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Saturday, September 29, 2012

WHO says only severely ill should be tested for new virus


Sep 29, 2012 - 19:47
By Kate Kelland

LONDON (Reuters) - Doctors should only test people for a new virus if they are very ill in hospital with a respiratory infection, have been in Qatar or Saudi Arabia and test negative for common forms of pneumonia and infections, the World Health Organisation said on Saturday.

The newly discovered virus from the same family as SARS has so far been confirmed in only two cases worldwide, one in a 60-year-old Saudi man who died from his infections, and another in a man from Qatar who is critically ill in a London hospital.

In updated guidance issued six days after it put out a global alert about the new virus, the WHO said suspected cases should be strictly defined to limit the need to test people with milder symptoms.

But it added anyone who has been in direct contact with a confirmed case and who has any fever or respiratory symptoms should also be tested.

The WHO said in a statement its new case definition was designed "to ensure an appropriate and effective identification and investigation of patients who may be infected with the virus, without overburdening health care systems with unnecessary testing."




The United Nations health agency said on Sunday a new virus had infected a 49-year-old Qatari who had recently travelled to Saudi Arabia, where another man with an almost identical virus had died.

The virus is from a family called corona viruses, which also includes viruses that cause the common cold and SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, which emerged in China in 2002 and killed around a tenth of the 8,000 people it infected worldwide.

INTENSIVE CARE

A spokeswoman for Britain's Health Protection Agency, where scientists analysing samples from the Qatari man found a match with the fatal Saudi case last weekend and reported their finding to the WHO, said on Saturday the 49-year-old was still in intensive care.

He is being cared for at St Thomas's hospital, where he has been connected to an artificial lung to keep him alive.

The WHO says there is so far no evidence to suggest the potentially fatal virus spreads easily from person to person. Scientists say the genetic makeup of the virus suggests it may have come from animals, possibly bats.

The WHO has been collaborating with laboratories such as the HPA and another lab in the Netherlands which were responsible for the confirmation of new virus.

"These laboratories have been working on the development of diagnostic reagents and protocols which can be provided to laboratories that are not in a position to develop their own, and these are now available," it said.

But it stressed only patients who fulfilled strict criteria - including having severed respiratory syndrome, requiring hospitalisation, having been in Qatar or Saudi Arabia or in contact with a suspected or confirmed case, and having already been tested for pneumonia.

"The essence is that this is not for people with coughs and colds,
" WHO spokesman Glenn Thomas told Reuters.

Six suspected cases in Denmark last week turned out to be false alarms and Thomas said it was important "to alleviate the burden of testing" by ensuring health authorities and members of the public understand the criteria for a suspected case.  http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/news/international/WHO_says_only_severely_ill_should_be_tested_for_new_virus.html?cid=33621272

China Quarantine intensified to block new virus' entry





 BEIJING - China's top quarantine authority on Saturday ordered a three-month intensifiedquarantine to prevent the entry of a new type of coronavirus.
In a statement on its websitethe General Administration of Quality SupervisionInspection andQuarantine demanded boosting body temperature monitoring and other medical inspections ontravelers from BritainSaudi Arabia and Qatarafter the World Health Organization (WTOsaidthe new virus has left a Qatari citizen in critical condition in London.
The administration also requires travelers from the three nations to inform China's entry-exitinspection and quarantine institutions if they develop acute respiratory symptoms such asfevercough or shortness of breath.
Coronavirus is a large family of viruses that includes viruses that cause the common cold andsevere acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
The 49-year-old Qatari man began showing symptoms on Sept 3, and he had traveled to SaudiArabia prior to the onset of illnessHe was transferred to Britain on Sept 11, and laboratorytests there confirmed the presence of a novel coronavirusaccording to the WHOhttp://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-09/29/content_15793588.htm?

WHO does not advise special screening at points of entry


Novel coronavirus infection - update - revised interim case definition

 WHO has continued to monitor the situation. No additional confirmed cases have been reported and there is no evidence so far of person to person transmission of the novel coronavirus.
In order to ensure an appropriate and effective identification and investigation of patients who may be infected with the virus, without overburdening health care systems with unnecessary testing, a revised interim case definition has been issued by WHO (see related links to right of this page). It should be noted that this case definition was developed based on data from two confirmed cases and as such some degree of clinical judgment is required where individual cases are concerned.
WHO has been cooperating closely with the laboratories which were responsible for the confirmation of the presence of the novel coronavirus in the two confirmed cases. These laboratories have been working on the development of diagnostic reagents and protocols which can be provided to laboratories that are not in a position to develop their own, and these are now available. WHO is now seeking to broaden the number of laboratories that will be able to assist Member States with the detection or confirmation of this novel virus.
WHO has received offers of support from a number of major public health institutions around the world to assist with testing, should the need arise. The complete nucleic acid sequence of the virus has been uploaded to Genbank and the testing protocol, utilizing real-time PCR, has been published.
WHO does not advise special screening at points of entry with regard to this event nor does it recommend that any travel or trade restrictions are applied.
WHO continues to inform its Member States through the designated National Focal Points under the International Health Regulations (2005). http://www.who.int/csr/don/2012_09_29/en/index.html

German officials count 8,400 kids affected by food-borne illness



Saturday, Sep. 29, 2012 12:00PM EDT 
BERLIN -- German health authorities say the number of children that have fallen ill with vomiting and diarrhea after eating food from school cafeterias and daycare centres has risen from about 4,500 to 8,400.
Authorities in Berlin and the surrounding eastern German states reported the new gastroenteritis cases Saturday, while laboratory investigations to determine the exact cause of the outbreak were still under way.
Berlin's health department says the sicknesses are moderate and most children recover within two days without requiring to be hospitalized.
In Saxony state, at least 16 cases of norovirus, a mostly food- or water-borne illness, were proven, according to German news agency dapd.
The government-affiliated Robert Koch Institute said Friday that all facilities where the illness occurred likely received food from a single supplier.


Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/health/german-officials-count-8-400-kids-affected-by-food-borne-illness-1.976707#ixzz27sZN09xO

Friday, September 28, 2012

W.H.O to declare Uganda Ebola free


W.H.O to declare Uganda Ebola free
Following Yesterday’s Plea from the Muslim Community with the fear of not going for Pilgrimage until the Country is declared Ebola free. The Ministry of Health has today spoken out that it will officially declare an end to the outbreak on the 4th of October after completing what is has called the 42 days of post Ebola Surveillance phase. The Ministry also implies that this period of time is a prerequisite of the World Health Organisation


Video  

Germany Disease with diarrhea and vomiting wave spreads

More than 6000 children affected

Disease with diarrhea and vomiting wave spreads

Food distribution in a school (Photo: AP)Enlarge ImageThe children apparently infected by the school lunches.The wave of gastrointestinal disorders meets more and more children and young people in East Germany. More than 6000 patients who continue to suffer from diarrhea and vomiting cafeteria food were, according to media Specifying now registered in Saxony, Thuringia, Berlin, Brandenburg and Saxony-Anhalt.
The cause of one of the largest national gastrointestinal disease waves of recent years is still open, a spokeswoman for the Robert Koch Institute (RKI). In Berlin, the authorities have norovirus and natural poisons (toxins) as a possible causative agent in sight. From the perspective of the German Society for Hospital Hygiene salmonella or norovirus could be the cause of the disease. "In any case, it must have given hygiene errors in production," board member Klaus-Dieter Zastrow said, referring to the food....

Germany- Noroviruses or school lunches - diarrhea cause still unclear



Search for the cause is a race against time - There are conflicting hypotheses

Chemnitz. In the search for the cause of the wave of vomiting and diarrhea in schools in Saxony, Thuringia, Brandenburg and Berlin, the authorities are still groping in the dark. Saxony Health Ministry announced on Friday that there was a "first sign of norovirus" as the cause. When Berlin's Robert Koch Institute (RKI), which is investigating the nationwide expansion of the disease wave, however, argue that this is cause for very unlikely.
Seasons Because it is not unreasonable that are currently found among the more than 6500 patients nationwide sporadic norovirus sufferers RKI spokeswoman Susanne Glasmacher said Friday the "Free Press". Each year we counted over 100,000 norovirus cases in Germany. The transmitted from person-to-person infection does not explain, however, the current dimension of the simultaneous outbreak of diseases. "That does not lay within two hours flat entire school classes," judged the RKI spokeswoman. As before, you go out of a food-borne infection, since many of the affected facilities were supplied by the same food suppliers. The supplier in question has a responsibility according to internal investigations so far by itself, has tightened its hygiene standards, but by its own account.
The Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety now coordinates the research on the origin and distribution channels of the food. At the country level official run laboratory tests of food samples. In Thuringia, where the State Office of foodstuffs examined samples from the menus suspected standing service, results were still pending yesterday...  http://www.freiepresse.de/NACHRICHTEN/TOP-THEMA/Noroviren-oder-Schulessen-Durchfall-Ursache-noch-unklar-artikel8109910.php

Canadian doctors to combat Ebola outbreak in the DRC


The Canadian Press
Published Friday, Sep. 28, 2012 2:33PM EDT 
WINNIPEG -- The Public Health Agency of Canada says a team of specialists will soon be en route to the Democratic Republic of Congo to help combat a deadly Ebola outbreak.
The National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg will deploy one of its mobile units to the country which has been reeling from the outbreak since May.
Chief of special pathogens Dr. Gary Kobinger says a team of three scientists will be on the ground to help diagnose and treat Ebola cases as they arise.
It's the latest of several international relief missions for the NML, which has sent one of its mobile units out into the field about once a year for the past decade.
The lab has been sent to Congo twice before to help with outbreaks in the impoverished African country.
The World Health Organization says there have been at least 51 confirmed cases during the most recent outbreak, 20 of which have been fatal. Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/canadian-doctors-to-combat-ebola-outbreak-in-the-drc-1.975735#ixzz27o2cRFaq

Thousands of children suffer from gastrointestinal infectionauthorities fear noro-virus outbreak in the East...


The mass occurrence of gastrointestinal infections in children still ensures guesswork. Meanwhile, the number of patients has increased to 6700 - in Berlin alone there are 2500 cases. The Ministry of Health has set up a task force.
The Social Ministry in Erfurt confirmed that in the contaminated school lunches all suggest the existence of the highly contagious noro virus . Federal and state governments established a joint coordination and investigation team.

Noro virus or poison?

In Berlin alone had until Friday afternoon, according to the state health secretary Emine Demirbüken-Wegner (CDU) 2176 known cases of disease - so has the number of people affected has more than doubled. One child was treated on Friday still in the hospital.Affected in the capital, a total of 58 schools and 22 kindergartens. . A school and a day care center remained closed on Friday , the Berlin Infection Protection Commissioner Marlen Suckau According to trigger the wave of infection two theses were in the room: Norovirus or a toxin. The final outcome is not yet available, it is determined in all directions. The Secretary of State for Health, Emine Demirbüken-Wegner (CDU) showed its concern: "We are investigating to feverishly, what it is." She stressed, however, that this did not constitute serious illnesses. In two weeks, the management expects results.



Several thousand children sick in four East German states

In Saxony until Friday afternoon around 2000 cases were announced in eleven counties, such as the Ministry of Health announced in Dresden. 17 schools and high schools have so far been closed as a precaution. Brandenburg from 1749 cases were reported. In Thuringia, were, according to the Ministry of Social Affairs to Friday morning reported 764 illnesses in 34 facilities - is still rising. Three of the four children who had to be hospitalized in the past few days could have been turned into fired. The disease wave with vomiting and diarrhea Tuesday evening had begun.

Catering company denies the blame

According to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), all cases are due to cafeteria food in schools and child care facilities that are apparently supplied by the same supplier with food. "So, everything points to a foodborne outbreak," said RKI spokeswoman Susanne Glasmacher.
This catering company Sodexo refused the responsibility. There was "still no logical connection between the suppliers and the reported cases of illness" that suggested food supplies as the cause, the company said on Friday in Rüsselsheim. Only a small part of the equipment supplied disease cases had occurred. The previously instructed increased hygiene measures could provisionally maintained.

"Task force" of federal and state

The federal government and the affected countries established a "Task Force" under the auspices of the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL), such as the Federal Ministry of Consumer Protection announced on Friday. The examination of the goods and delivery routes potentially affected foods will continue over the weekend with high pressure. The Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR) has been turned on. Federal Consumer Protection Minister Ilse Aigner (CSU) said that goal must be to find the cause of the disease as quickly as possible and stop the entry into the food chain...


Anatomy of the Discovery of the Deadly Bas-Congo Virus




Virus hunters published a paper today in the science journal PLOS Pathogens, describing how a team spanning a number of institutions identified a deadly virus unknown to exist until it killed three people within a few days in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. They used sophisticated technologies and techniques to detect the new virus, which could cause fatal hemorrhagic fever outbreaks similar to Ebola. Research like this can isolate viruses before they can cause epidemics...   http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/09/27/how-we-found-the-deadly-bas-congo-virus/

Yosemite expands hantavirus testing to allpark workers


 September 28, 2012, 10:32 AM

  Yosemite National Park will offer hantavirus testing to up to 3,000 park workers to determine if they have ever been infected with the deadly mouse-borne virus, officials said Thursday.

The testing to be done by state health officials will be voluntary and available to all workers for the National Park Service and its concessionaire, DNC Parks and Resort, park spokesman John Quinley said. He declined to say when the testing would start.     http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-204_162-57522292/yosemite-expands-hantavirus-testing-to-all-park-workers/

Ebola: Uganda Muslims barred from pilgrimage to Mecca



By FRANCIS MUGERWA & AL-MAHDI SSENKABIRWA | Friday, September 28  2012 at  18:16
Some 900 Ugandan Muslim pilgrims could miss taking part in the annual pilgrimage in the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina following Saudi Arabian authorities’ refusal to issue visas to the group on the basis that the country is not yet Ebola-free.
Sheikh Ibrahim Kirya, the chairperson Uganda Hajj Mission, said despite Ebola being contained, the Saudi Arabian Government was not yet convinced to clear the pilgrims.
“We have done our part to convince the Saudi authorities, but we have not achieved much yet. We are now seeking the intervention of our government so that Hajj companies don’t lose huge sums of money they have spent,” he said.
The annual Hajj begins on October 18.
Plans by medical officials to declare Kibale District Ebola-free have been pushed to October 4 following advice from the World Health Organisation.
“We received technical advice from WHO to extend the counting from 21 to 42 days after discharging the last positive patient from the hospital,” the district health officer, Dr Dan Kyamanywa, told the Daily Monitor on Tuesday.
There were plans to declare the district Ebola-free on Friday.
“Patients who were discharged are fully integrating in communities. But we are continuing with public sensitisation and mobilisation. We have noted remarked improvement in public and personal hygiene after the (Ebola) outbreak was confirmed,” Dr Kyamanywa added.
However, Mr John Mugabi, 35, a farmer, who was discharged from Kagadi Hospital after testing negative claimed he has never fully integrated in the communities.
“People still shun me. They think I am Ebola positive. I feel stigmatised. I have failed to resume my business,” Mr Mugabi, a resident of Butumba B Village, Nyanseke Parish, said.
Kagadi Hospital last received two suspected Ebola cases in mid September and they tested negative.  http://www.africareview.com/News/-/979180/1520294/-/fk93v5z/-/index.html

Animals suspected in spread of new virus related to SARS



London — Britain's Health Protection Agency has published an early genetic sequence of the new respiratory virus related to SARS that shows it is most closely linked to bat viruses, and scientists say camels, sheep or goats might end up being implicated, too.
So far, there are no signs the virus will be as deadly as SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, which killed hundreds of people, mostly in Asia, in a 2003 global outbreak.
In Geneva, WHO spokesman Glenn Thomas told reporters Friday that so far the signs are that the virus is "not easily transmitted from person to person" — but analyses are ongoing.
Global health officials suspect two victims from the Middle East may have caught it from animals.
"It's a logical possibility to consider any animals present in the region in large numbers," said Ralph Baric, a coronavirus expert at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Biologists now need to go into the area and take samples from any animals they can get their hands on, including camels and goats," he said. Baric said it was crucial to find out how widespread the virus is in animals and what kind of contact might be risky for people.
Baric suggested bats might be spreading the virus directly to humans since the two confirmed infections happened months apart. "If there was an established transmission pattern from other animals, we probably would have seen a lot more cases," he said.
The World Health Organization said it is considering the possibility the new coronavirus sickened humans after direct contact with animals. The agency is now working with experts in the Middle East to figure out how the two confirmed cases got infected but could not share details until the investigation was finished.
One patient was a Saudi Arabian man who died several months ago while the other is a Qatari national who traveled to Saudi Arabia before falling ill and is currently in critical but stable condition in a London hospital.
Earlier this week, WHO issued a global alert asking doctors to be on guard for any potential cases of the new respiratory virus, which also causes kidney failure.
Saudi officials have already warned that next month's annual Muslim Hajj pilgrimage, which brings millions to Saudi Arabia from all around the world, could allow the virus to spread. As a precautionary measure, they are advising pilgrims to keep their hands clean and wear masks in crowded places.
Experts said knowing where a virus comes from provides clues on how to stop it.
"This means we could prevent the fire before it starts instead of rushing towards it with fire trucks and water hoses afterwards," said Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota.
Osterholm said it was possible bats had simply passed on the virus from other animals and that there could be a complicated transmission chain that ultimately ended in humans.
Viruses reproduce as they infect animals and people, giving them more chances to evolve into a deadlier version.
"We don't know enough about coronaviruses to predict which mutations might make them more lethal or transmissible," Osterholm said. "But you don't want to tempt genetic fate with microbes because you're bound to lose most times."  http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120928/NATION/209280403/1020/Animals-suspected-spread-new-virus-related-SARS?

New SARS-like virus not spreading easily between people: WHO


Friday, 28 September 2012 

A new and potentially fatal virus from the same family as SARS which was discovered in a patient in London last week appears not to spread easily form person to person, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.

In an update on the virus, which has so far killed two Saudis and made a patient from Qatar critically ill, the United Nations health agency said it was working with international partners to understand the public health risk better.

“From the information available thus far, it appears that the novel coronavirus cannot be easily transmitted from person-to-person,” it said in a statement.
The WHO put out a global alert on Sunday saying a new virus had infected a 49-year-old Qatari who had recently travelled to Saudi Arabia, following the death of two other Saudis from the same virus.

The Qatari was described as critically ill on Tuesday and is being treated in a London hospital. No new confirmed cases of infection with the virus have since been reported, the WHO said.

WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl told reporters in Geneva that rapid progress was being made in characterizing the disease and developing diagnostic tests, which would be made available as quickly as possible, according to AFP.

The new virus shares some of the symptoms of SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, another coronavirus, which emerged in China in 2002 and killed around a tenth of the 8,000 people it infected worldwide.

Both patients who have so far been confirmed with the virus suffered kidney failure.

“Given the severity of the two laboratories confirmed cases, WHO is continuing to monitor the situation in order to provide the appropriate response, expertise and support to its member states,” the WHO statement said, according to Reuters.

Scientists at the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), which monitors disease in the European Union, said initial virology results and the separation in time of the only two confirmed cases suggest the infection may have developed from animals. Such diseases are known as zoonoses.

“(It) is quite probably is of zoonotic origin and different in behavior from SARS,” the scientists wrote in a “rapid communication” study in the online journal Eurosurveillance.

The WHO’s clinical guidance to its 194 member states says health workers should be alert to anyone with acute respiratory syndrome and requiring hospitalization who had been in the Middle East where the virus was found or in contact with a suspected or confirmed case within the previous 10 days.

The U.N. agency has not recommended any travel restrictions in connection with the new virus, but said it was working closely with Saudi authorities on health measures for Muslims making the haj pilgrimage to Mecca.

Health experts said rapid progress has already been made in figuring out the nature and genetic makeup of the new coronavirus, and in the development of sensitive and specific diagnostic tests.

The WHO said it is working with laboratories in various countries to make these tests available as quickly as possible.  http://english.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/09/28/240659.html?

51 cases of Ebola identified in north-eastern DRC


GENEVA (Xinhua) - 51 cases of Ebola have been identified in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). There is, at present, 20 deaths, according to the latest update announced Thursday by the World Health Organization (WHO). 


24 September 2012, 51 cases of Ebola hemorrhagic fever have been reported in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), including 19 cases confirmed by laboratory tests and 32 probable cases. We found 20 deaths including 7 confirmed Ebola victims and 13 probable cases.

Cases were identified in the areas of health and Isiro Viadana both located in the Eastern Province of Haut-Uele. Currently, 28 cases are considered suspicious and inquiries are ongoing.
The Ministry of Health of the DRC continues to work with its partners together in a national control committee meets the World Health Organization (WHO), "Médecins sans Frontières" (MSF), the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the center of American Control and Prevention (CDC), the United Nations Fund for Children's Aid (UNICEF). Together, they attempt to identify all possible routes of transmission of the disease and take appropriate measures to interrupt transmission and thereby put an end to the epidemic.
Local radio programs are also a fulcrum to circulate information and respond to questions of affected populations.
WHO and the Global Outbreak Alert and Response (GOARN) have deployed experts to support operations in place against the epidemic. Technical assistance has been strengthened by an expert for the prevention and control of infections to prevent the transmission of Ebola in community health facilities. Despite the situation, the WHO advises no travel in the region or in the DRC.  http://www.afriquinfos.com/articles/2012/9/28/debola-recenses-dans-nord-est-210486.asp

Action response of WHO and UNICEF hemorrhagic fever "Ebola" Isiro

Action response of WHO and UNICEF hemorrhagic fever "Ebola" Isiro
Kinshasa, 28/09 (ACP) - The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO) has sent equipment and inputs Isiro, chief town of the district of Haut-Uele in the Eastern Province, as part of their joint response to the Ebola haemorrhagic fever.
According to the spokesman of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Kinshasa, Yvon Edounou, UNICEF was able, with air support from the UN Mission for Stabilization in DRC (MONUSCO) , issue of transport equipment (vehicles, 10 motorcycles and 80 bicycles) and communication materials to strengthen the fight against this epidemic.
These interventions, he said, are carried out with funding from $ 1.75 million as UNICEF and WHO received last week from the central base (CERF). In addition, 78 cases, including 32 deaths, have been recorded at September 24, 2012, by the International Coordinating Committee of Scientific and Technical fight against fever in the district of Haut-Uele, says it does. ACP / BUM. - 
http://www.acpcongo.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=12093:action-de-riposte-de-loms-et-de-lunicef-a-la-fievre-hemorragique-l-ebola-r-a-isiro&catid=41:sante&Itemid=62

Eastern Province: Ebola, 32 deaths since the beginning of the epidemic

Haemorrhagic fever Ebola has already been 83 cases of which thirty-two deaths Isiro, about 5000 km north-east of Kisangani, capital of Orientale Province. These statistics were given on Tuesday 25 September, during the evaluation meeting of the International Committee of daily fight against Ebola outbreak in Isiro.Based on this evaluation, the trend of contamination of the epidemic is declining with only one recorded case last week, says the district medical officer Acting Haut Uele..

http://radiookapi.net/actualite/2012/09/27/province-orientale-ebola-32-morts-depuis-le-debut-de-lepidemie/

NOVEL CORONAVIRUS - SAUDI ARABIA (07): EUROSURVEILLANCE REPORTS



In this post:
[1] Eurosurveillance editorial observations
[2] ECDC/HPA report & recommendations

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Yosemite Workers Tested For Hantavirus, Ordered To Keep Quiet



Nine people who spent time at the park this year have been infected with the rare virus, the majority after staying at the “Signature” cabins in Curry Village. Three of them died.
KTVU-TV Oakland said 100 park workers submitted to voluntary testing on Wednesday and they have been ordered not to discuss the testing...  http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2012/09/27/yosemite-workers-tested-for-hantavirus-ordered-to-keep-quiet/

New virus in Africa looks like rabies, acts like Ebola


A virus that killed two teenagers in Congo in 2009 is a completely new type, related to rabies but causing the bleeding and rapid death that makes Ebola infection so terrifying, scientists reported on Thursday. They’re searching for the source of the virus, which may be transmitted by insects or bats.
The new virus is being named Bas-Congo virus, for the area where it was found.  Researchers are finding more and more of these new viruses, in part because new tests make it possible, but also in the hope of better understanding them so they can prevent pandemics of deadly disease.
The virus infected a 15-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl in the same village in Congo in 2009. They didn’t stand a chance, says Joseph Fair ofMetabiota, a company that investigates pathogens. Fair is in the Democratic Republic of Congo now, under contract to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to help battle an ongoing Ebola outbreak.
“They expired within three days,” Fair said in a telephone interview. “It was a very rapid killer.”
A few days later a male nurse who cared for the two teenagers developed the same symptoms and survived. Samples from the lucky nurse have been tested and it turned out a completely new virus had infected him, Fair and other researchers report in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS pathogens.
The DNA sequences went to Dr. Charles Chiu, of the University of California, San Francisco.
“We were astounded that this patient had sequences in his blood from a completely unknown and unidentified virus,” Chiu said. They weren’t expecting that.
“Congo is very much known for having Ebola and Marburg outbreaks. Yet about 20 percent of the time we have hemorrhagic fever outbreaks that are completely negative, which means unknown causes and they are not Ebola.”
The sequencing puts this new virus on its own branch of the bad virus family tree -- somewhat related to Ebola and the virus that causes Lass   http://vitals.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/27/14127587-new-virus-in-africa-looks-like-rabies-acts-like-ebola?

Coronavirus patient getting better: brother

Coronavirus patient getting better: brother
The brother of the Qatari man, who is being treated in a UK hospital after contracting an infection from the coronavirus, said that his brother’s condition was getting better now. “He is responding to treatment and the pneumonia has healed considerably,” he told local Arabic daily Arrayah. However, he criticised the lack of transparency at the  Supreme Council of Health (SCH). “The SCH statement that the patient had been transferred from Hamad Hospital to a British hospital lacked clarity. It was the patient’s family who  made all the arrangements to transfer him to Britain on a private  aircraft at their own  expense.” According to him, doctors at Hamad hospital failed in the diagnosis of the case. The brother explained that the patient began to feel short of breath and suffered different symptoms of severe flu a week after returning from a minor pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. “Yet, doctors at the Hamad hospital  gave him some antibiotics and told him he would be okay. In time, his condition deteriorated and he had to be sent abroad for treatment.” He admitted that the patient was being treated now at the State’s expense. http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=533990&version=1&template_id=57&parent_id=56

Ebola claims up to 33 lives in DR Congo- Ebola Baby dies


To date, there is no treatment nor vaccine for Ebola/AFP-File
KINSHASA, Sep 27 – An outbreak of Ebola fever in the Democratic Republic of Congo may have killed up to 33 people, while the number of suspected cases has risen, the health ministry said on Thursday.
A total of 79 cases were recorded, including 19 confirmed positive after laboratory analysis, 32 probable cases and 28 suspected cases, while 33 deaths were registered by September 25, the ministry announced. Seven of the deaths were proven to be caused by Ebola.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) said that the fatality rate was almost 42 percent.
The WHO added that a baby born prematurely in the isolation centre in Isiro – the epicentre of the epidemic in northeastern DR Congo – to a mother infected by the Ebola virus had died on Thursday, the statement said.
In DR Congo, it was the first time a pregnant Ebola patient had given birth, because “Ebola and pregnancy are almost incompatible,” Health Minister Felix Kabange Numbi said after the baby was born.
To date, there is no treatment nor vaccine for Ebola, which kills between 25 percent and 90 percent of patients depending on the strain of the virus. There have been eight outbreaks in DR Congo.
The disease is transmitted by direct contact with blood, faeces and sweat, by sexual contact and by unprotected handling of contaminated corpses.
Currently, 167 people who have been in contact with the 79 reported cases are under surveillance.
“We are in control of the situation, because we were able to make efforts in hospital measures – we have protective equipment,” added Kebela, who was on a mission to Isiro.
“We need to manage to follow all the contacts closely and regularly and to that end, we need to strengthen awareness among the population,” Benoit Kebela, the head of the health ministry’s unit to fight infectious diseases told AFP.
Among the 79 reported cases, 24 concern health workers.
“We are in control of the situation, because we were able to make efforts in hospital measures – we have protective equipment,” added Kebela, who was on a mission to Isiro.
An epidemic was declared in mid-August in Orientale province, but the international committee for the fight against Ebola has carried out research and dated the outbreak back to May.
The ministry of health, the WHO, the Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta, Georgia, and Doctors Without Borders (MSF – Medecins Sans Frontieres) are working in close collaboration to combat the outbreak. http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2012/09/ebola-claims-up-to-33-lives-in-dr-congo/

'New virus' man in stable condition



A man who contracted a potentially fatal Sars-like virus is now in a stable condition.
The 49-year-old, from Qatar, is being treated in an intensive care unit at St Thomas' hospital in London after he became infected with a new type of coronavirus.
A spokesman for the hospital confirmed that the man, who is still in isolation and is connected to an artificial lung to keep him alive, has been in a stable condition for the last two days.
He is receiving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (Ecmo) treatment, which delivers oxygen to the blood outside the body when the lungs are not able to. It also continuously pumps blood into and around the body.  http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5gVylXoK7wowy2XfkyDpz2NRdUTBw?docId=N0434941348743771002A