Frightened poultry workers on Monday shunned medical examinations for bird flu in northern Nigeria, where the presence of the deadly H5N1 virus which can affect humans was reported last week. Only about 20 of the estimated 160 employees of Sambawa Farms in Jaji, Kaduna State, turned up for a medical screening conducted at a nearby clinic by a joint team of federal and state health officials. Workers told IRIN that many of their colleagues stayed away because they were frightened of being detained by authorities if tested positive. But with no bird flu testing kits yet available in Kaduna, health officials were only able to check for flu symptoms and respiratory infections. “We don’t have the requisite kits to take the blood samples,” explained Julius Gajere, one of the doctors that conducted the checks. “We are going to identify those with any of the indicative symptoms and these would undergo blood screening when kits from the World Health Organisation (WHO) arrive by tomorrow (Tuesday),” he added. Veterinary officials at the weekend culled 160 ostriches at Sambawa Farms, the only birds that were still surviving at the farm after some 45,000 chickens kept there succumbed to bird flu over the past month. Police snipers hit a snag on Friday when they ran out of bullets, but by Saturday the dead ostriches were burned and buried in pits and the farm disinfected.
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| Dr Julius Gajere screens a farm worker for signs of bird flu |
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| Two members of a veterinary team that culled birds at Sambawa Farms dressed in special protective clothing |
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions