Two  people in Shanghai, one of China's largest cities, died this month after  contracting a strain of avian influenza that had never been passed to humans  before, the official Xinhua News Agency reported on Sunday.
The  two men, aged 87 and 27, became sick late February and died in early March. Another  woman in nearby Anhui province also contracted the virus in early March and is  in a critical condition, Xinhua said, quoting the National Health and Family  Planning Commission (NHFPC).
The  strain of the bird flu virus found in all three people was identified as H7N9,  which had not been transmitted to humans before, the commission said.
The  three cases were confirmed to be human infection of the H7N9 strain by experts  from the NHFPC, based on clinical observation, laboratory tests and  epidemiological surveys, Xinhua said.
All  three cases showed symptoms of fever and coughs that later developed into  pneumonia.
Calls  to the NHFPC on Sunday were not answered.
It  is unclear how the three victims were infected. The virus does not seem highly  contagious because no health abnormalities were detected among 88 of the  victims' close contacts, Xinhua quoted the commission as saying.
There  are no known vaccines against the H7N9 virus.
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