Rangers catch some of the 2.5 million bats that leave the Khao Chong Phran cave nightly. These bats are ecologically important pollinators. seed spreaders and pest controllers (Photo by Adriana Cargill/Medill)
A researcher puts a bat in a cloth bag to be studied (Photo dby Adriana Cargill/Medill)
Dr. Supaporn in her office (Photo by Adriana Cargill/Medill)
In the H5N1 virus, human-to-human transmission had been documented only in people who had prolonged contact with an infected person.Although it originated in wild birds, the H5N1 virus needed only to make the jump to becoming easily transmitted from human to human for it to become the perfect storm that the public health community had long feared — a virus that was both lethal and highly contagious.At a news conference in 2005, David Nabarro, the newly appointed Senior United Nations System Coordinator for Avian and Human Influenza, said it was "very likely" that the bird flu virus could jump into the human population. The number of deaths that would result from such a pandemic would depend on where the outbreak occurred, he said, and how quickly and aggressively health officials responded to it. That was especially the case in countries with limited health-care systems, unable to treat vast numbers of sick people and not equipped to transfer information from local to national authorities, he added."I'm not, at the moment, at liberty to give you a prediction on numbers," Nabarro said, "but I just want to stress, that, let's say, the range of deaths could be anything from 5 to 150 million.""The range of deaths could be anything from 5 to 150 million"
Scientists at the WHO Centre for Research and Training for Viral Zoonoses at Chulalongkorn University prepare to work with a sample in the lab (Photo by Adriana Cargill/Medill)
Cockfighting is a cultural institution in Thailand and one of its most popular gambling sports. But the fighting—blood on blood contact—is also a perfect scenario for diseases to spread. The Thai government requires that every rooster must be tested for avian flu and registered. (Photo by Adriana Cargill / Medill)
Pranorm wears white chalk on her forehead to keep the guano fleas from biting her face while she works at Khao Chong Phran bat cave. Her mother brought her here to collect guano when she was in the third grade and she's been doing it ever since. (Photo by Adriana Cargill / Medill)