re equating “some corruption exists” like in the US to ~99% corruption as it exists in China w.r.t how it seems you are defining corruption in the mainstream press.

        Because unlike China there exists enough of a free press, from institutions down to individual bloggers and professors, who can jump on the Internet and write almost anything without repercussion and if they write something very good or very important it’ll be spread.

        • __d 3 years ago

          I think you're both over-estimating the situation in the US, and under-estimating the situation in China, but you're right: there's a difference.

          My point is that _trusting_ news organizations is dumb. None is trustworthy. Whether their coverage is manufactured/absent/biased because it's required by the government, required by the owners, required by the editor, required by the organizational culture, or even a side-effect of their workload, nothing is trustworthy.

          I'm not sure there was ever a time that the press could be trusted, but it absolutely cannot be trusted now.

          • ericmay 3 years ago

            Personally I don’t find “trust nothing” to be very useful or practical. My local TV news reported that the Ohio Senate introduced a bill to do X and they reported that an estimated 26 people died the other day due to a tornado or series of tornadoes in Mississippi. I’m supposed to not trust that reporting?

            • __d 3 years ago

              Everything is information. It might be accurate, it might not. Personally I would not _trust_ the tornado report: maybe it was 25 people or 27? What motivations might there be to exaggerate or diminish the number? Disaster reporting often exaggerates during the initial phase, and then corrects (or not) later. In that case, perhaps errors are more likely to be a lack of knowledge, to reflect hearsay and confusion between agencies?

              I think it’s an important to maintain an attitude of skepticism, to be aware of sources of error, and biases that might be at play. Blind _trust_ in information sources is foolhardy.

      • dmix 3 years ago

        Just because “American also bad” doesn’t mean that they are in the same ballpark of bad.

        • __d 3 years ago

          Agreed. See the last line in my comment.

          • dmix 3 years ago

            I read that before replying. That was the type cope that come attached to these sorts of distracting replies to redirect attention to the amateur leagues while the NBA tier players run rampant.

    • projectazorian 3 years ago

      No you can't, but if they were locking down cities, we'd know about it.

    • FiReaNG3L 3 years ago

      ... anymore?

    • jsisto 3 years ago

      Same for American news

  • bagels 3 years ago

    Are there any variants that can spread from birds to humans but not from humans to humans? Definitely not an expert in this at all, but it seems like the virus wouldn't care where it was before it got in to someone's mucous membranes. I can certainly imagine some modes of transfer will be less likely because maybe this variant causes chickens to sneeze, but not people, greatly reducing transmissivity, but seems unlikely to me to be impossible.

    • ls612 3 years ago

      Most bird flu in the past only spreads from birds to humans, or is like MERS in that it can technically spread human to human but with an R0 far less than 1.

    • Izkata 3 years ago

      > mucous membranes

      Depends on which membranes. I think I remember reading that the reason these can transfer bird-to-human but not human-to-human is that they can only infect us if it gets so deep into the lungs we can't actually expel it from breathing or coughing.

    • onlyrealcuzzo 3 years ago

      My understanding is that most bird flu variants that spreads from birds to humans does not also spread from humans to humans.

  • gruez 3 years ago

    "Although the virus has caused severe illness in some patients, Chinese authorities say there's no evidence so far that the disease can be passed through human contact."

    https://abcnews.go.com/Health/mystery-illnesses-china-caused...

  • ChatGTP 3 years ago

    Was this not how Covid-19 was announced ?

    At first it wasn’t human to human and then…

  • timcederman 3 years ago

    Yet

UncleOxidant 3 years ago

I thought we were watching H5N1 which showed up in some humans in Cambodia last month?

Traubenfuchs 3 years ago

How does it make sense for humans to get this flu from birds, become symptomatic, but not pass it on to at least their sexual/kissing partners?

  • spamizbad 3 years ago

    Most people have the boring kind of sex where you do not consume the flesh of your partner.

    • ksenzee 3 years ago

      We don't catch bird flu from eating infected birds, we catch it from being exposed to live birds who are sick (or to their droppings, as I understand it).

    • onlyrealcuzzo 3 years ago

      Do you get bird flu from eating birds?

      That doesn't make sense.

      Does anyone eat raw birds?

      Wouldn't you just get it from being around birds?

      • 57FkMytWjyFu 3 years ago

        You would need to obtain a sufficient viral load in order to be infected. One or two copies won't do the job, you'd need to ingest infected material in some manner. Eye splash, breathe dust from cleaning a chicken house, or vicsera that harbor many copies of the virus. This is why we throw the guts out of most things before we continue preparation.

        Imagine a bucket of raw inverted chicken lungs.

        Ew.

    • akiselev 3 years ago

      The position known since the Kama Sutra as the Aztec Sacrifice. However, in the next edition it will be renamed the "Praying Mantis" in order to be less offensive.

    • gedy 3 years ago

      Hey, don't yuck their yum.

  • lamontcg 3 years ago

    Because it takes an avian nasal mucosa to spread it. Human mucosa is ineffective at creating infectious droplets and aerosols for whatever reason.

codeddesign 3 years ago

Coming out of China..what a surprise. Just wall off that country and the world would be a whole lot safer.

stan_kirdey 3 years ago

back to peloton times

racl101 3 years ago

Ah shit. Here we go again.

copper-float 3 years ago

Time for another three years of lockdowns. (I hope not)

  • vkou 3 years ago

    My town had three months of lockdowns, followed by (so far!) three years of complaining about lockdowns.

    (If I live long enough, I expect to hear thirty three more years of complaining about lockdowns.)

    • areyousure 3 years ago

      In case anyone is curious, it appears the location in question had three months of "stay at home", over a year of other restrictions (including school closures), 625 days of broad mask requirements, and so forth. In fact, some mask requirements are still in effect today.

mr90210 3 years ago

Here we…

  • ChuckNorris89 3 years ago

    Millennials gonna be hit with their fourth "once in a lifetime" event so far.

    • tiedieconderoga 3 years ago

      Eh, put it on the tab. Millennials have never known stability anyways, they'd probably get uncomfortable if their lives stopped staggering from one externally-imposed crisis to another.

    • taspeotis 3 years ago

      I used to live in Brisbane which had two "one in 100 year" floods in relatively quick succession: 2011 and 2022. When the second one came there was some talk about communicating the risk more effectively. Instead of saying "one in 100 year" it would be better to say there is like, a 0.2% chance of major flooding every year.

      • OJFord 3 years ago

        In what sense is 'one in 100 year' equivalent to '0.2% every year'? With the latter you'd expect 0.2 of them in 100 years?

        (Totally agree the phrasing is misleading to the layman though, which is really the only reason for it to exist anyway, in an attempt to be more relatable.)

    • thelittleone 3 years ago

      An unprecedented number of unprecedented, once in a lifetime events.

      • joshuahedlund 3 years ago

        Not likely. The 60’s had riots, Vietnam, political assassinations, Cuban missile crisis and ongoing Cold War MAD fears. The 1910-1940’s were jam packed with world wars, the Great Depression, Spanish flu, and more. And before that a quarter of all children died young. Every generation ever. What’s actually unprecedented is having a few years between crises where things are actually pretty ok!

        • lamontcg 3 years ago

          Shhhhh, you're harshing the millennial vibe. Remember that due to their constant suffering the millennials are the most empathetic generation ever and everyone else are the narcissists.

      • baal80spam 3 years ago

        That's the beauty (?) of statistics for you!

    • arcanemachiner 3 years ago

      Which one was the second one? I'm assuming the first and third are the Great Recession and Covid.

      • yamtaddle 3 years ago

        Probably 9/11. The resulting wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were largely fought by Millennials (with some gen-z nearer to the end, I think—but the initial invasions heavily involved "elder millennials" [EDIT: and x/y "cuspers", especially for Afghanistan], with younger millennials involved in the long middle period). Though Vietnam (among other wars, but it seems most-comparable) was easily within living memory at the time, so I'm not so sure about "once in a lifetime" for the wars. That kind of wildly-successful attack on the US, though—that part might more-or-less qualify.

      • ChuckNorris89 3 years ago

        Millennial bingo:

          2008 financial crisis
        
          2020 pandemic (& Brexit)
        
          2022 war start + highest winter temperatures ever recorded 
        
          2023 economic downturn and layoffs
        
        Who knows what the future holds.
        • hammock 3 years ago

          What is 2022 war? The US did not enter a new armed conflict in 2022.

          And you forgot 2001 dot com crash

          • ChuckNorris89 3 years ago

            Who said anything about the US? Russia did, and we in the EU are feeling the effects of this 2022 war on our doorstep.

            And most millennials were a bit too young to be directly affected by toe 2001 crash but the older gen definitely felt it.

          • andersentobias 3 years ago

            US looks rather involved in the 2022 Ukraine-Russia war from my peasant POV.

            Russia is not fighting the US military, but they are fighting US military vehicles etc

            • hammock 3 years ago

              The US exports military vehicles all over the world, and often is fighting against forces using them, in actual wars (as opposed to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which is between Russia and Ukraine). We gave $18 billion in military equipment to the Taliban last year. That Ukraine has US military equipment means very little.

              The US is providing security assistance to Ukraine, and condemns Russia's advance, but the US is not fighting a war in Ukraine

              • objektif 3 years ago

                Naive at best! US has been actively pushing Ukraine against any kind of negotiations. It is not about security here it is about geopolitical power dynamic in EU.

            • richardw 3 years ago

              Almost every war everywhere is fighting with AK's somewhere in the mix, often on both sides. Arms is a very dirty industry and many governments play it, often with proxy dealers to allow them to be arms (da-dish) length and offer plausible deniability. Very often, a superpower or country ends up being shot at with the weapons it provided years or decades earlier.

          • favsq 3 years ago

            >The US did not enter a new armed conflict in 2022.

            It didn't?

        • joshuahedlund 3 years ago

          I’ll take all four over a decade long global depression, flu that killed 2% of the globe, and two world wars in the same timeframe.

        • Izkata 3 years ago

          Don't forget 2001, we were also around for 9/11. It's the first major event I remember.

          And I actually missed the 2008 financial crisis because I was in college and insulated from it.

      • rubicon33 3 years ago

        maybe 9/11 + Iraq war, not sure... losing count at this point

    • bktkech 3 years ago

      It's like when I got bored playing SimCity and would just trigger all of the disasters.

    • dotancohen 3 years ago

      Lifetimes are getting longer.

    • ipaddr 3 years ago

      California hasn't fallen into the sea as many predicted so we have still more to look forward to

    • HWR_14 3 years ago

      Fourth?

  • Dalewyn 3 years ago

    *CJ noises intensify*

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection