Welcome to myLot!

existing user?

username
password
forgot your password?
 
 

new user?

desired name
 
Your myLot URL will be:
http://myLot.com/desiredname
 

popular interests

 
  mylot.com
24 seconds ago
 
  reading
3 minutes ago
 
  questions& answers
3 minutes ago
 
  internet
9 minutes ago
 
  life
9 minutes ago
 
  play in the rain
11 minutes ago
 
  friend
17 minutes ago
 
  weight loss
18 minutes ago
 
  make extra money
21 minutes ago
 
  my father
21 minutes ago
 
  make extra money
23 minutes ago
 
  single
24 minutes ago
 
myLot population
135,415
  users by location
  top referrers
  users by rating
homeinterestsdiscussionsblogsnewsmessages friendsphotosearningsmyLot
web | myLot | discussions | blogs | news | photos

sponsors
Online College Programs - US Residents
Get matched with up to 5 colleges with 1 form. Serious inquiries only.
www.NexTag.com/online-degrees

No Time for School? Graduate Online
Get a Degree in as Few as 2 Yrs- Graduate Faster with Online Classes.
www.ClassesUSA.com

All poultry in Seoul killed after bird flu outbreak email this discussion to a friend?

By HYUNG-JIN KIM
Associated Press Writer
 
2 months ago

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Korean officials said Monday they have killed all poultry in Seoul, the capital, to curb the spread of bird flu following a new outbreak of the disease in the city.


Quarantine officials destroyed 15,000 chickens, ducks, pheasants and turkeys raised in farms, restaurants, schools and homes in the capital, said Kim Yoon-kyu, a Seoul Metropolitan Government official.


The Seoul government said the slaughter was necessary to contain the disease. It said it will now focus on preventing live poultry from being brought into the capital.


The slaughter began Sunday night, hours after authorities confirmed Seoul's second outbreak of bird flu in less than a week.


The slaughter did not affect parrots, parakeets and canaries because they have little chance of spreading the disease, Kim said.


Government tests were under way to determine whether the outbreak was caused by the virulent H5N1 virus, said Kim Chang-seop, an official at the Agriculture Ministry. He said test results would be available as early as Monday night.


On Monday night, government tests confirmed the latest outbreak in Seoul was caused by the deadly H5N1 virus, said Yoon Young-ku, a spokesman at the Agriculture Ministry.


The tests also confirmed two additional outbreaks of the virus in Busan, brining to 31 the total number of outbreaks in South Korea, he said.


Bird flu began sweeping southern parts of the country last month for the first time in more than a year, forcing the slaughter of about 6.8 million birds.


The virus remains hard for people to catch, but scientists worry it could mutate into a form that spreads more easily between humans, with the potential to kill millions worldwide.


Worldwide, at least 241 people have died from bird flu since 2003, according to the World Health Organization. Most human cases have been linked to contact with infected poultry.



tags:  skorea bird flu
 

other health & medical news

Dental industry gets an earful on mercury

People trust dentists with their health. Some members of Congress are more skeptical.

Started in health & medical news • 7 hours ago • 0 responses
Fringe autism treatment could get federal study

Pressured by desperate parents, government researchers are pushing to test an unproven treatment on autistic children, a move some scientists see as an unethical experiment in voodoo medicine.

Started in health & medical news • 7 hours ago • 0 responses
Tags: med autism research
FDA calls for urgent warning on tendon risks

Drug safety officials Tuesday imposed the government's most urgent safety warning on Cipro and similar antibiotics, citing evidence that they may lead to tendon ruptures, a serious injury that can...

Started in health & medical news • 8 hours ago • 0 responses
Tags: antibiotics warning
Elderly may fare worse on prostate cancer drugs

A prostate cancer study that could change how doctors treat some patients found that widely used hormone-blocking drugs did not improve survival chances for older men whose disease hadn't spread.

Started in health & medical news • 1 response • Last response by yesah65 (0) • 1 hour ago
Summary Box: US plans controversial autism study

QUACK RESEARCH? The government wants to test chelation, a treatment for lead poisoning, on children with autism _ even though there's no evidence it leads to improvements.

Started in health & medical news • 9 hours ago • 0 responses
  privacy  •  terms  •  about myLot  •  legal  •  contact  •  FAQs  •  RSS  •  toolbar  •  guidelines  •  advertise  

©2008 myLot™. All Rights Reserved.