Health workers are overwhelmed by injured and routine work is disrupted.

Measles could potentially become a serious problem.

After SARS they know they should really provide timely information about what is going on.

That would be the beginning of a human influenza epidemic but we are not there yet.

An outbreak of cholera, affecting probably several hundreds of people, is occurring.

It is not too late. The wounded will need long term care, and the hospitals' stocks are quick to run out.

WHO tries to encourage people to try and lead a healthy life. There is safe sex, one can drink alcohol in a reasonable way and one can attempt eating in a balanced fashion. But with tobacco, there is no middle ground, it is black and white and it kills half of those consuming it.

They (the dead) were certainly all in contact with the same source of infection, but they (the WHO team) will also try to see whether we are looking at the first cases of human-to-human transmission.

The first working hypothesis is that the children touched, played with sick chickens and were infected that way. But they are also going to try to see if we are faced with a first case of human-to-human transmission, which would be the start of a flu epidemic.