MIKE MAGEE, MD: There's a fairly strong divergence of opinions about whether we actually will have a pandemic from H5N1. On the one end of the spectrum are professionals from the World Health Organization and elsewhere who believe that with such an enormous virus load being carried by birds around the world and other species, with mutations occurring day-in and day-out, that it's only a matter of time before they hit on that perfect mutation that will allow easy spread from humans to humans. Therefore, in their eyes, when it comes to a pandemic for H5N1, it's not a question of "if," it's just a question of "when."
Now, on the other end of the spectrum are clinicians who are working in the field, who are in Vietnam, who are in Indonesia, who have seen huge numbers of birds die from H5N1 but very few humans become infected, even though they're in close proximity to each other. Those clinicians are saying, "Look, if this was going to spread, it would have probably happened in the last ten years and the fact that it has not shows that it probably won't in the future."
ANNOUNCER: The World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, among other health agencies, are working hard to prevent a widespread outbreak of H5N1 among humans.
BRUCE POLSKY, MD: There have been literally armies of scientists and public health workers around the world who have taken measures to see that this doesn't happen. So I don't think it's just a matter of good luck and biology being entirely on our side. I think it's because of certain interventions that have been undertaken.
ANNOUNCER: The interventions include providing protective equipment to poultry workers and educating them to better recognize sick flocks. There is also close monitoring of bird shipments from country to country. On the scientific front, there's research into diagnosis, medical treatment and experimental vaccines. Whether the currently-spreading avian flu becomes a major health threat to humans remains unknown, but many scientists believe advances in medicine plus quick action may offer good protection.
MIKE MAGEE, MD: If H5N1 began in an area, the best thing that we could do is to shut that area down, to isolate that area, to massively treat the population within that area and then have very, very careful surveillance of everyone else. That's the way you protect yourself in a modern, mobile world.