May 16, 2009 Saturday
Updated

May 16, 2009
Swine flu set to spread
Acting WHO Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukuda told reporters that studies by experts indicated a 'significant number of people' had been infected, but remained undetected or unconfirmed by laboratory tests. -- PHOTO: AFP
GENEVA - SWINE flu will spread further across the world, experts at the World Health Organisation warnedon Friday, as the number of confirmed cases surged by more than 1,000 and the US reported two more deaths.

Acting WHO Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukuda told reporters that studies by experts indicated a 'significant number of people' had been infected, but remained undetected or unconfirmed by laboratory tests.

'Their work also suggests that the virus is transmissible enough that we will expect to see continued community level outbreaks and regional spread,' he told a WHO meeting in Geneva on pandemic preparedness.

The latest WHO data showed 7,520 people in 34 countries were confirmed to have caught the influenza A(H1N1) virus, up 1,000 from Thursday.

According to the figures, most of the deaths had occurred in Mexico, where the Mexican officials said death toll rose by two on Friday to 66 with the epidemic having sickened 2,829 people there.

'We cannot know when we will have it contained,' Mexican Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova admitted at his daily press briefing.

But, he said, 'I expect in this month or next we can be very close ... and that most of the cases will be sporadic.' US health officials also upped the number of US deaths from three to five, reporting that one person had died in Arizona as well as a young man in Texas.

Of the three previous US deaths, two were in Texas and one was in Washington state.

The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said the number of confirmed and probable cases had reached 4,714, with only four states - Alaska, Mississippi, West Virginia and Wyoming - having been spared so far.

On Friday, New York City authorities were forced to close three schools, sending home 4,500 students, after an assistant principal of one of the schools was hospitalised in serious condition. -- AFP

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