NOT MEDICAL ADVICE.  For educational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider.
IndonesiaH5N1Avian Influenza

H5N1 Bird Flu in Indonesia

Indonesia has the world's highest H5N1 death toll — and sparked a landmark international dispute over virus sharing that reshaped global pandemic preparedness.

VirusWatch Editorial Team — Last reviewed: May 2025
Medical Disclaimer: This page is for educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Avoid contact with sick or dead poultry.
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Key Data

MetricData
Confirmed human cases (since 2005)>200
Deaths>168 (highest globally)
Case fatality rate~84% (among highest H5N1 CFRs globally)
Virus sharing controversy2007 — led to WHO PIP Framework
H5N1 clade in IndonesiaClade 2.1 (distinct Indonesian lineage)
Health authorityMinistry of Health (Kemenkes), Indonesia

Why Indonesia Has the Highest H5N1 Death Toll

Indonesia's extraordinary H5N1 burden results from several intersecting factors. First, H5N1 became enzootic in Indonesian poultry within months of its introduction in 2003-2004, spreading rapidly across the world's fourth most populous country (270 million people) with extensive smallholder poultry farming, particularly on densely populated Java (population ~145 million). Second, Indonesia's H5N1 strain (Clade 2.1) evolved separately from other global clades and may have distinct virulence characteristics. Third, patients often presented late for medical care — when already severely ill — reducing treatment effectiveness. Fourth, many affected areas had limited ICU capacity. The combination produced a case fatality rate of approximately 84% — one of the highest for any infectious disease in recent history.

The Virus Sharing Controversy and PIP Framework

In 2007, Indonesia's Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari announced that Indonesia would withhold H5N1 virus samples from WHO's global network, arguing that the existing system allowed pharmaceutical companies in wealthy countries to access samples freely and then sell resulting vaccines at prices that developing countries could not afford. This "viral sovereignty" argument — Indonesia was providing the raw material for a product it couldn't afford — sparked intense global debate. After years of negotiations, the WHO Pandemic Influenza Preparedness (PIP) Framework was adopted in 2011, establishing rules for equitable sharing of virus material and vaccine benefits, including a fund (PIP Benefit Sharing) for developing country access.

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FAQ

The H5N1 risk for tourists visiting Indonesia's major destinations is very low. Normal tourist activities — hotels, restaurants, temples, beaches — carry negligible risk. Exposure risk increases with contact with live poultry: visiting farms, live markets, or handling birds. Bali and Java do have endemic H5N1 in poultry; travelers should avoid live poultry markets and contact with birds, wash hands frequently, and ensure all poultry is fully cooked.

Yes. In 2006, a family cluster of H5N1 occurred in Sumatra involving 7 confirmed cases (6 deaths) within one family — the largest family cluster of H5N1 seen globally at the time. Investigators found limited human-to-human transmission within the household, likely through prolonged close contact during care of sick relatives. No further community spread occurred. This cluster was extensively studied as evidence that under certain conditions, limited H5N1 human-to-human transmission was possible.

Sources: WHO Indonesia H5N1 data; Indonesia Kemenkes avian influenza reports; NEJM (Kandun et al. Indonesia family cluster); WHO PIP Framework documentation.

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