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Jakarta: Thirteen people from a village in North Sumatra are due to be tested for bird flu after falling sick, Indonesian health officials said on Thursday.
The 13, from Air Batu village, were hospitalised this week after suffering fever, but their conditions had improved yesterday and they might not be suffering from the disease, a health official said.
A bird flu surveillance team from Indonesia's health ministry has been sent to the area.
"Although they found dead chickens in the area, the symptoms are not like bird flu," said Erna Tresnaningsih, the health ministry's director of animal-borne disease control.
Sari Setiogi, a spokeswoman for the World Health Organisation in Geneva, and the head of a laboratory in Jakarta conducting the tests said the findings were expected later yesterday, but were not released yet.
Treatment
A seven-year-old girl and an eight-month-old child were being treated in Adam Malik hospital in North Sumatra's capital Medan with Tamiflu, the medication most often used to treat bird flu, said hospital spokesman Sinar Ginting.
The country's largest known cluster of bird flu cases in humans occurred in May 2006 in the Karo district of North Sumatra province, where as many as 7 people in an extended family died.
The WHO said at the time that limited human-to-human transmission could not be ruled out but that the virus samples from the scene did not show any significant genetic mutations.
Ginting said on Wednesday that not all the patients were believed to have had contact with fowl, which is the most common way of contracting the H5N1 bird flu virus, after some chickens in the area had died suddenly and were found to have been infected.
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