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Cowpox infection in US lab worker called a first

(CIDRAP News) A US laboratory worker contracted a painful, slow-healing cowpox virus infection on the job in 2010, marking the first such case reported in the United States, though the virus, a relative of smallpox, is known in Europe and Russia, according to a study published yesterday. The infected researcher had  Read More »

Dutch officials approve publication of Fouchier’s H5N1 study

(CIDRAP News) The Dutch government has granted virologist Ron Fouchier, PhD, an export license that allows him to submit his much-debated H5N1 transmissibility paper to Science, according to a ScienceInsider report published today. “Now we can move on,” Fouchier told ScienceInsider. His report details how he and his colleagues developed an  Read More »

Board on Life Sciences of the U.S. National Academies announces new biosecurity website

(The National Academies) The Board on Life Sciences of the U.S. National Academies is pleased to announce the creation of a new website on biosecurity. The site brings together information and resources from across the National Academies on biosecurity, biodefense, relevant aspects of public health, and discussions of the relationship between  Read More »

Secret Briefing Helped Sway H5N1 Flu Papers Decision

(Science AAAS) A classified briefing from U.S. intelligence officials helped persuade a majority of members of a government advisory board that the benefits of publishing two controversial H5N1 avian influenza studies outweighed the risks, according to testimony presented yesterday at a U.S. Senate hearing. The late March briefing to the National  Read More »

Dutch Government OK’s Publication of H5N1 Study

(Science AAAS) AMSTERDAM—The Dutch government has given virologist Ron Fouchier of Erasmus MC an export license for his controversial H5N1 transmissibility study, allowing Fouchier to send a revised manuscript of his paper to Science. The license “is in my inbox,” says Fouchier. “Now we can move on.” The decision by Henk  Read More »