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Friday, September 08, 2006 20:19:23 -0400As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:19:23 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction.  If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email. You will receive full credit for your find, to include reward monies.  Please include the exact date of the dream and the DD number.  And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.



DD4143


Brian Ladd of Brians Dreams - www.briansprediction.com



See if this dream has come true yet    Submit information for this dream   Get free text updates on this DD here!
"Syanfitil dies, midwife has h5n1 affects this child's life"...not sure yet.AVIAN FLU RELATED DREAMSThe following dreams are related to past, present and future events dealing with avian flu,  if you have any additional information of any of these DD's listed below, please let me know...Brian

DD872  DD992  DD1533  DD17522  DD2170  DD2175  DD2561  DD2658  DD2661  DD2692  DD2778  DD2822  DD2814  DD2996  DD3030  DD3137 DD3271   DD3032  DD3388  DD3444  DD3670  DD3682  DD3699  DD3837  DD3917  DD3986  DD4004  DD4012  DD4013  DD4018  DD4025  DD4030  DD4053  DD4058  DD4059  DD4065  DD4066  DD4068  DD4076  DD4088  10042005  DD4103  DD4105  DD4107  DD4119  DD4143  DD4579  DD4687  EC


8.24.2006

14 killed from unidentified disease

Epidemic of an unidentified disease has killed at least 14 people, including seven children, in Netini village development committee (VDC), a far eastern village of Nuwakot district, in the past two weeks.

The disease, which was first detected in dogs and chickens in the last week of June, had started spreading to humans, reports The Kathmandu Post daily.

Major symptoms of the disease are high fever together with bleeding from nose and mouth at the time of death. nepalnews.com pb Aug 19 06

reply

Thanks, posted.Bran


8.24.2006
Brian,

Another one on bird flu...sort of interesting in that old & new strains are
involved.

Jim D.

-----Original Message-----
From: ProMED-mail [mailto:dd@briansprediction.compromed@promed.isid.harvard.edu]
Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2006 03:43 PM
To: promed-ahead-edr@promedmail.org
Subject: PRO/AH/EDR> Avian influenza (183) - Thai, Laos, Cambodia,
Egypt, China


AVIAN INFLUENZA (183) - THAILAND, LAOS, CAMBODIA, EGYPT, CHINA
****************************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org>

In this update:

[1] Thailand, Laos: FAO
[2] Asia round-up: FAO
[3] Cambodia, ducks, Kampong Cham
[4] Egypt update: OIE
[5] China (Hunan): OIE

*****
[1] Thailand, Laos - FAO
Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2006
From: Mary Marshall <tropical.forestry@btinternet.com>
Source: UN News Centre, 17 Aug 2006 [edited]
<http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=19552&Cr=bird&Cr1=flu>


Laboratory results show that a recent wave of bird flu in poultry in
Thailand and Laos was the result of both old and new strains of the
H5N1 virus, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) said today, calling for vigorous implementation of control
measures to prevent further spread of the disease.

The FAO says last month's outbreak in Thailand's Pichit province was
caused by the same strain that has been circulating in the area since
2003, meaning the virus has become endemic to the region.

"The H5N1 virus thus remained alive in central Thailand in a
reservoir of birds and poultry, most probably a mix of backyard
chickens, ducks and fighting cocks," said Laurence Gleeson, regional
manager of FAO's bird flu centre in Bangkok today.

Outbreaks in Thailand's Nakhon Phanom province and Vientiane in Laos,
on the other hand, were caused by strains that did not exist there
previously but that did resemble ones found in southern China, the FAO said.

The bird flu situation in the region has reached a "critical
juncture," said the agency, noting that outbreaks were continuing in
China and also reoccurring in Laos, while cross-border poultry trade
persisted across South-East and East Asia, despite well-known risks.
For all of those reasons, heightened vigilance was essential
throughout the region.

"Timely reporting and sharing information continue to be crucial,"
said He Changchui, FAO's Regional Representative for Asia and the
Pacific, pointing out that while some countries can beat back
occasional bird flu reoccurrence, poorer countries still need funding
to strengthen veterinary services and build up transboundary animal
disease containment programmes.

--
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>

[Information concerning the properties of the 2 strains of H5N1 avian
influenza virus now circulating in Thailand and Laos can be found in
archived 20060818.2315. - Mod.AS].

******
[2] FAO - Asia round-up
Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2006
From: ProMED-mail <promed@promedmail.org>
Source: FAO AIDE news, Situation Update 41, 4 Aug 2006 - circulated
18 Aug 2006  [edited]


ASIA ROUND-UP
-------------
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) type H5N1 continues to
spread in Asia. In addition to the 10 countries affected in Southeast
Asia (2003 - 2004), India, Pakistan, Myanmar and Afghanistan were
newly affected by new outbreaks of HPAI in 2006 in poultry and wild birds.

More than 220 million birds have been culled as a consequence of HPAI
outbreaks in Asia with a major impact on food security and people's
livelihoods, backyard poultry farms and the international trade in
live poultry and poultry products. In addition, the unproductive
"downtime" forced on affected poultry farms has had a negative effect
on such farms, public health issues and contact with HPAI H5N1
contaminated environments.

China, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Malaysia and Thailand reported new
outbreaks of HPAI during 2006. Although there is an increase in
knowledge and public awareness of HPAI in poultry, it is not yet
clear what is the exact role of wild birds in the epidemiology of
HPAI, the susceptibility of wild bird species, the mechanisms
underlying virus persistence and virus transmission between and among
wild migratory wild birds, resident wild birds, free range birds and
domestic poultry populations.

In Asia, 2 sources of infection of HPAI virus probably coexist: the
introduction, transmission and circulation of the virus in domestic
poultry populations (particularly on backyard farms), live bird
markets and commercial poultry farms with low biosecurity systems,
and migratory wild birds. However, the link between domestic poultry
and wild bird habitats and the true risk posed is still unclear.

--

reply

Hi, yes it is, posted.Brian 


 

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