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Showing newest 113 of 516 posts from 7/1/09 - 8/1/09. Show older posts
Showing newest 113 of 516 posts from 7/1/09 - 8/1/09. Show older posts

Friday, July 31, 2009

Two new swine flu deaths in Orange County

Orange County Health Department officials confirmed this afternoon the swine flu-related deaths of two county women.

A 70-year-old woman died Saturday and tests confirmed Tuesday she had the H1N1 (swine) flu .

A 25-year-old woman died Tuesday night, but the announcement was made today because her family hadn't been contactedOrange County Health Department officials confirmed this afternoon the swine flu-related deaths of two county women.

>> click here for full article >>

Kuwait announces 44 new swine flu cases

KUWAIT, July 31 (KUNA) -- Forty-four swine flu cases have been discovered in Kuwait yesterday and Friday, bringing total of registered patients to 172, the health ministry said.

Ministry spokesman Dr. Yusuf Al-Nisf told KUNA laboratory tests carried on samples of people yesterday and today showed that 44 of them were infected with the A(H1N1) virus.
He said this raised number of swine flu cases registered in Kuwait to 172.

Kuwait, said Al-Nisf, has been following the situation of the swine flu since its outbreak and was dealing with it in line with recommendations of the World Health organization (WHO). (end) mah.bs KUNA 312341 Jul 09NNNN

Saudi Health Ministry announces two swine flu fatalities

RIYADH, July 31 (KUNA) -- Saudi Health Ministry on Friday announced two deaths resulting from the A (H1N1) virus in the country, raising the number of fatalities to four.
A 32-year-old Saudi male nurse and a 25-year-old man were the fresh victims of the pandemic, the ministry said in a statement.
An Indonesian woman and a Saudi man were announced dead in result of the flu in the last few days.
The ministry reiterated keenness of transparency regarding the disease, stressing that it will continue providing information to the public through media, including developments on the disease and the number of cases detected.
Saudi Health Minister Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeea is slated to hold a press conference tomorrow to brief on latest developments regarding the pandemic. (end) od.hb KUNA 312147 Jul 09NNNN

Indonesia's A/H1N1 infected patients reach 495

The number of A/H1N1 positively infected people in Indonesia has reached 495, with 276 males and 210 females, the private news portal bisnis.com quoted an official as saying on Friday.

According to the Health Ministry's data, Indonesia had new cases of 16 people consisting of 10 males and six females as of Thursday night.

>> click here for full article >>

health care worker fatality H1N1

A cancer nurse at Mercy San Juan Medical Center in Carmichael has died of the H1N1 flu, becoming the first reported health care worker in California killed by the new variant of swine flu.

"We're very concerned that a nurse died," said Jill Furillo of the California Nurses Association, adding that the death underscores the need for strong infection controls to protect nurses and patients.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu hysteria yet to grip nation, but politicians doing their best

Hungary chalked up its first fatality in the global “swine flu” epidemic last Wednesday when an autopsy on a 41-year-old man who died suddenly of pneumonia the previous week revealed that he had been infected with the A(H1N1) strain of the influenza virus.

Chief medical officer Ferenc Falus informed the government of the case. “The patient, a Hungarian national, did not report to a doctor, and the illness was complicated by existing heart and lung conditions,” Falus said. Government spokesman Domokos Szollár said Hungary plans to stockpile influenza vaccine, and would have enough - four million doses - to inoculate all those at risk in time for a nationwide vaccination campaign scheduled to begin in October.


>> click here for full article >>

A(H1N1) and Dengue killer epidemics

Tiong Lai should take leave from MCA party duties to lead a 24/7 national campaign, resign as Health Minister or take leave as Health Minister so that a “full time” Health Minister can provide leadership

It is shocking that instead of leading the national war against the double epidemics of A(H1N1) and dengue, the Health Minister, Datuk Liow Tiong Lai is leading the national blame game with the MCA-owned Star putting him on the front-page headline news blaming “the lack of vigilance by members of the public and even some doctors”.

Let me tell Tiong Lai. Don’t blame others. If you want to blame somebody, blame yourself for failing to provide the needed leadership to mobilize Malaysians to fight the double epidemics as Health Minister.

Liow does not seem to be a Health Minister who is confronted with the two killer epidemics, with A(H1N1) claiming four deaths and recording a total number of 1,302 cases while dengue has killed 64 and recorded 26,446 cases since January, set to break even last year’s worst dengue epidemic of 49,335 cases and 112 casualties.

>> click here for full article >>

Breastfeeding could save 1.3 mln child lives-WHO

* Only 40 percent of children are breastfed to 6 months
* Exclusive breastfeeding helps against diarrhoea, pneumonia
* Pregnant women told to be alert for H1N1 and seasonal flu

GENEVA, July 31 (Reuters) - Teaching new mothers how to breastfeed could save 1.3 million children's lives every year, but many women get no help and give up trying, the World Health Organisation said on Friday. Less than 40 percent of mothers worldwide breastfeed their infants exclusively in the first six months, as recommended by the WHO. Many abandon it because they don't know how to get their baby to latch on properly or suffer pain and discomfort.

>> click here for full article >>

Malang, East Java ::: Islamic school students develop flu symptoms

Malang, East Java – Hundreds of islamic school students of Pondok Pesantren Babussalam developed flu symptoms. Prior to the incident, number of chickens suddenly died around the school’s area, as head of public health center of Pagelaran, dr Rosihan Anwar stated.

However, further examination done by Livestock and Animal Health Service of Kabupaten Malang showed no evidence of bird flu infection to the dead chickens. “Livestock service said that the chickens were negative bird flu infection,” he said.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu stretches doctors to the limit

Published Date: 31 July 2009 SWINE flu calls in South Tyneside have stretched an emergency out-of-hours doctors service to the limit, according to bosses.

Northern Doctors Urgent Care (NDUC) has been dealing with two and a half times the usual number of calls expected for this time of year.

>> click here for full article >>

SWINE FLU HITS MED CRUISE SHIP CREW

Dozens of crew on a cruise ship have been confined to their cabins with suspected swine flu.

Royal Caribbean's Voyager of the Seas arrived in Villefranche-sur-Mer as part of a Mediterranean tour, and local officials allowed the ship's 3,600 passengers to visit the town before it left later for Marseille.
Around 60 crew have been told to stay in their cabins and another 70 are showing flu symptoms.

EU: Airlines can't arbitrarily bar suspected flu sufferers

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union's transport chief said Thursday that airlines cannot arbitrarily bar suspected swine flu sufferers from flights.

Antonio Tajani said existing EU passenger rights mean that sick travelers can demand compensation on top of a full refund or a new flight, if they are not allowed to board a commercial flight in the 27-nation bloc.

>> click here for full article >>

Aantal H1N1 gevallen verdubbeld

vr 31 jul 2009, 12:22 | BILTHOVEN - Er zijn 517 mensen in Nederland besmet met de Mexicaanse griep. Dat heeft het Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu (RIVM) vrijdag laten weten.

Het oproepen van 12-jarige meisjes voor vaccinatie tegen baarmoederhalskanker wordt uitgesteld, vooralsnog tot voorjaar 2010. Dit heeft het ministerie van Volksgezondheid, Welzijn en Sport (VWS) na overleg met
het RIVM en GGD Nederland besloten. Reden is de ontwikkeling rond de Nieuwe Influenza A (H1N1) en de te verwachte belasting van de GGD’en rond de bestrijding van deze griep.
Nieuwe Influenza A (H1N1)

School mogelijk dicht bij griep

vr 31 jul 2009, 07:25 | Den Haag - Nog voor het nieuwe schooljaar begint, moet duidelijk zijn wanneer scholen dicht moeten na uitbraak van de Mexicaanse griep. Een werkgroep werkt aan een landelijke richtlijn.

Nieuwe Influenza A wordt ook wel Mexicaanse Griep genoemd. De ziekte verloopt in de meeste gevallen mild, en is vergelijkbaar met de seizoensgriep. Iemand met Nieuwe Influenza A is gemiddeld een week ziek. Ook zonder medicijnen te gebruiken worden mensen met deze griep meestal weer snel beter.

Voor bepaalde groepen mensen kan deze griep ernstiger verlopen. Heeft u 38 graden koorts of luchtwegklachten (hoesten, kortademigheid, keelpijn)? Neemt u dan telefonisch contact op met uw huisarts. Mensen met koorts en andere griepverschijnselen wordt verzocht thuis te blijven.

Het RIVM houdt er rekening mee dat ongeveer 1 op de 3 tot 1 op de 10 mensen in Nederland Nieuwe Influenza A (H1N1) zal doormaken. De verwachting is dat na de vakantieperiode het aantal besmettingen zal oplopen. De minister van VWS heeft genoeg vaccins besteld voor de gehele Nederlandse bevolking. Het besluit aan wie een vaccinatie tegen de Nieuwe Influenza A (H1N1) aangeboden zal worden, wordt later genomen.
De Gezondheidsraad en het RIVM adviseren de minister hierover.

Babies among swine flu victims as virus takes growing toll

Babies under one year old have been among the victims of swine flu here, it emerged last night, as seven people who fell ill with the virus developed serious complications and have had to be treated in hospital.

Two of the seven people are still critically ill and in intensive care. A third person who was in a serious condition has been moved back to a main ward.

Chief medical officer Dr Tony Holohan said analysis of the first 217 laboratory-confirmed cases has revealed the average age of the victims is 23.

>> click here for full article >>

Zes Nederlandse doden door busongeluk Spanje

vr 31 jul 2009, 05:55|SAN POL DEL MAR - Door een busongeluk in het noordoosten van Spanje zijn donderdagavond laat zes Nederlandse toeristen omgekomen

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Alarmdienst SOS International 0800-0990099



OOK VIJFTIGER IN KRITIEKE TOESTAND

'We hopen allemaal en vechten om hem erdoor te krijgen, maar we moeten nu vooral afwachten', reageert UZ-woordvoerster Ann Segers.

De patiënt wordt beademd met speciale apparatuur. Voorts krijgt hij virusremmers tegen de Mexicaanse griep en antibiotica tegen de longontsteking. De vijftiger ligt ook geïsoleerd van andere patiënten, maar het ziekenhuis neemt voorlopig geen andere maatregelen tegen de Mexicaanse griep.

>> click here for full article >>

Only half VNese provinces, cities have plans to fight super flu

Only 34 out of 63 provinces and cities have worked out A/H1N1 prevention plans, despite the spread of the disease to schools and State offices and the increasing number of cases.

Minister of Health Nguyen Quoc Trieu made the statement at a weekly meeting of the National Steering Committee for A/H1N1 Prevention Wednesday in Ha Noi.

>> click here for full article >>

Taiwan reports first death from H1N1 flu

TAIPEI: Taiwan's health authorities on Thursday reported the island's first death of a patient suffering from H1N1 flu.

The 39-year-old man was hospitalised on July 14 after developing a sore throat and fever, the Centres for Disease Control (CDC) said.

CDC officials said the victim, who had a history of liver cancer and hepatitis, died from a combination of liver problems and H1N1 flu.

Also on Thursday, a local government in southern Taiwan announced the temporary closure of a high school after at least 10 students were confirmed to have contracted the A(H1N1) virus.

Island-wide, five people are considered to have severe cases of H1N1 flu, with three of them, including a six-year-old boy, currently in intensive care.

More than 800 people have been killed around the world and tens of thousands been infected by the A(H1N1) virus, which first surfaced in Mexico. The World Health Organisation has warned that the pandemic is now unstoppable. - AFP/de

2 new moms in Bay Area die from swine flu; concern raised about risk for pregnant women

Swine-flu virus has claimed the lives of two Bay Area women who recently gave birth, adding to the growing body of evidence that pregnancy puts women at increased risk of flu-related hospitalization and death.

News of the deaths comes as the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that pregnant women be among the first to receive a vaccine, when it's available. The CDC also urges that anti-viral drugs like Tamiflu or Relenza be quickly administered to pregnant women with suspected influenza.

>> click here for full article >>

Two recent swine flu deaths were O'ahu men

The two recent deaths related to H1N1, or swine flu, were men with underlying medical conditions that contributed to their deaths, said the state Department of Health.

The men, one in is 20s and another in his 30s died early last week, said Janice Okubo, state DOH spokeswoman. The man in his early 20s died on July 21 at his home and the man in his 30s died on July 22 at a hospital.

>> click here for full article >>

Eilat man dies of swine flu

A 35-year-old man, Shimon Azran, died at the weekend in the Red Sea resort of Eilat.

The health ministry said he died of complications after contracting the virus.

He was said to be "obese and a heavy smoker" and had been suffering from pneumonia.

Medics said he was in the high-risk category of those diagnosed with swine flu.

Mr Azran's family have filed a police complaint against the town's Yoseftal Hospital, claiming that his death was a result of medical negligence.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu Nat, 16, fighting for life

A BRITISH girl was fighting for life in a Greek hospital last night after falling ill with swine flu on holiday.

Natasha Newman, 16, was "critical but stable" on life support after failing to seek medical help for EIGHT DAY

>> click here for full article >>

'Swine flu drug has side-effects'

More than half of children taking Tamiflu suffer side-effects such as nausea, insomnia and nightmares, researchers said.

Two studies from experts at the Health Protection Agency (HPA) showed a "high proportion" of British schoolchildren reporting problems after taking the anti-viral drug.

>> click here for full article >>

Read also Children on Tamiflu suffer nightmares

The most dangerous yet

With more people falling prey to the swine flu virus H1N1 in the past six weeks than has happened with previous flu pandemics over as long as six months, the World Heath Organisation (WHO) has done well to formally declare it the “planet’s fastest moving pandemic”; such a warning was badly needed to alert countries to the looming peril.

Since everyone is immunologically vulnerable to this virus strain, WHO reckons that a staggering two billion people (30 per cent of the world’s population!) may get affected in the next two years

>> click here for full article >>

Man, 62, is third swine flu victim in Ottawa

OTTAWA – Ottawa Public Health is reporting a third death in the city of a person who had the H1N1 flu virus.

A 62-year-old man who tested positive for the virus and had chronic medical conditions died in the past week.

There are 357 confirmed cases of the H1N1 flu virus in Ottawa, half of them in children and teenagers.

Public health officials say 69 people have been admitted to hospital after testing positive for the virus, also known as swine flu.

The Public Health Agency of Canada reported that as of Tuesday, the virus had been linked to 58 deaths in Canada.

Pandemic Influenza 09 Swine Flu - Update 120

The Ministry of Health website http://www.moh.govt.nz/influenza-a-h1n1 contains information to help people and organisations understand and manage pandemic influenza (H1n1) 09 swine flu, including:
• Being prepared
• Signs and symptoms
• Protecting and caring for yourself and others, including babies and young children
• Questions and answers
• Information for:
- Health professionals
- Employers and employees
- Education providers and parents
- Pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers
- Travellers

>> click here for full article >>

Thursday, July 30, 2009

WHO says swine flu may infect 1 bn in 2 yrs

A top World Health Organisation (WHO) official in charge of the H1N1 flu pandemic hinted that the virus could infect as many as 20 to 40 per cent of the global population, or more than 1 billion people, in a year or two.

The global tally of confirmed and reported H1N1 cases as of Wednesday was 175,785, including 1,116 deaths, according to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control.

In an interview with Kyodo News, Keiji Fukuda, acting assistant director general of the UN agency, said it is impossible to give a precise figure but past pandemics show that at least a third of the world’s population may become infected in a year and whether it is 20 per cent or 40 per cent, it would not make much of a difference

>> click here for full article >>

Dies sind die Profiteure der Schweinegrippe

Über 5000 Menschen haben sich in Deutschland mit der Schweinegrippe infiziert, weltweit sind über 150.000 Menschen. Staaten legen Impfprogramme auf, Firmen richten Krisenstäbe ein, auch Privatleute bevorraten Hygieneprodukte. Die Angst steigt – und sie beschert Unternehmen gute Geschäfte.

Die Pharmaindustrie profitiert am meisten von der Schweinegrippe. Seit Jahresanfang hat der Schweizer Hersteller Roche seinen Umsatz mit dem Anti-Virenmittel Tamiflu verdreifacht: auf 1,01 Milliarden Schweizer Franken...

>> click here for full article >>

Seven children confirmed with A/H1N1 at Beijing summer camp

BEIJING, July 30 (Xinhua) -- Seven children from a summer camp in Beijing had been reported to be A/H1N1 positive as of Wednesday, the municipal tourism bureau said Thursday.

The seven were all primary and middle school students, said Ren Jibin, deputy researcher of the administrative office, Beijing Tourism Bureau, without giving further information.

Another 77 people, including seven teachers, seven parents and 63 students aged from eight to 16, who had close contact with the seven had been quarantined, Ren said.

Another 36 students at a special training camp in Beijing were confirmed to have been infected with the A/H1N1 flu, the Beijing municipal health authorities said on July 25. The camp had more than 80 primary school students from across the country staying from July 11 to 20.

Confirmed A/H1N1 flu cases reach to 3,459 in Hong Kong

HONG KONG, July 30 (Xinhua) -- Hong Kong's Department of Health said Thursday that there had been 189 newly confirmed cases of Influenza A/H1N1 in the 24 hours to 2:30 p.m. Thursday, leading to the total cases of the disease in the Chinese region to 3,459 so far.

But the department said that currently just 37 of the confirmed cases are staying in public hospitals for treatment. Among them, 32 cases are in stable condition, one in serious and four in critical condition.

Neighboring Macao also reported seven newly confirmed cases of Influenza A/H1N1 on Thursday, bringing the cumulative number of such cases in the region to 181 so far.

According to Macao's Health Bureau, some 14 patients who tested positive for the A/H1N1 flu virus were still receiving medical treatments at local hospitals, and their health conditions remained stable.

On Thursday evening, Indonesia's Health Ministry stated the Southeast Asian nation has confirmed 35 more persons positively infected by the A/H1N1 virus, putting the total cases to 479 in the country.

Director General of Disease Control and Environmental Health of the Ministry Prof. Dr. Tjandra Yoga Aditama said that three of the newly infected persons were foreigners and the rest were Indonesian citizens.

Indonesia has been hit the hardest by avian influenza virus H5N1, the presence of the A/H1N1 virus has created fears that both viruses could conduct a multiple combine that could create a new type of virus with the speed similar to the A/H1N1 and the severity of attack equal to the H5N1 virus.

According to the World Health Organization, over 800 people have been killed by the A/H1N1 virus so far out of 134,503 cases found over the world.

Feared by the spread of the A/H1N1 virus, Vietnam, another Southeast Asian nation hit hard by the avian influenza virus H5N1,has urged its people to step up prevention against the new flu.

Vietnamese Health Minister Nguyen Quoc Trieu said on Wednesday that only 34 out of 63 municipalities and provinces in the country have A/H1N1 prevention plans despite the fast spread of the disease.

In the past week, the disease has spread to many schools and office buildings across the country, said Trieu. So far, there have been 763 A/H1N1 flu cases reported in the country

The minister required A/H1N1 flu-hit provinces to set up temporary hospitals where they are most needed such as schools, offices and industrial zones.

The Health Ministry planned to buy more Tamiflu and Relenza drugs. It also asked manufacturers and importers to prepare enough medical masks to meet the increasing needs of health staff and the public.

4,000 catch swine flu in past week

Health Protection Scotland have made the estimate. The Health Secretary has said the government will continue to monitor the situation.

More than 4,000 people have contracted swine flu in the past week in Scotland.

Health officials have confirmed that the rate of GP consultations for flu-like symptoms has increased slightly over the past week to 55 from 47 per 100,000.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu deaths rise to 31 in Florida; among latest victims is Palm Beach County woman, 90

Eight more people in Florida have died of swine flu, including a 90-year-old woman from Palm Beach County, the Florida Department of Health announced Thursday.

The other verified victim include a 57-year-old man, a 47-year-old man and a 3-year-old girl in Miami-Dade County, a 59-year-old and 49-year-old man in Broward County, and a 44-year-old man and 49-year-old man in Hillsborough County.

>> click here for full article >>

Eerste dode door Mexicaanse griep in België

30 jul 2009 | BRUSSEL - In België is voor het eerst iemand overleden aan de gevolgen van de Mexicaanse griep. De autoriteiten hebben dat donderdag bekendgemaakt, aldus de Vlaamse publieke omroep VRT.

Het gaat om een vrouw van rond de dertig jaar uit Turnhout, provincie Antwerpen. Ze kreeg de eerste symptomen van de ziekte anderhalve week geleden.

De toestand van de vrouw verslechterde omdat zij een dubbele virale longontsteking ontwikkelde. Die infectie werd haar donderdag fataal.

Ze heeft de Mexicaanse griep niet opgelopen tijdens een verblijf in het buitenland.

In totaal zijn in België 126 mensen besmet met de Mexicaanse griep.

Op 28 juli stond het aantal bevestigde griepgevallen in Nederland op 364. In Nederland is nog niemand overleden aan de Nieuwe Influenza A (H1N1).

Brest: Décès d’une jeune fille de 14 ans porteuse du virus A (H1N1)

ANTE - Selon l'Institut de veille sanitaire, elle était déjà atteinte d'une maladie grave... L'Institut de veille sanitaire (InVS) a annoncé ce jeudi le décès d'une jeune fille de 14 ans atteinte de la grippe A (H1N1) au CHU de Brest. Elle serait morte il y a au moins une semaine, selon la même source.

La patiente souffrait déjà d'une «maladie grave, compliquée d'une autre infection pulmonaire sévère», selon la même source. Il s'agit du premier décès d'une personne touchée par le virus en France.

MIDDLE EAST: Swine flu deaths registered

DUBAI, 30 July 2009 (IRIN) - Three H1N1 2009 deaths were registered in the Middle East over the past 10 days as the world awaits a vaccine, expected to be available in September, according to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) latest briefing note.

On 27 July, Saudi Arabia announced its first death from the virus. The 30-year-old Saudi man was admitted to a private hospital in the eastern city of Dammam on 22 July with a fever and pneumonia but died three days later, despite receiving antibiotics and Tamiflu treatment, according to the Saudi Ministry of Health

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu cases - 110,000 in week

THE number of new swine flu cases hit 110,000 in England last week, the Government said today.

It is a ten per cent rise on the 100,000 cases estimated in previous weeks.

The current number of deaths total linked to the virus in England is 27, while 793 patients are being treated in hospital.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu girl fights for life

Published Date: 30 July 2009
A British schoolgirl is fighting for her life in a Greek hospital after contracting swine flu while on holiday.
Natasha Newman, 16, from Highgate, north London, is in a "critical but stable" condition in Athens after falling ill on the island of Cephalonia.

>> click here for full article >>

Seven in hospital with Swine Flu

SEVEN people are currently in hospital with Swine Flu symptoms north of the Tyne.
South of Tyne, five people are currently in hospital, three in County Durham and Darlington, and 19 in Teesside.

>> click here for full article >>

20 Israelis seriously ill with swine flu

Obstetricians at Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem's Ein Kerem performed a cesarean section to deliver the seven-month-old fetus of a 38-year-old east Jerusalem woman in serious condition due to swine flu complications.

>> click here for full article >>

First death in France from swine flu

Paris. France has reported its first death linked to lethal virus as known as swine flu today, AFP informed.
According to data from the World Health Organization the swine flu death toll rises to over 800 people worldwide.

752 County Swine Flu Cases Reported, 14 Fatal

The number of confirmed cases of swine flu reported in San Diego County since the pandemic began earlier this year stood at 752 Thursday morning, health officials said.A total of 14 of those cases have been fatal, according to the county Health and Human Services Agency.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu 'may have plateaued' in UK

LONDON (AFP) – The swine flu pandemic "may have plateaued" in Britain, health officials said Thursday, estimating some 110,000 new cases last week, only 10 percent higher than the previous week.

The number of deaths in England was 27, just one up on the previous week's toll of 26, said the Health Protection Agency (HPA) in its weekly briefing on swine flu.

>> click here for full article >>

not enough H1N1 vaccine available for every American?

ATLANTA — A panel of health experts laid out a plan on Wednesday for vaccinating certain people first in the likely event that not enough swine flu vaccine will be available to immunize every American in time for the expected surge of cases this fall and winter.

The top priority group, 159 million Americans, or about half the population, would include health care workers and emergency medical responders, because their jobs are critical.

>> click here for full article >>

Group A(H1N1) flu outbreak seen amongst visiting students

TAIPEI, Taiwan -- The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) yesterday confirmed the latest case of a massive outbreak of the A(H1N1) swine flu in Taipei City involving over 20 foreigners in town for a medical symposium.

Only six out of the infected cases tested positive for the disease, but health officials were cited as saying that it is likely that all of them contracted the novel virus.

Because the out-of-town carriers do not have National Health Insurance coverage, each of them paid out of pocket for the entire course of Tamiflu treatment, which cost between NT$2,000 and NT$3,000, said local media.

None of them are hospitalized and they have chosen to recuperate in their hotels, added reports.

The infections were first reported by a medical student from National Yang Ming University, who noticed several students from Hong Kong showing signs of the disease. Two days into the conference, 22 foreign participants exhibited flu-like symptoms, and in response the cases were reported via the 1922 epidemic control hotline.

The conference is still in progress and will largely take place in venues with open spaces, and participants will also be given gauze masks, said conference organizers.

Wang Zong-hsi, a public relations spokesperson for the CDC, lauded the efficient management of the situation by event sponsors. Five-hundred participants were in town for the 8-day Asian Medical Students' Conference.

Meanwhile, the Cabinet-level health department ruled out a possible group infection in Tainan, where 33 students in Tu Cheng High School were verified as not carrying the novel A(H1N1) strain, but rather the common cold, local media reported.The school has decided to suspend summer supplemental classes for three days and has asked those with symptoms to remain at home to prevent further transmission.

Seven new swine flu cases confirmed in Bahrain

Bahrain Health Ministry has confirmed seven new cases of swine flu in the kingdom, taking the total number of cases to 90.

Six Bahrainis and a Jordanian tested positive for the H1N1 virus and were admitted into quarantine at a community health centre, the Gulf Daily News reported.

A 13-year-old girl and two boys aged eight and four from the same Bahraini family were among those admitted after recently returning from Mecca, ministry spokesman Adel Abdulla told the paper.

Two critical in Republic after contracting swine flu

Two patients in the Republic remained critically ill in hospital last night after contracting swine flu.

They include a 30-year-old Slovakian who was put in intensive care in St James's Hospital in Dublin on Friday.

>> click here for full article >>

Expectant Mom Critically Ill from Swine Flu

(IsraelNN.com) An expectant mother, 38, is critically ill from the swine flu virus. The woman is hospitalized at Jerusalem’s Hadassah Ein Kerem Medical Center. However her fetus isn’t in danger. An additional seven Israelis are hospitalized in critical condition from H1N1 influenza, commonly known as swine flu.

Student's swine flu ordeal

A STUDENT quarantined for a week in Egypt after airport officials mistook his fear of flying for swine flu has spoken of his nightmare.

Farhan Malik, 17, was stopped at Sharm El Sheikh airport with a high temperature and held in hospital until tests confirmed he never had the virus.
>> click here for full article >>

Suspected swine flu death probe

Regional health bosses have confirmed they are investigating the death of a middle-aged man in Norfolk from suspected swine flu.

The man, who died on Tuesday, had been prescribed Tamiflu, but it had still not been confirmed last night if he had contracted the H1N1 virus.
>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu: Church bans wine at communion

CHURCHES in Essex have been ordered to ban the consumption of wine at Holy Communion as part of a raft of measures to prevent the spread of swine flu.

The move comes just weeks after the Bishop of Chelmsford, Dr John Gladwin, outlawed the use of holy water when making the sign of the cross in case it helped the potentially fatal disease spread.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu medical centres on standby after more cases in Selby

A NEW swine flu pandemic service was launched by health chiefs this week as more cases of the virus were reported in Selby district.
The Department of Health's dedicated website and phone line is able to tell residents quickly if they have the illness.
>> click here for full article >>

1 In 6 Health Workers Won't Report in Flu Pandemic

Just in case you were counting on them… 16 percent of public health care workers will not report for work in a flu pandemic emergency—regardless of the severity.

The survey published in PLOS ONE was conducted among 1,835 public health workers in Minnesota, Ohio, and West Virginia from November 2006 to December 2007.

>> click here for full article >>

'Volledige bescherming tegen malaria is mogelijk'

wo 29 jul 2009, 23:00 |NIJMEGEN - Volledige bescherming tegen malaria is mogelijk. Dat stellen wetenschappers van het Universitair Medisch Centrum St Radboud (UMC) in Nijmegen na onderzoek met hulp van proefpersonen die zich vrijwillig aan malaria lieten blootstellen.

De vrijwilligers werden besmet met malaria, terwijl zij het antimalariamiddel chloroquine kregen. De onderzoekers constateerden een goede afweerreactie bij de proefpersonen, die geen ziekteverschijnselen vertoonden. Enkele maanden later namen de wetenschappers nogmaals de proef op de som. De vrijwilligers werden opnieuw blootgesteld aan malariaparasieten. Ook nu werden zij niet ziek door de opgebouwde afweerreactie. Volgens de onderzoekers is een groep afweercellen, de zogeheten multifunctionele T-cellen, belangrijk voor de beschermende afweerreactie.

De studie bewijst dat het mogelijk is om op efficiënte wijze volledige bescherming tegen malaria op te bouwen, aldus de wetenschappers, die er een „hoopvol uitgangspunt voor een toekomstig effectief malariavaccin” in zien. De onderzoeksresultaten staan in medisch-wetenschappelijk tijdschrift The New England Journal of Medicine.

Malaria behoort tot de ernstigste infectieziekten in de wereld. Jaarlijks sterven meer dan een miljoen mensen aan de gevolgen van de ziekte. Afrika telt de meeste slachtoffers. Vooral jonge kinderen zijn slachtoffer door het ontbreken van een goede afweerreactie.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Aníbal Fernández says number of H1N1 deaths reported is accurate?

Cabinet Chief Aníbal Fernández said that it is not right for "a group of people, of I don't know what kind of doctors, to end up saying that there are more deaths," referring to claims that the death toll due to the H1N1 virus is higher than the Government says.

Fernández signaled that in cases of diseases such as this one, people "have the obligation to report upon it, because you can not hide this information."

>> click here for full article >>

Grippe A(H1N1) : 1.022 cas confirmés ou probables en France

La France totalisait mercredi 1.022 cas confirmés ou probables, dont 4 cas graves, depuis le début de l'épidémie de nouvelle grippe A(H1N1), selon le dernier point de situation de l'Institut de veille sanitaire (InVS).

"La maladie reste à ce jour bénigne", indique l'InVS. "L'activité grippale en médecine libérale ou à l'hôpital ne montre pas de signe en faveur d'une circulation large du virus dans la population", ajoute-t-il.

>> click here for full article >>

La gripe A ya causó 230 muertes | H1N1 caused 230 deaths

Pese a que los contagios parecen haber ingresado en una curva descendente, la gripe A aumenta su número de víctimas mortales en la Argentina por la confirmación de casos por parte de los ministerios de Salud provinciales. Ayer se notificaron 20 nuevos decesos en siete distritos, por lo que la cifra asciende a 230 personas fallecidas.

Las demoras en las confirmaciones de los casos fatales elevan la cifra en momentos en que se producen menos contagios, según explican las autoridades sanitarias distritales.

El Ministerio de Salud de la Nación, por su parte, mantiene su nómina oficial de muertes en 137 casos, dato emitido por última vez el 14 del actual. Ese día se conoció el fuerte enojo de la presidenta Cristina Kirchner por la difusión de la cantidad de decesos que, en aquella ocasión, llevó a la Argentina a ser el segundo país del mundo respecto del número de muertes por gripe A. La Presidenta recriminó la publicación de esa cifra y, desde entonces, no se conocieron nuevas notificaciones desde el gobierno nacional.

La Capital informó ayer sobre otro deceso, por lo que suman 20 víctimas fatales en este distrito. La provincia de Buenos Aires informó dos nuevos decesos, por lo que la suma total allí es de 79 personas fallecidas.

Google translation

Although the infections appear to have entered a downward trend, influenza A growing number of people killed in Argentina by the confirmation of cases by the provincial ministries of health. Yesterday 20 new deaths were reported in seven districts, the figure rises to 230 people died.

Delays in the confirmation of fatal cases raise the figure at a time when there are fewer infections, explain the district health authorities.

The Ministry of Health of the Nation, for its part, maintains its official list of deaths in 137 cases, data issued last 14 June. That day saw the anger of the strong president Cristina Kirchner at the spread of the number of deaths, in that case led to Argentina to become the second country in the world regarding the number of deaths due to influenza A. The President reproached the publication of this figure, and since then not met new notifications from the national government.

The Capital reported yesterday about another death, so 20 total deaths in this district. The province of Buenos Aires reported two new deaths, so the sum total here is 79 people died.>> click here for full article >>

Interim Guidance for the Detection of Novel Influenza A Virus Using Rapid Influenza Diagnostic Tests

CDC H1N1

This interim guidance provides an overview of the sensitivities of rapid influenza diagnostic tests (RIDT) in detecting novel influenza A (H1N1) virus in order to help guide the reporting and interpretation of test results. This document does not discuss either direct (DFA) or indirect immunofluorescence assays (IFA). This guidance is primarily intended for clinical laboratories and clinical practices conducting influenza testing on respiratory specimens from patients with suspected novel influenza A (H1N1) virus infection. Information on laboratory biosafety is available at: http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/guidelines_labworkers.htm and interim guidance on clinical testing recommendations is available at: http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/specimencollection.htm. Guidance will be updated as needed based on new data.

>> click here for full article >>

Employers prepare for flu pandemic

Although the swine-flu pandemic has not affected Arizona more than an ordinary flu season so far, public-health officials still urge businesses to plan for the possibility of having up to 40 percent of their workers absent this fall and winter.

Businesses should start planning how to maintain critical operations, manage supply disruptions and handle employees who need to stay home and take care of sick family members, said speakers at a Tuesday workshop sponsored by the Arizona Public Health Association.

>> click here for full article >>

CDC To Urge Swine Flu Vaccine For Pregnant Women

Advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are recommending that pregnant women be near the front of the line for swine flu vaccination. Those recommendations are based on new data from the CDC that paint a picture of how the first wave of swine flu affected for pregnant women.

The study, published online Wednesday in the British journal The Lancet, shows that pregnant women infected with the pandemic H1N1 influenza strain have a much higher rate of hospitalization.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu pregnancy alert raised

Pregnant women are four times more likely to be hospitalised with swine flu than the general population, America's public health agency has warned.

In the first two months of the pandemic from mid-April to mid-June there were six deaths from swine flu among pregnant women reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, all of whom were "relatively healthy", the agency said.

There were 34 cases of swine flu among pregnant women within the first month, of whom a third (11) were admitted to hospital.

>> click here for full article >>

Vietnam's highland province reports first H1N1 case

Dau Hoang Anh, 17, a student of Nguyen Khuyen Private High School in Ho Chi Minh City, returned home to Gia Lai last Thursday for the summer vacation.

The school on Tuesday reported 13 infections among students in the city. It was closed last Thursday after several students caught the flu, also known as swine flu.

>> click here for full article >>

Thailand's death toll of the flu jumps to 65 Wednesday

Death toll of the new strain of influenza reached 65 on Wednesday, climbing from 44 last week, Deputy Permanent Secretary for public health Dr Paijit Warachit said.

The infected cases in Thailand jumped from 6,776 to 8,877, he said.

The fatalities were of altogether 27 provinces; 17 from central region, six from northeast, four from north and south each.

The ministry announced in its weekly press conference that there were 44 fatalities.

Paijit said the fatal cases have involved those who have prior medical conditions, those with weak immune system and some who sought treatment late."

Thailand has 3.39 million tablets of Tamiflu in its stock, and the Government Pharmaceutical Organization is producing another 10 million tablets, Paichit said.

The World Health Organization said Monday the worldwide death toll has reached 816 since the start of the outbreak. It has tallied more than 130,000 infections around the world.

Saudi hopes to limit flu spread at haj pilgrimage

29 Jul 2009 15:31:28 GMT Source: Reuters
JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia, July 29 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia says it will use thermal cameras and have more medics on stand-by as part of measures to limit H1N1 flu during the haj pilgrimage but does not expect to stop the spread of the virus completely.

Around 3 million pilgrims from more than 160 countries take part in the haj in the holy city of Mecca most years, including up to 2 million who come from abroad. They mostly arrive by air in Jeddah. On Monday, Saudi Arabia announced its first death from H1N1, a 30-year-old Saudi man in Dammam on the other side of the vast desert country. Saudi Arabia has reported nearly 300 cases.

>> click here for full article >>

Four swine flu patients die

FOUR more people with swine flu have died in New South Wales, bringing the state's toll to 21, health authorities say.

New South Wales Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant confirmed the new deaths today, saying all four people - two men and two women aged between 57 and 71 - had underlying medical conditions.

Dr Chant said they had been at greater risk of developing severe illness from Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza due to their underlying illnesses.

>> click here for full article >>

Helpline taking heat off doctors

Staff at a Stafford Borough GP surgery are encouraging those with mild influenza symptoms and the ‘worried well’ to call a national helpline - leaving local doctors free to assist the most vulnerable victims of swine flu.

Great Haywood’s Hazeledene House surgery received around 60 inquiries last week from patients concerned they had contracted the disease.

Each was called back by a GP from the health centre and given advice, and where appropriate, a prescription for antiviral drug Tamiflu.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu complications hit pregnant women

Pregnant women who get swine flu are at least four times as likely to be hospitalized as other people with the virus, a new study says.

While experts don't know if pregnant women are more susceptible to swine flu, they say once pregnant women are infected, they have a higher risk of complications.

Researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analyzed the first 34 U.S. cases, including six deaths, of swine flu in pregnant women from April to mid-June.

>> click here for full article >>

A New Airport Ritual, Swine Flu Screening

On Tuesday, in response to an article by my colleague Sheryl Gay Stolberg about her daughter’s experience of being “caught in China’s swine flu dragnet,” a reader of NYTimes.com posted a comment with a link to the video embedded below, which he said shows passengers on a flight from the United States being screened for infection on arrival at an airport in Shanghai last month.

According to the person who seems to have shot this short clip, it shows “people in white hazmat suits” who came aboard the plane to “take the temperature of every passenger by way of a laser beam aimed at their foreheads.”

>> click here for full article >>

Quarantaine op voorhand

wo 29 jul 2009, 12:15 | ROTTERDAM - Rotterdamse huisartsenposten hebben griepkamers ingericht waar patiënten kunnen verblijven als ze klachten hebben die op de Mexicaanse griep lijken.

De griepkamer dient als wacht- en behandelkamer. Patiënten die verschijnselen hebben die op de besmettelijke griep duiden, worden op die manier apart gehouden. De huisartsenposten hopen zo besmetting tegen te gaan.

Patiënten met verdachte griepklachten moeten zich eerst telefonisch bij de huisartsenpost melden. „Ze kunnen niet zomaar komen aanlopen en in de gewone wachtkamer gaan zitten”, zegt Pronk. De patiënten krijgen mondkapjes en handschoenen en worden naar de aparte kamer gebracht. Ook de dokter neemt beschermende maatregelen, als hij contact met de mensen heeft.

Volgens de Vereniging van Huisartsenposten Nederland zijn alle huisartsenposten en huisartsen zich aan het voorbereiden op de grote uitbraak van de griep, die dit najaar wordt verwacht. De vereniging benadrukt dat mensen eerst de dokter moeten bellen als ze denken besmet te zijn. Ze mogen zich niet zomaar bij de praktijk melden.

Swine flu ward to open at hospital

A DEDICATED swine flu ward will open at Ipswich Hospital this week to help cope with a possible surge in demand for treatment.

Bramford Ward has been converted into a specialist flu-busting ward with isolated bays and expert staff on hand to tackle the pandemic.

So far the Heath Road hospital has had no patients admitted because of swine flu, but it is keen to prepare for a possible influx later this year.

>> click here for full article >>

Pregnant Women Hit Hard With Swine Flu, Likely to Be Among First to Get Vaccinated

Swine flu has been hitting pregnant women unusually hard, so they are likely to be among the first group advised to get a new swine flu shot this fall.

Pregnant women account for 6 percent of U.S. swine flu deaths since the pandemic began in April, even though they make up just 1 percent of the U.S. population.

On Wednesday a federal vaccine advisory panel is meeting to take up the question of who should be first to get swine flu shots when there aren't enough for everyone. At the top of the list are health care workers, who would be crucial to society during a bad pandemic.

>> click here for full article >>

Hospitals braced for huge surge in swine flu

Health bosses in Bradford are preparing for hospital admissions to rise by up to 50 per cent per week when the first major wave of the swine flu pandemic hits the district.

Directors at NHS Bradford and Airedale estimate there will be 500 to 900 extra hospital admissions a week, The district’s hospitals usually admit about 2,000 patients a week, of which almost 50 per cent are for elective treatment.

>> click here for full article >>

Global trade system raises virus's threat

ATHENS, Ga. --- An international gathering of influenza and immunology experts shared promising research Tuesday on how the immune system reacts to flu and potential new approaches to combating it.

But one public health expert also issued a dire warning about the coming impact of the novel influenza A H1N1 pandemic and potentially devastating disruptions to worldwide trade

>> click here for full article >>

Hygiëne in de Supers - dacht 't wel?

AMSTERDAM - Supermarktmedewerkers, zoals vakkenvullers en cassières, moeten vaker hun handen reinigen om verspreiding van de Mexicaanse griep te voorkomen.

>> click here for full article >>

Hand Hygiene in Healthcare Setting << click for CDC

The hand hygiene guidelines were developed by the CDC's Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee (HICPAC), in collaboration with the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA), the Association of Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC), the Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA)

Israeli scientists fear spreading of more animal-to-human diseases

JERUSALEM, July 28 (Xinhua) -- Israel's health authorities have confirmed that the A/H1N1 flu played a role in the recent death of a 35-year-old resident of the Red Sea resort city of Eilat.

It is the first known death case of this influenza in the country with a population of seven million, but a high number of 1,300 A/H1N1 cases among the some 140,000 cases worldwide.

Scientists in the country say they cannot rule out more deaths in the weeks ahead. The Health Ministry has also looked into the death of a child in central Israel who showed signs of A/H1N1 flu complications, but test results later ruled the virus out as a cause.

>> click here for full article >>

Xinhua News Agency

Influenza cases increase to 9 in Myanmar
A/H1N1 flu death toll in Colombia reaches 13
A/H1N1 flu death toll in Brazil reaches 56
A/H1N1 flu death toll rises to 17 in Ecuador
Macao's A/H1N1 confirmed cases rises to 167
Influenza A/H1N1 cases exceed 3,000 in Hong Kong
632 new A/H1N1 cases confirmed in Europe
New Zealand's influenza A/H1N1-related death toll rises to 13

>> click link for full article >>

Military planning for possible H1N1 outbreak

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The U.S. military wants to establish regional teams of military personnel to assist civilian authorities in the event of a significant outbreak of the H1N1 virus this fall, according to Defense Department officials.

The proposal is awaiting final approval from Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

The officials would not be identified because the proposal from U.S. Northern Command's Gen. Victor Renuart has not been approved by the secretary.

The plan calls for military task forces to work in conjunction with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. There is no final decision on how the military effort would be manned, but one source said it would likely include personnel from all branches of the military.

>> click here for full article >>

2 out of 3 flu deaths in LatAm

SAO PAULO - GOVERNMENTS worldwide are worried about swine flu, but the worst-hit region by far is Latin America, which accounts for around two-thirds of the 816 confirmed deaths so far from the disease.

The outlook is especially unsettling for the estimated 380 million people grappling with winter in South America, where the A(H1N1) virus is speedily propagating.

>> click here for full article >>

Young man with swine flu dies in WA

A 22-year-old man has become the third West Australian to die with swine flu.

The WA Department of Health said the man, who had an underlying medical condition, died in Fremantle Hospital on Tuesday.

WA chief health officer Tarun Weeramanthri said no further details were available at the family's request.

>> click here for full article >>

Call for new blood donors before virus affects supply

Published Date: 29 July 2009
HEALTH officials are preparing for blood supplies to be hit by the flu pandemic as more cases emerge in the winter.
People who are ill, including those with flu, cannot give blood, raising the possibility that if a large number of donors are affected, supplies to the NHS could drop.

>> click here for full article >>

War declared on flu as Haj season nears

JEDDAH: More than 500 companies and establishments providing services to pilgrims and visitors have adopted a number of precautionary measures to protect their employees and customers against swine flu during the Haj and Umrah seasons

>> click here for full article >>

East London district on swine flu frontline

Pharmacies in Tower Hamlets no longer stock Tamiflu: the east London borough has Britain's highest swine flu rate, and the drug is only available at a distribution centre whose address is kept secret.

Up to 400 people flock every day to the centre, near the working-class district's Mile End hospital, which is on the frontline of the swine flu pandemic gripping Britain harder than any other European country.

>> click here for full article >>

All-Ireland quarter off as outbreak fears grow

A SUSPECTED outbreak of swine flu among 21 young GAA players from Ulster has led to the first cancellation of an All-Ireland fixture due to fears over the global flu pandemic.

The GAA last night confirmed that the crucial ESB Minor Championship Quarter Final between Dublin and Co Down scheduled for Saturday at Kingspan Breffni Park has been postponed after 21 players came down with flu-like symptoms following a training session last Tuesday.

>> click here for full article >>

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Tuesday in Australia: almost 2,000 new cases

So, the Department of Health and Ageing caught up with their weekend backlog and published 1,965 new cases in their daily H1N1v update. If it were a real 24 hours worth it would be alarming, but it’s clearly to make up for the under-reporting of the last few days (see yesterday’s post).

With this update the 7 day moving average has snapped back to its steadily increasing trend. It’s now 713 – the largest number yet. Hospitalisations remain steady – at their recent record highs.

>> click here for full article >>

Mexico: 142 deaths

Crofs H5N1

Via El Economista: Suben a 142 muertes por influenza humana en México. [Mexico's deaths from influenza rise to 142.] Excerpt, with my translation:

La Secretaría de Salud informó que del 21 al 28 de julio aumentaron de 14,861 casos de Influenza AH1N1 confirmados a 16,019, lapso en el que se incrementaron las muertes de 138 a 142.

The Health Secretariat reports that from July 21 to 28, confirmed cases of H1N1 rose from 14,861 to 16,019, and deaths rose from 138 to 142.

En su reporte semanal, detalló que de las 142 defunciones, 50.7% eran mujeres y 49.3% hombres, de los cuales, el 70.4% tenía entre 20 y 54 años de edad.

In its weekly report, it said that of the 142 deaths, 50.7% were women and 49.3% were men, and 70.4% were between 20 and 54 years of age.

Asimismo, señaló que en todas las entidades se registran casos de contagio, siendo Chiapas la que concentra el mayor número de enfermos, seguido por Yucatán, Distrito Federal, Jalisco, Tabasco, Veracruz y Guerrero.

As well, it reported that all Mexican states have recorded cases, with Chiapas having the most number, followed by Yucatán, the Federal District, Jalisco, Tabasco, Veracruz and Guerrero.

Three Collier jail inmates test positive for swine flu

— Three inmates in the Naples Jail Center of the Collier County jail have tested positive for swine flu and are being treated under isolation, according to Collier County officials.

In addition to the three inmates who tested positive, four other inmates who have flu-like symptoms are being treated in isolation.

The Sheriff's Office said it is taking all steps possible to reduce the likelihood of additional cases. None of the symptomatic inmates have needed to be hospitalized, officials said.

Sheriff's press release

Here is the text of a news release from the Collier County Sheriff's Office:

Three inmates in the Naples Jail Center have tested positive for the H1N1 (swine flu) virus. The Collier County Sheriff's Office has taken all steps possible to reduce the likelihood of additional cases at the facility.

The inmates are being treated under medical isolation, as are four additional inmates who are displaying flu-like symptoms. None of the symptomatic inmates have required hospitalization. In addition, because they are being cared for in the NJC medical facility they have access to round-the-clock care.

In accordance with agency protocol and guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, all areas of the facility that these individuals have come into contact with have been sanitized and staff and inmates have been provided with information reminding them of hand washing and other measures that can help them avoid coming down with the flu. In addition, CCSO has been working closely with the Collier County Health Department on thi s matter.

Because visitation at the NJC is accomplished via video rather than face-to-face contact, visitation is not being affected.

Test results confirming the H1N1 virus were received Tuesday.

The CDC recommends that people:

• Wash hands frequently.

• Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth.

• Avoid close contact with anyone who is sick.

• Stay home for seven days or until symptoms subside if you have flu-like symptoms, which include a fever, cough or sore throat.

For more information on the H1N1 virus go to www.collierprepares.org

'Lovable' diabetic mom's swine flu death shocks family

PAHOKEE - — Family members were stunned by how quickly Onetta Willis, a mother of three and longtime state government employee, sickened and succumbed to swine flu before dying this month, her uncle said today.

"It was a shock," said Lamar Mullins, Willis' uncle. "She wasn't sickly. It seemed like it just happened."

He said Willis suffered from diabetes but controlled it with medication. He said he knew of no other health problems that she had.

"She never appeared to be sick ever to me," he said.

>> click here for full article >>

MOH to run swine flu adverts on radio, TV

The Ministry of Health says it will soon start running radio and TV adverts and stick posters to sensitize people on swine flu.

And the Ministry has described as stable the condition of the four victims who were recently diagnosed with swine flu in the country.

Ministry’s Spokesperson, Reuben Mbewe, said in an interview with ZANIS in Lusaka today that the adverts are aimed at sensitizing the general public on the dangers of the pandemic, how it is transmitted and how to prevent it.

Dr Mbewe said the ministry has taken major precautions against the virus and is working in partnership with the World Health Organisation (WHO) and other donors to ensure that the country is safe from the pandemic.

He said WHO has since given the country masks and over 1,000 dosages to treat the virus although there is no vaccine against it yet.

Dr Mbewe said the committee on swine flu that was recently formed under the Ministry of Health is meeting regularly to counter check and ensure that the pandemic is put under control.

He further said that three out of the four victims who were diagnosed with the disease in Zambia are quarantined in a camp in Ndola while the other is with relatives in one of the farms in Lusaka.

Dr Mbewe said that the victims are being monitored by his ministry if case of any latest development

A total of 816 people have died of swine flu worldwide, while some 100,000 more have been affected by the influenza ) virus, also known as H1N1.

Studentensteden wapenen zich tegen griep

UTRECHT - Studentensteden in Nederland nemen maatregelen om de verspreiding van Mexicaanse griep tijdens de introductieweken te voorkomen. De Utrechtse Introductie Tijd (UIT) voert momenteel intensief overleg met de GG en GD over de ziekte. „Er is overleg over een protocol en we laten ons goed informeren” zegt Malou van Bentum van UIT.

De website van UIT zwijgt echter in alle talen, niets met betrekking tot dit overleg wordt openbaar gemaakt op deze site. Wellicht toch om te voorkomen dat de studenten massaal wegblijven?

>> click here for full article >>

Malaysia reports third case of A/H1N1 flu death

KUALA LUMPUR, July 28 (Xinhua) -- Malaysia reported its third case of death of the A/H1N1 flu here on Tuesday.

This was also reportedly the first case of death resulted by a local transmission of the virus.

The third victim, a 42-year-old man, died on Monday at a private hospital here, according to the Malaysian Health Ministry.

The two earlier deaths, both imported cases of the virus involved a Malaysian man, 46, who died on July 26 and an Indonesian student, 30, who died on July 21.

Malaysian Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai said the third victim had died of severe pneumonia with multi-organ failure after receiving treatment for 10 days in a private hospital since July 18.

>> click here for full article >>

First swine flu death in Kingdom

RIYADH: The Ministry of Health announced Monday the first swine flu death in the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia is now the third country in the region after Egypt and Israel to report a swine flu fatality.

“The victim, a Saudi male, 30, was admitted to Al-Mouwasat Private Hospital in Dammam at 6 p.m. Wednesday with complaints of high fever, continuous coughing and severe throat pain due to advanced bronchitis,” Health Ministry spokesman Dr. Khalid Al-Mirghalani said.

He added that on admission, the man was treated with tamiflu and intravenous antibiotics. “Eight hours after admission, the doctors found the patient’s condition worsening and he was moved to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) of the hospital where he was placed in a ventilator.” The patient died Saturday at 5:55 a.m. in the ICU.

His name is being withheld in deference to his family’s wishes.

Al-Mirghalani said that the dead man had contracted the disease from frequently visiting an infected individual. Besides the immediate reasons for admitting the flu victim to the hospital, he said the patient was obese and had severe breathing difficulties. Clinical tests by the ministry confirmed that the deceased was suffering from H1N1, Al-Mirghalani added.

On behalf of ministry officials, Health Minister Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, who is also the chairman of the National Committee to Combat Swine Flu, sent a message of condolence on Monday to the bereaved family.

Al-Mirghalani said the ministry had alerted all health departments in the Kingdom to take extra precautions. He said the people should follow Health Ministry guidelines, which are in line with those of the World Health Organization. Washing one’s hands before touching one’s eyes and nose and covering the nose and mouth while sneezing or coughing are necessary precautions against the infection.

The ministry called on the public not to panic because of the death. The rate of death from swine flu is still well below that from common flu.

Since May 27, more than 300 patients have been affected by the flu in Riyadh, Dammam, Jeddah, Makkah and Madinah. More than 95 percent of the flu victims have recovered, according to a statement by the Ministry of Health.

Considering the arrival of pilgrims during Ramadan, the national committee is currently implementing a separate program for Umrah and Haj pilgrims who will visit the holy cities of Makkah and Madinah.

A quarantine facility has been set up at airport arrival lounges to separate Haj and Umrah pilgrims, who show swine flu symptoms. The Ministry of Health has stockpiled adequate quantities of tablets and vaccines to treat swine flu patients.

Copper to fight swine flu!

LONDON (Commodity Online): You must have heard about copper’s qualities to fight bacteria and in old days Indians used to store drinking water in copper vessels before the water purifiers and plastic cans arrived.

Now, another quality of the wonder metal copper has come out. Copper can fight swine flu, or the H1N1 influenza.

Copper is quite effective in inhibiting the influenza A H1N1 virus.

According to a study, copper appears to have a broad spectrum in antiviral activity due to its effectiveness against RNA (Ribonucleic acid)-based influenza and DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid)-based adenovirus 40/41, which causes gastrointestinal infections.

Bill Keevil, professor at the University of Southampton’s School of Biological Sciences, said he believed copper could be used to reduce the spread of flu in public places.

With the ongoing threat of contamination by influenza A virus, such as H1N1, there is a real and pressing need to utilise all appropriate and effective measures with proven antimicrobial qualities, said Keevil.

It is recognised that many infectious diseases are contagious and studies have now shown that the use of copper as a surface material in key public places such as hospitals and food preparation areas offers the potential to substantially restrict and reduce the spread of harmful infections.

The influenza aspect of the study involved a series of experiments testing incubation of influenza A on copper and stainless steel surfaces.

Results showed that after incubation for one hour on copper, 75 per cent of the virus was eradicated. Similar inactivation rates have now been observed for adenovirus 40/41.

The study has contributed further to the understanding of copper’s antimicrobial qualities, which actively inhibit the growth of bacteria, fungi and viruses, said a University of Southampton release.

With copper’s new role in swine flu treatment coming to light, will the prices of copper go up?

Advies over vaccinatie Mexicaanse Griep op komst

DEN HAAG - Het Centrum voor Infectieziektebestrijding (CIb) en de Gezondheidsraad presenteren naar verwachting half augustus een advies over welke groepen het eerst moeten worden gevaccineerd tegen de Mexicaanse Griep. Een woordvoerder van minister Ab Klink (Volksgezondheid) heeft dat dinsdag gezegd.

>> click here for full article >>

Swine flu closes 183 schools

A total of 371 students have been reported infected with the H1N1 flu virus nationwide, the Education Ministry reported Tuesday.

Education Minister Jurin Laksanavisit said 183 schools in the country were closed at the moment to prevent the spread of the virus.

However no decision had been made to close all schools in Ratchaburi, as suggested, to help curtail the rapid spread of the virus in the province, which reported the world's first known case of a foetus being infected with the flu by its mother.

Each school would continue to exercise its own judgement, he said.
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Saudi Arabia, Israel report first deaths from swine flu

A Saudi man has died after being struck down by H1N1 influenza, the health ministry said yesterday, the first such death in a country set to welcome vast numbers of Muslim pilgrims later this year.

The 30-year-old man was admitted to a private hospital in Dammam in eastern Saudi Arabia on Wednesday with a fever and pneumonia. He died on Saturday from H1N1, despite treatment with antibiotics and the anti-viral drug Tamiflu, the ministry said.

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Swine flu could become resistant to Tamiflu

Swine flu could become resistant to Tamiflu, the only drug that can treat the virus, because it is being over-prescribed, a leading doctor has warned.

Dr Holden, the British Medical Association's lead authority on pandemic flu, said he thought the thresholds for issuing Tamiflu had been set too low, a policy which he fears will come back to haunt the Department of Health if the H1N1 virus becomes resistant to Tamiflu

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SWINE FLU VICTIM SPEAKS OF HER ORDEAL

A Banbridge swine flu victim has spoken of how the virus made her hallucinate and how she was quarantined for a number of days to stop the potentially lethal disease from spreading.

Eighteen-year-old Emma McIntyre-Barnes from The Rowans in Banbridge discovered she had the illness after returning home from the Oxegen music festival in Punchestown, which ran from July 10-12.
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Lords criticise government handling of swine flu outbreak

The government was today criticised by the House of Lords science and technology committee for delays in setting up the national pandemic flu service (NPFS) and failing to test the whole UK response to a pandemic before it began.

In an incisive report into the state of the nation's preparedness for the pandemic, the committee says it has "significant concerns" about the delays and "invites the government to provide a more detailed explanation of the reason".

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Pregnancy likely to be swine flu shot priority

ATLANTA (AP) -- Swine flu has been hitting pregnant women unusually hard, so they are likely to be among the first group advised to get a new swine flu shot this fall.

Pregnant women account for 6 percent of U.S. swine flu deaths since the pandemic began in April, even though they make up just 1 percent of the U.S. population.

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Kwart verpleegkundigen wil geen vaccinatie H1N1

AMSTERDAM - Eén op de vier verpleegkundigen wil niet gevaccineerd worden tegen de Mexicaanse griep (Nieuwe Influenza A)

Dit blijkt uit een poll die Nursing Platform voor verpleging en verzorging, onlang op haar website hield. Opvallend resultaat was dat bijna een kwart (24,6%) van de verpleegkundigen geen vaccinatie tegen de Mexicaanse griep wil krijgen.

Bijna een kwart (24,6%) van de verpleegkundigen wil geen vaccinatie tegen de Mexicaanse griep krijgen. Ten slotte weet 21,9% nog niet of ze een inenting wil. In totaal stemden 598 personen. Waarschijnlijk zal het vaccin tegen Mexicaanse griep in september klaar zijn. Tot die tijd wordt verpleegkundigen geadviseerd om bij koorts thuis te blijven.

Filipino maid dies from swine flu

Hong Kong - A 37-year-old Filipino maid has died from swine flu, the first person without any underlying health problems to die from the virus in Hong Kong, a media report said Tuesday.

The woman arrived in Hong Kong on June 28 and developed a sore throat and fever the following day but did not visit a doctor until more than a week later, the South China Morning Post newspaper said.

Thai baby born infected with swine flu

Thai health officials said on Tuesday that a baby had been born in Thailand with H1N1 swine fu having contracted the virus while still in the womb.

The baby was born prematurely on Saturday, when doctors decided to deliver it by caesarean section seven months into the pregrancy of a 24-year-old mother who was found to be infected with the flu virus
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Pregnant swine flu patient may lose baby

A young Dubai mother may lose her unborn baby after being diagnosed with swine flu, it has been reported.

The 25-year-old Emirati women, who is five and a half months pregnant, is suffering from pneumonia and is currently in a medicated coma at Welcare Hospital, Gulf News reported.

"Doctors at Welcare have told us that it's a 50:50 chance that she might lose the baby; they say that it is in critical but stable condition," her brother Mohammad told the paper.

Three swine flu cases confirmed in Kerala

Thiruvananthapuram, Jun 28, 2009 (Asia Pulse Data Source via COMTEX) -- In first confirmed cases of swine flu in southern state of Kerala, three persons, two of them women, tested positive for the A(H1N1) virus Sunday.

Of these, a 53-year-old woman and her 24-year-old son had arrived at the Nedumbassery Airport in Kochi on June 24 from Britain while another woman reached Karippur Airport in Kozhikode from Dubai the same day.

The National Institute of Communicable Diseases, to where their throat swab samples were sent for analysis, had telephonically informed the hospitals where they had been quarantined that these patients had tested positive for H1N1, Director of Health Services Dr Shylaja told PTI.

All on planet at risk

GENEVA - THERE may be no escape from H1N1 pandemic flu, which according to the latest World Health Organisation figures has spread to the most remote parts of the planet including popular island getaways.

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East London district on swine flu frontline

LONDON (AFP) – Pharmacies in Tower Hamlets no longer stock Tamiflu: the east London borough has Britain's highest swine flu rate, and the drug is only available at a distribution centre whose address is kept secret.

Up to 400 people flock every day to the centre, near the working-class district's Mile End hospital, which is on the frontline of the swine flu pandemic gripping Britain harder than any other European country.

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H1N1 Rabbits

di 28 jul 2009, 07:10|AMSTERDAM - Medicijnproducenten zijn op zoek naar honderden Nederlanders om als proefpersoon te dienen voor een nieuw vaccin tegen de Mexicaanse griep.

Het Zwitserse bedrijf Novartis, een van de twee leveranciers van de 34 miljoen Nederlandse inentingen, heeft opdracht gegeven komende maand in ons land te beginnen met een test van het vaccin, meldt het AD. Volgens griepexpert Ab Osterhaus zijn de risico's voor de proefpersonen klein.

Warum die Schweinegrippe ein Glücksfall ist

Für die Schweinegrippe kramen die Behörden ihre Katastrophenpläne heraus. Während die Fallzahlen auch in Deutschland steigen, zeigt sich, dass die Gefährlichkeit des Pandemie-Virus' bei Weitem überschätzt ist. H1N1 ist ein mildes Virus – eine gute Gelegenheit, in Deutschland den Ernstfall zu proben.

Die Schweinegrippe greift um sich, wie es zu erwarten war – in dieser Woche dürften in Deutschland mehr als 4000 Krankheitsfälle offiziell registriert worden sein.

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Disturbing news from Vietnam


Via Look At Vietnam.com, a report that seems like just another swine-flu story. But the real story is buried at the end: Ministry cautions about swine flu spread on public vehicles. The real story:

The deputy director of the Department of Preventive Health in the central province of Ha Tinh, Nguyen Luong Tam, confirmed July 26 that a 30-year-old man died of bird flu at the General Hospital.

Vo Cong Tam had been rushed to hospital the previous day with pneumonia, high fever, headache, muscular and joint pain, cough, breathing difficulty, and vomiting. Doctors diagnosed him as having avian influenza and isolated him.

They found his lung to be seriously damaged. He died on July 26. Health workers later found diseased poultry at Mr.Tam’s house.

He also had contact with a relative, Ms. Nguyen Thi Dao, a teacher at Ngo Thoi Nhiem private High School in District 9 where 73 students and five teachers have contracted swine flu.

So Vietnam has had another bird-flu death, but in connection with an H1N1 outbreak. I hope the Vietnamese experts are testing all concerned, including the unfortunate H5N1 victim, for both viruses.

From Croft | H5N1

Five S.F. cops believed to have swine flu

(07-27) 14:05 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- Five San Francisco police officers have become ill after one of them was apparently exposed to swine flu during a trip last week to Mexico, authorities said today.

The five all work at the department's Northern Station on Fillmore Street. Capt. Al Casciato, head of the station, said all the officers believed to have the H1N1 virus work the same shift.

One of the officers returned from his trip to Mexico on Wednesday, and two days later he and other officers started showing symptoms, Casciato said. One of the officers went to the doctor and was tentatively diagnosed with the illness.

Casciato said police started a "precautionary cleaning" of the station over the weekend. Patrol cars are also being scrubbed.

The five officers have been told to stay home this week and must be cleared by the department's doctor before they can return.

"Right now, everybody is healthy," Casciato said. "The ones who were sick are feeling better."

Sixth South Australian swine flu death

A SIXTH person with swine flu has died in South Australia, health authorities say.

The 73-year-old woman had severe underlying medical conditions in addition to swine flu, SA Health's chief medical officer Paddy Phillips said in a statement today.

The woman died in the Royal Adelaide Hospital on last night, he said.

The number of confirmed swine flu cases in SA is now 1837.

Over 800 dead of swine flu worldwide: WHO

A total of 816 people died of swine flu worldwide, with most of the deaths occurring in South America, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said Monday.

So far, 707 people have died in the Americas, 44 in South-East Asia, 34 in Europe, 30 in the Western Pacific region and one in the Eastern Mediterranean region, the UN agency said.

In addition, more than 20 countries such as Afghanistan, Belize, Bhutan, Botswana, Haiti, Namibia, Sudan, Tanzania, and Solomon Islands, among others, have confirmed swine flu cases since July 6.

A total of 134,503 people worldwide have been affected by the influenza A(H1N1) virus, also called swine flu, so far. The actual figure may be much higher, as countries are no longer required to report swine flu cases, WHO said.

Canada natives fear swine flu spread in coming months

Canada's native communities already hard hit by the swine flu pandemic could witness a devastating spike in the number of cases during the region's long winter months ahead, health experts warn.

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