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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Dr. Beat Richner, Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospitals


Dr. Beat Richner, Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospitals

Phnom Penh / Siem Reap Angkor, 8.7.2012

Urgent message

Since the end of April 2012 in the Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospitals 66 children

were admitted with just same symptoms and clinical findings. The children, most

between 2 and 3 years old, suffered from Encephalitis. They develop in the last

hours of their life a total destruction of the alveolas in the lungs. Up to now 64 have

died. Only two have survived. The last week from 2
nd to 7th July there were only two

cases.

On 20
th June, after having discussed this in Cambodia new picture of disease since

early May with the Ministry of Health, and after having got no positive results by

Institut Pasteur, which whom we cooperate since beginning of the discovery of this

for Cambodia new phenomena in our 5 Hospitals, we wrote a letter to the Minister

of Health suggesting as causing reason a Enterovirus, or an intoxication by a

medication outside of our Hospitals, or both. All the 64 cases who have died were

treated outside by private clinics before they were brought to the Kantha Bopha

Hospitals.

Yesterday the Institut Pasteur could confirm, that in the majority of the above

described cases the Enterovirus Type 71 was found. Still we have now to see what

really is causing the deadly pulmonary complication and see if a toxic factor is

playing a role too. Why only a very few children infected by Enterovirus 71 are

doing this awful destruction of the lungs?

Unfortunately WHO has given a declaration on July 2
nd to Reuters without being

clear on the facts being presented on 29
th June in the Ministry of Health by Kantha

Bopha to all the officials of Health. WHO was telling whole the world: New mystery

killer disease in Cambodia! This was causing unnecessary panic in Cambodia.

On the level of public health it is not an alarming issue: The 5 Kantha Bopha

Hospitals are covering 85% of all Cambodian sick children. In case of the Dengue

Fever Kantha Bopha is covering 92%. In June 75 799 sick children were treated in

our outpatient stations. 16 517 severely sick children had to be hospitalized, among

them 5534 severe cases of the Hemorrhagic Dengue Fever. In June only 34 cases

with this above described “ new” disease were hospitalized. This declaration by

WHO, which is not at all involved in this matter, to Reuters on July 2
nd was neither

professional nor necessary, but causing panic for nothing.

Dr. Beat Richner, Founder and Head of the Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospitals in

Cambodia.
http://www.beat-richner.ch/pdf/2012/EnterovirusType71_8July.pdf

Mystery illness in Cambodia solved, doctors say #EV71 #Cambodia

Hat tip to  Alert

By Dr. Sanjay Gupta and Danielle Dellorto, CNN
updated 11:17 AM EDT, Wed July 11, 2012
Phnom Penh, Cambodia (CNN) -- The cause of a mysterious illness that has claimed the lives of more than 60 Cambodian children has been determined, medical doctors familiar with the investigation told CNN on Wednesday.

A combination of pathogens, disease-causing micro-organisms, is to blame for the illness, the World Health Organization, in conjunction with the Cambodian Ministry of Health, has concluded, the doctors said.

The pathogens include enterovirus 71, which is known to cause neurological disease; streptococcus suis, which can cause infections like bacterial meningitis in people who have close contact with pigs or with pork products; and dengue, which is transmitted by mosquitoes.

The inappropriate use of steroids, which can suppress the immune system, worsened the illness in a majority of the patients, the doctors said. The World Health Organization (WHO) is expected to advise health care workers to refrain from using steroids in patients with signs and symptoms of the infection, which include severe fever, encephalitis and breathing difficulties.

While not all the microorganisms were present in each patient, doctors concluded the illness was caused by a combination of them and worsened by steroid use.

The WHO sources did not want to be identified because the results of the health organization's investigation have not yet been made public.

"I'm very confident for the reason of the epidemic," said Dr. Phillipe Buchy, chief of virology at the Institut Pasteur in Cambodia and one of the doctors who cracked the case.

"The first thing that goes through your mind is, is this one of the usual suspects you haven't detected before?" said Dr. Arnaud Tarantola, chief of epidemiology and public health at the Institut Pasteur. "If it is, has it mutated, or changed in a way that it causes more severe disease? Or is it something completely new?"

On the steroids issue, Tarantola said, "When you have a dying child, you try to use what you have at hand, and they were right to try that." But, he acknowledged, "from the cases we reviewed, almost all of the children died, and almost all of them had steroids."

Parents face anxious wait over mystery illness

"I think we can close the case and move ahead asking different questions," Buchy said. "Not what is the illness, but now, how long has the virus been circulating? What is the extent of the circulation of the virus? How many mild diseases are we missing? That's the next step."

Over the past four months, doctors at Kantha Bopha Children's Hospitals in Phnom Penh have been faced with the mysterious syndrome, which kills children so fast that nearly all of those infected with it die within a day or two of being admitted to the hospital.

Dr. Beat Richner, head of the children's hospitals -- which cared for 66 patients affected by the illness, 64 of whom died -- said that no new cases of the illness had been confirmed since Saturday.

Other hospitals in the country have reported similar cases, but far fewer than the children's hospitals in the capital, which are the most popular.

In the last hours of their life, the children experienced a "total destruction of the alveola(e) in the lungs," Richner said. Alveolae are the air sacs where oxygen enters the bloodstream.

Most of the children who have contracted the illness have come from the south of the country, though health officials cannot find what is known as a cluster -- a lot of cases coming from one specific area.

By June 29, the WHO had been contacted and Cambodian officials were scrambling to instruct health providers across the country to spread information about the illness as quickly as possible.

Officials search for clues in disease killing Cambodia's children

The WHO and the Cambodian authorities' announcement of the situation drew criticism from Richner, who said they were "causing unnecessary panic."

The WHO said the unexplained nature of the outbreak obliged it to communicate the information.

Over the weekend, lab tests linked enterovirus 71 (EV71) to some of the cases. But the tests didn't solve the whole puzzle and health officials continued their investigations, noting the detection of other elements like streptococcus suis and dengue.

The link to EV71 does not particularly help in the treatment of the illness, as there is no effective antiviral treatment for severe EV71 infections and no vaccine is available.

In milder cases, EV71 can cause coldlike symptoms, diarrhea and sores on the hands, feet and mouth, according to the journal Genetic Vaccines and Therapy. But more severe cases can cause fluid to accumulate on the brain, resulting in polio-like paralysis and death.

Outbreaks of the enterovirus "occur periodically in the Asia-Pacific region," according to the CDC. Brunei had its first major outbreak in 2006. China had an outbreak in 2008.

Adults' well-developed immune systems usually can fend off the virus, but children are vulnerable to it, according to the CDC.

"It looks like (EV71) has emerged strongly, probably because it hadn't circulated with the same intensity in the past years," Tarantola said.

Reported cases of streptococcus suis have risen significantly in recent years, notably in Southeast Asia, according to a paper that appeared last year in Emerging Infectious Diseases, a journal published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

The rainy season in Cambodia, which lasts from May to October, is a key problem in trying to control diseases like dengue. Because of a lack of indoor plumbing in many homes, people collect rainwater in vats, creating potential breeding grounds for mosquitoes.

In Cambodia, as with many places around the world, parents first try treating their child at home. If that doesn't work, they typically then go to a local clinic. A hospital visit, which often involves a long trip, is a last resort. 
http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/10/world/...ase/index.html

Mystery disease is not much of a mystery

Nope. Now it's all good. So it is 3 different diseases, all treated too late or with steroids..
Judging from recent reports, many countries are stringently checking their borders for any sign of a disease that is probably already in their country, namely HFMD..or Dengue Fever..or Strep Suis..

So far Thes countries are checking the borders for sick people from Cambodia. The W.H.O. is about to tell them that is unneccesary some time today. I heard it from CNN.
They didn't tell you what the other countries are doing.

Indo  http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/world/2012-07/09/c_131704362.htm

Vietnam  http://www.nhandan.com.vn/cmlink/nhandandientu/thoisu/doi-song/i-s-ng-tin-chung/ki-m-d-ch-y-t-bien-gi-i-ng-n-ch-n-b-nh-l-vao-vi-t-nam-1.357278

Thailand http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/301865/hfmd-in-thailand-is-under-control-says-deputy-minister

Phillipines  http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/07/10/12/cambodian-infection-encephalitis-type-not-hfmd  Tight watch against enterovirus

China The usual

Malaysia http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v6/newsgeneral.php?id=679882



Most of these countries are calling it a strain from Cambodia that they are worried about. Soon I guess, they will say it's regular old HFMD with a few cases of EV71 thrown in and some dengue or pig strep on steroids. I can't help but to think back a couple days where the guy said it was a "Perfect Explanation" for what is happening.



All reports are from the same CNN story, Nothing from the WHO or any other gov't entity. Last nights report from Sanjay said that the Cambodia ministry of health were handling field reports and were not working hand in hand with the WHO. Less than 8 hrs later it is all a big misunderstanding. Just run of the mill diseases on steroids. 0 Maybe the dr was right when he said that the WHO jumped the gun on this, as they overlook the Dengue cases right in front of them. Hopefully that is all it is, cause it is what they are gonna tell us. Oh yeah, it is not contageous..imagine that.  http://www.rappler.com/world/8364-no-need-to-panic,-cambodia-says-on-virus

Mexico-31 farms infected -3.4 mil birds affected -2.5 mil culled #H7N3



 ..As part of health activities in Punjab by avian influenza 148 poultry farms are reviewed and confirmed the presence of the virus in 31 of them, 34 more were negative and the rest is continued with the diagnosis laboratory, reported the National Health Service, Food Safety and Food Quality (SENASICA).
  On the National Emergency Animal Health (DINESA) launched to eradicate H7N3 avian influenza outbreak, originated in the municipalities of Acatic and Tepatitlan, Jalisco, applied in farms and backyards covered, until the day before Monday, a flock of 16.5 million birds, of which 3.4 million have been found affected.
 . The farms remain under quarantine and isolation, as well as maintaining, in accordance with national and regional poultry industry, the control measures to mobilize in order to prevent infected birds, poultry, contaminated poultry offal and could move to other regions without the virus.
  In this universe, the number of birds have been culled as a control and eradication, until Monday, was 2.5 million....    http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=es&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fyucatan.com.mx%2Fmexico%2Favanza-el-control-de-la-gripe-aviar%2F

China to lend hand in battle with killer virus

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

China yesterday pledged to provide medical experts and funding to assist the investigation and clinical management of a virus that has killed more than 60 Cambodian children.

Eang Sophalleth, personal spokesman for Prime Minister Hun Sen, told reporters the pledge had been made during a meeting between the premier and Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi yesterday in Phnom Penh.

“There is a mysterious disease that is responsible for killing more than 60 Cambodian children. So China would like to provide experts and funding to assist Cambodia in finding the cause of the disease,” Sophalleth quoted Yang as saying to Hun Sen.

Cambodia’s largest children’s hospital, Kantha Bopha, has reported that 64 children have died from the virus since April.

Tests being conducted by Kantha Bopha and the Ministry of Health and the World Health Organisation have recently identified the disease as enterovirus 71 – a virus associated with hand, foot and mouth disease that can cause severe complications for children.

WHO epidemiologist Dr Nima Asgari said the details of the co-operation with incoming Chinese experts was a matter for the Ministry of Health, but welcomed the additional assistance.

“What I can say is that China does have a lot of experience with clinical management of this virus,” Asgari said.

China has experienced several outbreaks of EV-71, including severe outbreaks in 2008 and 2009 that claimed hundred of lives, according to media reports of the events. During the 2008 outbreaks, the US embassy in Beijing reported that “all the deaths were children less than six years old, and most were under two years of age”.

The commitment of expert assistance and funding was part of Yang’s promise from China to continue providing loans and aid to Cambodia as well as pushing for business and investment and tourists to the Kingdom.

According to Sophalleth, Hun Sen thanked China for its continuing support for Cambodia.http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012071157342/National-news/china-to-lend-hand-in-battle-with-killer-virus.html

Mix of pathogens caused mystery illness in Cambodia, doctors say

HAT TIP TETANO

Video


By Dr. Sanjay Gupta and Danielle Dellorto, CNN
July 11, 2012 -- Updated 0936 GMT (1736 HKT)
 
Phnom Penh, Cambodia (CNN)
-- The World Health Organization, in conjunction with the Cambodian Ministry of Health, will conclude that a combination of pathogens is to blame for the mysterious illness that has claimed the lives of more than 60 children in Cambodia, medical doctors familiar with the investigation told CNN on Wednesday.

The pathogens include enterovirus 71, streptococcus suis and dengue, the medical sources said. Additionally, the inappropriate use of steroids, which can suppress the immune system, worsened the illness in a majority of the patients, they said.

The sources did not want to be identified because the results of the health organization's investigation have not yet been made public.

Dr. Beat Richner, head of Kantha Bopha Children's Hospitals -- which cared for 66 patients affected by the illness, 64 of whom died -- said that no new cases had been confirmed since last Saturday.

The World Health Organization (WHO) is also expected to advise health care workers to refrain from using steroids in patients with signs and symptoms of the infection, which include severe fever, encephalitis, and breathing difficulties.
Over the past four months, doctors at Kantha Bopha in Phnom Penh have been faced with the mysterious syndrome, which kills children so fast that nearly all of those infected with it die within a day or two of being admitted to the hospital.
In the last hours of their life, the children experienced a "total destruction of the alveola(e) in the lungs," Richner said.
Other hospitals in the country have also reported similar cases, but far fewer than..


Tuesday, July 10, 2012

The border medical quarantine, block "unknown disease" in Vietnam

Wednesday, 11/07/2012 (GMT +7)

 On 10-7, Department of Preventive Medicine (Ministry of Health) dispatch center requests the international medical quarantine center of preventive medicine are quarantine border activity immediately deploy the following activities: close monitoring for people on entry, especially for objects suspected carrier of infectious diseases through gate examination and medical treatment facilities for entry, examination and isolation of cases suspected infectious disease.

http://www.nhandan.com.vn/cmlink/nhandandientu/thoisu/doi-song/i-s-ng-tin-chung/ki-m-d-ch-y-t-bien-gi-i-ng-n-ch-n-b-nh-l-vao-vi-t-nam-1.357278

MEXICO SECRETARY OF HEALTH DENIES H7N3 CAN INFECT HUMANS

Or anything else for that matter..

SECRETARY OF HEALTH, CHERTORISKI SOLOMON: Good afternoon everyone, I greet with respect to fellow media, I thank the Secretary Ferrari's invitation to be together, to comprehensively platicarles all sides of this issue we have As always busy.

I would start by saying that the Ministry of Health we have one of the expert groups for influence in the world, recognized worldwide as reiterated today headed by Dr. Pablo Kuri, three messages that I would very timely.
The first influence is a disease that affects several animal species including as we all know and have experienced the human being, yet each of these viruses is limited to the transmission within the same species. In this particular case the H7N3 virus is only transmitted between birds, I want it very clear that no virus among lizards, whales, horses and of course reiterated among humans, but the virus that we are living today in the country today, focusing on the state of Jalisco has no chance of being transmitted to humans. I say this with all punctuality, with precision throughout history has never been a case of transmission of this virus to humans and I think it is very important as we have been doing throughout the week to reiterate this message there is no risk of infection in humans. http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sagarpa.gob.mx%2Fsaladeprensa%2Fboletines2%2FPaginas%2Fdefault.aspx


..Chertorivski Solomon, owner of Health, noted that "there is no risk of human infection" by bird flu and if they even broke the cordon sanitaire and someone were to eat eggs or chicken infected, your health is no risk.
http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2012/07/06/153333235-se-duplicara-cuarta-emergente-de-exportacion-de-huevo



Due to the outbreak of bird flu that has affected A7N3 thousands of birds in the municipalities of Tepatitlán Acatic and Jalisco, the State Government through the Ministry of Health reports that this virus is not transmissible to exotic beings human by any means.
Likewise, this office has ruled out the possibility of avian flu infection who consume eggs and poultry.
Avian influenza is a highly contagious viral disease caused by a virus Type "A" that affects several species of birds of all ages, as wild and domestic turkeys, chickens, ducks, water birds, the latter acting as potential carriers virus.
Dr. Jose Trevino Leo Cardenas Director of Prevention and Disease Control, reported that this disease is only transmitted between birds that have contact with infected feces, secretions, contaminated food and water or improper handling of dead birds.

HFMD in Thailand is under control, says deputy minister

Published: 11/07/2012 at 01:36 AM Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) in Thailand is under control thanks to measures put in place to prevent a virulent strain from spreading to Thailand from Cambodia, Deputy Public Health Minister Surawit Khonsomboon said yesterday.

Extraordinary surveillance measures were being implemented to keep Enterovirus Type 71 (EV-71), a strain of HFMD that has claimed the lives of more than 60 children in Cambodia, from spreading to Thailand, Dr Surawit said.
Parents are being advised to encourage their children to wash their hands often and avoid taking them to crowded places, Dr Surawit said.
If parents suspect an infection they should immediately take their children to a doctor to reduce the risk of complications of the disease which can affect victims' brains, lungs, and hearts, he said.
Authorities have sent a communicable disease control unit to the Chong Jom-Osamach border crossing in tambon Dan of Kap Choeng district of Surin to screen Cambodian parents and their children for HFMD virus strains.
Any Cambodian travellers suspected of carrying the virus would be quarantined, the Surin provincial health office said.

Meanwhile, parents of 16 Cambodian children attending a pre-school child centre in Ban Dan in the same border district of Surin were asked to take their children back to Osamach in Cambodia.
Sirichai Tantiratananon, president of tambon Ban Dan administration organisation, said it was a temporary measure to prevent the children infecting their Thai peers.
Satawas Sinprasitkul, director of Kap Choeng district hospital, said no Cambodian patients with EV-71 has been admitted to his hospital since the virus was found across the border three months ago.
Dr Apichart Rodsom, chief of the provincial health office in Kanchanaburi, said four new HFMD cases in children aged three to five which were reported this week were not the EV-71 strain.

EV-71 is one of two pathogens commonly found in infected Thai patients, but it was a virulent form of the virus that was detected in recent Thai cases, the permanent secretary for public health, Dr Paijit Warachit, said. The other type of HFMD virus commonly found in Thailand is Coxsackie A 16, he said.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/loca...eputy-minister

China-Mainland baby, young girl treated for deadly virus #EV71

Mary Ann Benitez

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Two mainland children - a five-year- old girl from Guangxi and a 39-day-old baby boy from Shenzhen - are being treated at Hong Kong hospitals for a severe form of enterovirus infection, the Centre for Health Protection said last night.

It is the third and fourth such case of the infection this year and comes days after Cambodia announced that Enterovirus71 was....

The clinical diagnosis was meningitis due to EV infection, with her cerebrospinal fluid specimen testing positive for the virus. Her condition is stable.
The girl's older twin brothers, aged seven, also had symptoms and sought medical help. Other family members did not have any symptoms.
The baby boy lives in Shenzhen and had fever on July 4. He was brought to Hong Kong for treatment the next day and admitted to Prince of Wales Hospital in Sha Tin.
He no longer has fever and was stable last night.
His cerebrospinal fluid specimen tested positive for EV while his rectal swab tested positive for the Coxsackie virus. Both viruses cause hand, foot and mouth disease, so called because of characteristic rashes...
The specific strain of EV for both children has not yet been typed, but most likely could be EV71, which experts and the CHP have said "is more likely associated with severe medical complications and even death." ...

http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_d...=20120711&fc=2

Research Continues Into Mystery Disease in Cambodia

   
     
10 de julio de 2012, 15:20

Phnom Penh, July 10 (Prensa Latina) Specialized physicians are continuing their tireless efforts today to identify a rare disease that has killed at least 61 children under three years of age in Cambodia.

Virologists at the Pasteur Institute, involved in the investigation, dismissed for now that it has anything to do with Enterovirus 71 (EV71), associated with brucellosis, as a cause of the sudden outbreak of severe fever and respiratory and neurological problems detected in the Kantha Bopha Children's Hospital in this capital...

However, they are considering the possibility that since brucellosis is endemic in neighboring Indochinese countries, they may be dealing with a mutation of the virus.


 ....Although 15 of the 24 blood samples analyzed by Pasteur Institute showed the presence of EV71, Asgari noted that these results require further research in the coming days...
http://www.plenglish.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=524596&Itemid=1

CNN’s Sanjay Gupta Talks To Mediaite About Mystery Illness Claiming Lives In Cambodia

CNN’s Sanjay video

by Alex Alvarez | 3:04 pm, July 10th, 2012



CNN’s Sanjay Gupta is in Cambodia this week, covering a perplexing illness that, to date, has taken the lives of over 50 young children. Gupta, a neurosurgeon, has been talking with local doctors and officials from the World Health Organization in an effort to determine what, exactly, has caused these children to succumb and perish so quickly. Eleven hour time difference be damned, Gupta graciously made time to speak with us about his report and what he’s been able to learn so far.

According to Dr. Gupta, the illness appears to be some combination of an enterovirus (Type 71, specifically) and a second, “mystery” component still being investigated. He explained that these issues manifest in children who “arrived with mild symptoms, were treated and given medicine — bad medicine, or medicine that was inappropriate or wrong.” The issue of patients being given medicine that is incorrect, old, diluted or counterfeit is a widespread one, he noted, and one that poses a real and fatal threat across third world countries and the United States alike....http://www.mediaite.com/tv/cnns-sanjay-gupta-talks-to-mediaite-about-mystery-illness-claiming-lives-in-cambodia/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+mediaite%2FClHj+%28Mediaite%29

Cambodians fear mystery deaths #EV71 VIDEO



Video http://in.reuters.com/video/2012/07/10/cambodians-fear-mystery-deaths?rpc=401&videoId=236424756&feedType=VideoRSS&feedName=WorldNews&rpc=401&videoChannel=117460

CHOLERA outbreak in CUBA


Date: Tue 10 Jul 2012

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/international/americas/view/20120710cuba_reports_more_cholera_cases/srvc=home&position=recent


The number of cholera cases confirmed in eastern Cuba jumped from 30 to 85 over the weekend [7-8 Jul 2012] but the death toll remained at 3, one government official said, although independent reports put the number of deaths as high as 15. As many as 5 other cases of cholera also were unofficially reported in Havana, and dissidents in Guantanamo near the eastern tip of the island reported cholera-like cases in Caimanera, a village on the edge of the US naval base.

The state-owned TV station in Granma province, where the outbreak has hit hardest, suggested that residents avoid traveling outside the area, and trucks with loudspeakers urged them to boil water and wash their hands often, 2 residents said.

Public health officials in the British-run Cayman Islands, just south of Granma, issued a advisory against travel to Cuba, and US Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R[epublican]-Florida, warned potential travelers that visiting the island "may put them at risk of becoming ill with cholera." The CDC in Atlanta had not issued any special travel notices on Cuba as of Monday evening [9 Jul 2012]. Its Web page recommends only general vaccinations, like those for hepatitis A and B, typhoid fever, and rabies.

Cuban government epidemiologist Ana Maria Batista Gonzalez told Granma's Telecentro TV station Sat 7 Jul 2012, that 30 cholera cases had been confirmed in the province, then raised the number to 85 when she appeared again on the station the next day, said [SM], a doctor and dissident in the Granma town of Manzanillo.

A Cuban government statement, on 3 Jul 2012 -- the only other official word on the outbreak, said 53 cholera cases had been confirmed and that the outbreak was "under control." There was no explanation for the conflicting numbers, although it's possible that the number 53 referred to cases in the southeastern region, not just Granma.

Batista also noted the number of suspected cases in Granma rose from 332 to 346, and more general cases of diarrhea and vomiting rose from 3422 to 3998, [SM] said. Most of the cases have been recorded in Manzanillo and the provincial capital, Bayamo, as well as nearby municipalities of Niquero, Yara, and Bartolome Maso, Batista said. All are along Cuba's southern coast, about 415 miles [670 km] east of Havana.

Batista said the death toll remained at 3, the same number the government reported on 3 Jul 2012. A Bayamo dissident said he had heard reports of 5 deaths and [SM] put it at about 10. Havana dissident [CM] has reported about 15.

Police continued a heavy security presence at area hospitals and relatives were not allowed to visit patients with cholera, CM said. He was fired from his public health job after he began speaking out against the government and his wife became a human rights activist.

Cholera was declared eradicated in Cuba no later than the early 1900s, but an ongoing outbreak in neighboring Haiti has killed more than 7400 people and scores of Cuban doctors have worked there.

Philippines Spray planes against #EV71

Tight watch against enterovirus

Philippines
AIRPORT quarantine authorities are spraying incoming airplanes, either with connecting flight or direct from Cambodia, with disinfectants in a bid to control or prevent the entry of the deadly virus traced to have killed 61 children in Cambodia this past week....
.....On Tuesday the officials sprayed three Cebu Pacific flights from Saigon, one Philippine Airlines flight, also from Saigon, one Kuwait Airways which made a stopover in Bangkok and a Thai airways from the Thai capital. R. Mercene..
http://businessmirror.com.ph/home/nation/29754-tight-watch-against-enterovirus \


As part of the airport’s precautionary measures, quarantine officers assigned to each incoming flight spray “Coopex” germ disinfectants on aircraft cabins to extinguish the virus.

http://manilastandardtoday.com/www2/2012/07/11/health-airports-alerted-to-enterovirus-71/

Mexico applied a million #bird flu vaccines from China


July 10, 2012
Guadalajara, Mexico. - A batch of one million vaccines from China will be implemented in the coming days the birds were not infected by bird flu at farms in Mexico to try to protect their health, reported the National Union Poultry (A).
A According to the number of farms with confirmed presence of the flu has risen to 29, five more than the last report, so that the epidemic is already affecting some 2.5 million birds...
http://www.noticiassin.com/2012/07/mexico-aplicara-un-millon-de-vacunas-contra-gripe-aviar-provenientes-de-china/

'No need to panic,' Cambodia says on virus



PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – Officials of a Cambodian hospital slammed the World Health Organization (WHO) for creating “unnecessary panic” about a previously unidentified disease that has so far killed over 60 children here.

“There’s no need to panic,” Dr Denis Laurent, Biologist and Deputy Director of the Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospital (KBCH) in Phnom Penh told Rappler. Laurent is the assistant of Dr Beat Richner, the founder and head of KBCH who was the first to sound the alarm about the disease.

The WHO has alerted neighboring countries including the Philippines about an "unknown disease" that had killed 52 children in Cambodia.

The Pasteur Institute in Phnom Penh earlier announced that it discovered Enterovirus Type 71 in about two-thirds of patients. The virus is the “perfect explanation” for the deaths, according to the institute’s virology unit head Philippe Buchy who was cited by Bloomberg.

While the Enterovirus 71 was indeed found in a majority of the fatal cases, there are still questions left unanswered, Richner said in a statement released Sunday..



“Unfortunately, WHO gave a declaration on July 2 to [a news agency] without being clear on the facts being presented on June 29 in the Ministry Of Health by Kantha Bopha to all the [health] officials,” Richener said. “WHO was telling the whole world: new mystery killer disease in Cambodia! This was causing unnecessary panic in Cambodia.”

LONG LINE. Parents and children are hoping to avail of free medical treatment. Photo by Paul John CanaLONG LINE. Parents and children are hoping to avail of free medical treatment. Photo by Paul John Cana

Richener added that the issue is “not alarming."

In June, 75,799 sick children were treated in our outpatient stations, 16,517 severely sick children were hospitalized, among them 5,534 severe cases of the hemorrhagic dengue fever. Only 34 cases with this…‘new’ disease were hospitalized. This declaration by WHO…was neither professional nor necessary, but causing panic for nothing.”
...According to Laurent, no new fatalities from the disease have been reported since the latest statement issued by the hospital Sunday... http://www.rappler.com/world/8364-no-need-to-panic,-cambodia-says-on-virus

Thailand-Disease warning for schools due to HFMD

 July 10, 2012 5:47 pm

Thailand-The Public Health Ministry on Tueday instructed schools and nurseries nationwide to close if they find that students in five classes or more have contracted hand, foot and mouth disease.

The move follows reports that at least 64 children in Cambodia died after being infected with enterovirus 71, know to cause the disease, since April this year.

In Thailand, about 10,813 children are believed to have caught the disease during the most recent outbreak but there were no reports of any fatalities.

Disease Control Department director general Dr Pornthep Siriwanarangsan said the strain of hand, foot and mouth disease currently spreading in the country is not a virulent one.

It is recommended that children with fever, blister-like lesions on the tongue, gums and inside of the cheeks, and a pimple-like rash on the hands and feet be taken to a clinic for treatment.

About 20,000 nurseries have been told to suspend classes if they find that two or more children have been infected with the virus. School who find infected students in five classes have been told to close. http://www.nationmultimedia.com/national/Disease-warning-for-schools-30185866.html

MASK

MASKhttp://www.timesofmalta.com/articles...disease.427938

Philippines-Doctors, health care providers told to report Enterovirus 71 cases

July 10, 2012 5:48pm

The Health Department will require doctors and health care providers to report incidents of Enterovirus 71 infections by making it a notifiable disease....

A notifiable disease is a disease that must be reported to public health authorities at the time it is diagnosed because it is potentially dangerous to human or animal health...

The DOH said EV-71 causes diseases of varying intensity, including the often mild hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD), acute respiratory disease, acute flaccid paralysis (polio-like) and the deadly brainstem encephalitis.
It said HFMD is a self-limiting illness whose symptoms include fever with skin lesions or rashes.

Philippine authorities last weekend went on alert against what was then a mystery disease, amid reports of children in Cambodia dying from it.
Also, the DOH and World Health Organization (WHO) clarified the Cambodian EV-71 infection was of the encephalitis type and not HFMD.

The DOH said affected Cambodian children had fever followed by rapid respiratory deterioration and impaired consciousness.
"Death occurred 24 hours from hospital confinement," the DOH said http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/264880/news/nation/doctors-health-care-providers-told-to-report-enterovirus-71-cases

WHO Defends Warning on Cambodia Virus

  • Updated July 10, 2012, 6:37 a.m. ET
  • As Cambodian authorities grapple with a disease outbreak that has killed more than 50 children, they're also struggling with another issue: how to best manage interest from the outside world without triggering alarm.

    The issue bubbled to the surface earlier this week when Beat Richner, a well-known doctor in Cambodia and founder of the Kantha Bopha Children's Hospitals where the disease was first reported, complained that international health authorities moved too quickly to sound the alarm, risking a panic before they had all the facts.
    Writing in a post on his Facebook page, he said the World Health Organization's declaration ...

      The rest is subscription   http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303567704577518312828428088.html

    'Cambodian infection is encephalitis type, not #HFMD'

     07/10/2012 6:06 PM
    MANILA, Philippines - The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Department of Health (DOH) reported today that the disease that struck and killed Cambodian children in the last few months was of the encephalitis type and not the hand foot and mouth disease (HFMD) they earlier reported.
    The health agencies maintained, however, that the new strain discovered is linked to the Enterovirus-71 (EV-71), which causes different diseases of varying intensities.
    EV-71 may also cause HFMD as well as acute respiratory disease, acute flaccid paralysis (polio-like), and the deadly brainstem encephalitis...
    ...It also urged parents and day-care personnel to clean and disinfect toys and teaching tools that are easily shared with other children.
    http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/07/10/12/cambodian-infection-encephalitis-type-not-hfmd


    Undiagnosed illness in Cambodia - update

    As part of the continuing investigations into the undiagnosed illness, the Ministry of Health of the Kingdom of Cambodia is finalizing the review of all suspected hospitalised cases. This final review added an additional two cases between April to 5 July 2012, making the total number of children affected to be 59. Of these, 52 have died.
    The age of the cases range ...

    http://www.who.int/csr/don/2012_07_09/en/index.html

    Cause of lethal children's disease still contested #EV71 #HFM

    Cause of lethal children's disease still contested
    120710_02a

    A Cambodian woman (L) pulling a child on a gurney at Kantha Bopha children's hospital in Phnom Penh. Medical experts are scrambling to respond to what the Cambodian health ministry and World Health Organization have labelled an "undiagnosed syndrome" that has claimed the lives of at least 56 boys and girls, mostly toddlers, since April. Photograph: AFP Photo / Khem Sovannara
    While virologists may have identified a common infection in the mystery illness that has taken the lives of dozens of Cambodian children since April, the actual cause of the deaths is still a matter of conjecture.

    The two sides racing to find the cause of the deaths and a possible cure for the illness that has plagued the Kingdom are at odds over almost everything to do with the case.

    Kantha Bopha Children’s Hospitals, which first identified that an unusual syndrome was striking down children, alerted the Ministry of Health in June of their concerns about a possible “new deadly illness”.

    Kantha Bopha says it has identified 66 cases of the mystery illness in its hospitals, 64 of the cases were fatal.

    However, the Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization, which is assisting the ministry’s investigations, yesterday put the number at 59 cases with 52 deaths across Cambodia – a pared down number from the initial media reports from the WHO of 60 deaths.

    A joint press release from the MoH and the WHO said that their investigations were not finalised, but officials believed that the deaths were caused by severe cases of Hand, Foot and Mouth Disease, a common disease in children and infants.

    Symptoms of the HFMD include fever, painful sores in the mouth and a rash with blisters on hands, feet and buttocks, said the press release.

    The unknown disease, however, presents the symptoms of deadly respiratory destruction and neurological affliction, as both Kantha Bopha and the MoH and WHO have reported.

    Kantha Bopha officials yesterday said they remained suspicious of the information published by MoH and WHO.

    Dr Denis Laurent, assistant to Kantha Bopha Hospitals founder Dr Beat Richner, said yesterday that 64 children died of the disease in their hospitals alone.

    “It’s up to you to choose,” said Dr Laurent of the discrepancy in numbers. “You can believe in the MoH, or you can believe in us.”


    Richner remained concerned that the children’s deaths were caused by maltreatment and drug intoxication in private clinics. http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2012071057324/National-news/lethal-childrens-disease-still-contested.html

    Monday, July 9, 2012

    Enterovirus 71 cited in puzzling Cambodian infections

    Lisa Schnirring * Staff Writer
    Jul 9, 2012 (CIDRAP New) – Lab analysis in the mysterious recent illnesses and deaths of dozens of Cambodian children pointed to enterovirus 71 (EV-71), a virus that causes hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) and can lead to severe complications in some patients, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced today.


    Cambodia's health ministry is finalizing its review of all suspected hospitalized cases, which included two additional cases, raising the total to 59 infections, 52 of them fatal, according to the WHO. However, hospital sources said the number of children with severe infections is somewhat higher.

    Dr. Beat Richner, founder and head of Kantha Bopha Children's Hospitals, which has five facilities in Cambodia, said yesterday in a statement that 66 children have been admitted to the hospitals with the same symptoms and clinical findings, and only two patients have survived.

    The WHO and local health officials are exploring other factors that might be contributing to the serious and fatal complications in some of the patients. The WHO said lab tests conducted by Cambodia's Pasteur Institute have turned up other pathogens, including dengue virus and Streptococcus suis. Tests have ruled out H5N1 and other influenza viruses, SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), and Nipah virus.

    The Pasteur Institute tested 24 samples, and EV-71 was found in 15 of them, according to a report today from the Phnom Penh Post.

    Richner said the children suffered from encephalitis, with the condition progressing to total destruction of lung alveoli during the last hours of the children's lives. He said in the statement that he and his team wrote a letter to the health ministry on Jun 20 describing the clinical picture of the cases and suggested that the condition might be caused by an enterovirus infection, intoxication from a medication given before hospitalization, or both. He said all 64 of the children who died at Kantha Bopha hospitals had been previously treated at outside private clinics.

    The WHO, the Pasteur Institute, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), are assisting Cambodia's health ministry with the outbreak investigation.

    H.E. Mam BunHeng, the country's health minister..

    Jabs hope after Cambodian deaths

    Jabs hope after deaths

    Tuesday, July 10, 2012

    An experimental vaccine for Enterovirus 71 - linked to the mystery disease that has killed 52 children in Cambodia since April - is undergoing clinical trials in the mainland and Taiwan.

    The vaccine is likely to be on the market sooner than any drugs, said virology professor Malik Peiris at the University of Hong Kong School of Public Health.
    The Cambodian Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization announced yesterday in Phnom Penh that laboratory results of all hospitalized cases from April to last Thursday revealed "a significant portion of the samples tested positive for EV71, which causes hand, foot and mouth disease."

    The children range from three months to 11 years old, with a 1.3:1 male to female ratio.
    Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection has told doctors to remain vigilant of "febrile patients returning from Cambodia with respiratory and/or neurological symptoms."
    Peiris said the virus does not have to be some "new mutant strain because we know EV71 can cause this type of problem." In 1998, about 200 children died during an outbreak in Taiwan, he said.
    Sufferers develop brain stem encephalitis and respiratory distress within hours.
    Meanwhile, 15 Hongkongers, among a 32-member tour group to Cambodia last month, have been diagnosed with bacterial dysentery after complaining of fever, diarrhea and vomiting. http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?we_cat=4&art_id=124187&sid=36977414&con_type=1&d_str=20120710&fc=2

    Tonight on AC360: Mystery illness kills children in Cambodia

    An illness that quickly turns deadly is claiming the lives of young patients in Cambodia. Doctors at the Kantha Bopha Children's Hospital who regularly treat conditions like Dengue fever, malaria and tuberculosis say they've never seen anything like it.
    A World Health Organization representative says many of the children died within 24 hours of being admitted to the hospital. The sickness begins with a mild fever and then rapidly impairs the body. The speed of deterioration and other symptoms are baffling to medical experts.
    An enterovirus associated with hand foot and mouth disease has been linked to some of the patients, but that's only one small clue and doctors aren't sure what it means. While parents try to maintain hope, medical experts are working to uncover a pattern and find more pieces to the puzzle.
    CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta traveled to Cambodia and was granted access to the intensive care unit. Watch his report to learn more at 8 and 10 p.m ET on AC360. http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2012/07/09/tonight-on-ac360-mystery-illness-kills-children-in-cambodia/

    A report on the 11 yr old Cambodian death from # HFM

    ..
    Vorn Pov



    Among the dead was Vorn Pov, whom his father said was 12 years old. In Cambodia, it’s common to add a year when counting ages. Vorn Pov died on June 23, about a week after he first became sick. His father, Khuth Vorn, 53, lives in a wooden thatched roof house next to lush green rice fields in Prey Veng province, southeast of Phnom Penh near the border with Vietnam.


    When Vorn Pov first got sick, Khuth Vorn took him to a local clinic, where he stayed for three days. He was transferred to a private clinic in Prey Veng provincial town for four days when his condition worsened, after which he was taken to the Kantha Bopha hospital, Khuth Vorn said. His son arrived at 5 p.m. and was pronounced dead four hours later.


    “The doctors said his lungs had burned,” Khuth Vorn said, sitting shirtless at a stone table as half-a-dozen barefooted small children played around him in dirt littered with plastic bags, empty soda bottles and discarded cigarette packages. “My wife was sobbing. We felt helpless.”


    Provincial and district officials visited him yesterday to find out more details about his son’s illness, he said.


    Iceberg Effect


    “If EV-71 is the explanation, what very likely occurred is a massive outbreak of hand, mouth and foot disease, which might not have hit the radar because it’s generally a mild disease and lasts for a few days,” said Peiris.


    Peiris explained that in epidemiology there is what is called the iceberg effect: where only a small percentage of the affected present as a serious disease. “What is different could be the host’s ability to combat the disease,” he said.


    Hand, foot and mouth disease is a common infectious disease in infants and children, according to the joint release. It is spread from person to person by direct contact with nose or throat discharges, saliva, fluid from blisters, or the feces of the infected, according to the release. http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2012/07...foot.html#more

    Cambodian Killer Unmasked?

    Scientists have identified a possible culprit in the mysterious syndrome that has killed dozens of children in Cambodia since April, the Cambodian Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization announced on 8 July...
    ... They found strains of Streptococcus in throat samples from a number of patients but eliminated it as the cause of death after finding the same strains in samples from children with other symptoms.



    Neighboring Vietnam has been badly hit by hand, foot, and mouth disease, so "we were expecting an outbreak sooner or later," Buchy says. But samples from victims did not initially test positive for Enterovirus 71. It was only after contacting scientists at the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, that the Pasteur team learned that the primers and probes they had designed for the virus in 2009 were out of date. Sequences of more recent Enterovirus 71 strains from Vietnam revealed that the virus had undergone significant genetic drift, Buchy says.



    If Enterovirus 71 is indeed the culprit, one puzzling aspect may be the high number of fatal cases in a country of only 15 million people. Vietnam, which has a population roughly six times as large, confirmed only 20 deaths from hand, foot, and mouth disease between January and April of this year. In China, meanwhile, the health ministry announced last week that 240 people died of hand, foot, and mouth disease between January and May 2012. (The death toll has been higher this year than in years past, a ministry official told China Daily.)

    While health officials have no idea how many people might be infected with hand, foot, and mouth disease in Cambodia, Buchy speculates that the population is largely naive to the virus and that "we may have a huge proportion of the child population that is not totally immune." Institut Pasteur scientists are now testing additional samples from the 24 patients and waiting for cell culture results. They will then start sequencing the Cambodian strain, Buchy says. Eventually, he says, they hope to determine "for how long and at which level the virus has been circulating" in Cambodia.http://news.sciencemag.org/scienceinsider/2012/07/cambodian-killer-unmasked.html?rss=1

    EV-71 virus can result in brain swelling and death – Cambodian deaths tied to common child


    health11 EV 71 virus can result in brain swelling and death   Cambodian deaths tied to common child illness
    PHNOM PENH: Mean Thida, 4, affected with mystery disease, sleeps beside her mother as she receives treatment via a bottle of serum, not in photo, at their home near a dump site at Sambour village, on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, yesterday. A deadly form of a common childhood illness has been linked to many of the mysterious child deaths in Cambodia that caused alarm after a cause could not immediately be determined, health officials said yesterday.— AP
    http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/07/09/ev-71-virus-can-result-in-brain-swelling-and-death-cambodian-deaths-tied-to-common-child-illness/

    Indonesia heightens monitoring on Cambodian mysterious disease


    English.news.cn 2012-07-09 19:16:57

    July 9 (Xinhua) -- Indonesian Health Ministry is put under a heightened state of vigilance to monitor the recent development of a mysterious disease that reportedly has killed more than 50 children in Cambodia since April, local media reported on Monday. The Health Ministry's director general for disease control and environmental health, Tjandra Yoga Aditama, said that his ministry had been corresponding with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Cambodian Health Ministry to gather information about the disease's symptoms, and determine whether or not the disease might spread to other countries.
    "Currently, the Cambodian Health Ministry and the WHO have yet to collect all the data. Therefore, we can only refer to the disease as an undiagnosed syndrome and a neuro-respiratory syndrome," Tjandra was quoted as saying by the Antara news agency...Even though the disease has claimed dozens of lives, the WHO has yet to issue a travel warning for Cambodia.
    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/world/2012-07/09/c_131704362.htm

    Sunday, July 8, 2012

    WHO Update on investigation of unknown disease in Cambodia

    Update on investigation of unknown disease in Cambodia

    CAMBODIA, 8 July 2012 – The Cambodian Ministry of Health, in partnership with the World Health Organization and other partners, is currently conducting an active investigation of the undiagnosed syndrome that affected children in Cambodia. Based on the latest laboratory results, a significant proportion of the samples tested positive for Enterovirus 71 (EV-71), which causes hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD). The EV-71 has been known to generally cause severe complications among some patients.http://www.wpro.who.int/en/
    http://www.wpro.who.int/CAM_mystery_8July.pdf
    Some kids had strep suis and Dengue

    Ben Tre: Part pig "run" PRRS

    Ben Tre: Part pig "run" PRRS

    Sunday, 08/07/2012 14:49 \

    blue ear pig Lo spread, many pig farmers in Ben Tre province rushed to sell pork "non", despite heavy losses.


     According to Ben Tre Veterinary Department, the three southern provinces as Binh Duong, Dong Nai and Bac Lieu has announced blue ear pig. This disease tends to spread and the annual peak in July, 8 calendar.

    http://nld.com.vn/20120708023653586p0c1002/ben-tre-ban-heo-chay-dich-tai-xanh.htm

    SINGAPORE-Local farms take precaution against bird flu


    Updated 10:52 PM Jul 08, 2012

    SINGAPORE - Farms in Singapore are taking precaution against bird flu, after recent outbreaks in some parts of Asia.

    They have increased the disinfection frequency to twice a week - from once every week.

    At N & N Agriculture farm in Lim Chu Kang, vehicles have to be thoroughly sanitised before they can enter.

    And they have to go through another round before they can enter the egg production area of the farm.

    Apart from strict compliance with AVA guidelines, some farm owners have also gone the ...



    http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore...ainst-bird-flu

    Thailand Public Health Ministry orders 4 mil Tamiflu in case of #bird flu outbreak

    Public Health Ministry orders 4 mil Tamiflu in case of bird flu outbreak
     Sunday, 08 July 2012
    • BAGKOK, 6 July 2012 -The Ministry of Public Health has reaffirmed that no outbreak of avian flu has been detected in Thailand, but to play it safe the ministry has ordered millions of doses of antiviral drugs of Tamiflu in case of emergency.

    According to Department of Disease Control Director-General Dr. Pornthep Sririwanarangsan, the stocking up on Tamiflu is necessary because not only has the avian flu outbreak been reported in China, but also in Mexico.

    Dr. Pornthep said even though Thailand has been free of such flu since 2007, the Ministry of Public Health is taking no chances. It has instructed public health volunteers across the country to monitor the poultry situation and notify authorities if the animals’ deaths are suspected to have been caused by H1N1.
    He claimed that no dead poultry in Thailand have been found infected by the avian flu so far. He assured the public that since Thailand is an exporter of poultry, it is unlikely for the avian flu to enter the country.
    However, 4 million Tamiflu tablets will be obtained to make sure people receive the medication immediately should they develop the H1N1 symptoms. Moreover, the quarantine zones along the Thai border have also been told to be extra cautious about all the birds imported into the country.

    http://www.pattayamail.com/news/public-health-ministry-orders-4-mil-tamiflu-in-case-of-bird-flu-outbreak-14415

    Doctors identify Cambodia mystery illness

    Scientists identify illness that killed 64 children as Enterovirus 71, a strain of hand, foot and mouth disease.

    Last Modified: 08 Jul 2012 12:07


    Video


    Scientists in Cambodia have said they have identified the mystery illness that has killed dozens of children in the past three months.

    The Pasteur Institute in Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital, announced on Sunday that tests indicate the unknown sickness that has led to the deaths of 64 children and hospitalisation of 66 is the Enterovirus 71.

    The virus is a strain of hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) that is widespread in Asia, but not usually found in Cambodia.
    HFMD is a human ailment caused by intestinal viruses, and not to be mistaken for foot-and-mouth disease, which only affects animals. Infected children generally suffer from high fever, rashes, respiratory and sometimes neurological problems.
    In 64 of the 66 cases, the children's health deteriorated much faster than doctors expected. This is one of the reasons why the illness was difficult to identify, as the Enterovirus 71 usually does not lead to such quick deaths.

    Paediatrician Beat Richner, founder of Kantha Bopha children's hospitals, was the first to raise concerns about the illness.
    Richner said all the patients who died were treated in private clinics in local areas before being brought to the Kantha Bopha hospitals in the capital and the northwestern province of Siem Reap.
    "They all got injections or infusions by private centres before coming to us," he said. "Some died four hours after arriving."

    Faulty prescriptions?

    Out of the 66 children hospitalised, the two patients that lived were treated only by Kantha Bopha staff, suggesting that botched medical treatment may be a factor.

    "All these children have encephalitis [inflammation of the brain] and in the later hours of their life they develop a severe pneumonia with a destruction of the alveoli in the lungs. That is the reason they die," Richner said.

    The alveoli, or air sacs, are pockets in the lungs where the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide takes place.

    There is no known cure for the Enterovirus, but doctors recommend good hygiene especially for young children.

    The UN health body and Cambodian officials have urged parents to bring their sick children to hospital if they see any signs of any unusual illness.

    There have been no cases reported outside Cambodia so far.
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia-pacific/2012/07/201278103438248264.html

    Officials make break in baffling disease killing Cambodian children

    Hattip TETANO

    (CNN) -- Health officials say they have made an important discovery in the mystery surrounding the deaths of more than 60 children in Cambodia.

    The Institut Pasteur in Cambodia tested samples taken from 24 patients and found 15 had tested positive for Enterovirus Type 71.

    "These results now give a good explanation to this outbreak," Dr. Philippe Buchy, head of the institute's virology unit, said in an e-mail. "We will get more results hopefully by next Tuesday or Wednesday."

    In milder cases, EV71 can cause coldlike symptoms, diarrhea and sores on the hands, feet and mouth, according to the journal Genetic Vaccines and Therapy.

    But more severe cases can cause fluid to accumulate on the brain, resulting in polio-like paralysis and death.
    Deadly disease kills Cambodian children

    There is no effective antiviral treatment for severe EV71 infections, and no vaccine is available.

    Adults' well-developed immune systems usually can fend off the virus, but children are vulnerable to it, according to the CDC.


    http://edition.cnn.com/2012/07/08/wo...ldren-disease/

    Friday, July 6, 2012

    MEXICO SECRETARY OF HEALTH DENIES H7N3 CAN INFECT HUMANS

    Or anything else for that matter..

    SECRETARY OF HEALTH, CHERTORISKI SOLOMON: Good afternoon everyone, I greet with respect to fellow media, I thank the Secretary Ferrari's invitation to be together, to comprehensively platicarles all sides of this issue we have As always busy.

    I would start by saying that the Ministry of Health we have one of the expert groups for influence in the world, recognized worldwide as reiterated today headed by Dr. Pablo Kuri, three messages that I would very timely.
    The first influence is a disease that affects several animal species including as we all know and have experienced the human being, yet each of these viruses is limited to the transmission within the same species. In this particular case the H7N3 virus is only transmitted between birds, I want it very clear that no virus among lizards, whales, horses and of course reiterated among humans, but the virus that we are living today in the country today, focusing on the state of Jalisco has no chance of being transmitted to humans. I say this with all punctuality, with precision throughout history has never been a case of transmission of this virus to humans and I think it is very important as we have been doing throughout the week to reiterate this message there is no risk of infection in humans.   http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sagarpa.gob.mx%2Fsaladeprensa%2Fboletines2%2FPaginas%2Fdefault.aspx 


    ..Chertorivski Solomon, owner of Health, noted that "there is no risk of human infection" by bird flu and if they even broke the cordon sanitaire and someone were to eat eggs or chicken infected, your health is no risk.
    http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2012/07/06/153333235-se-duplicara-cuarta-emergente-de-exportacion-de-huevo   
     


    Due to the outbreak of bird flu that has affected A7N3 thousands of birds in the municipalities of Tepatitlán Acatic and Jalisco, the State Government through the Ministry of Health reports that this virus is not transmissible to exotic beings human by any means.
    Likewise, this office has ruled out the possibility of avian flu infection who consume eggs and poultry.
     Avian influenza is a highly contagious viral disease caused by a virus Type "A" that affects several species of birds of all ages, as wild and domestic turkeys, chickens, ducks, water birds, the latter acting as potential carriers virus.
      Dr. Jose Trevino Leo Cardenas Director of Prevention and Disease Control, reported that this disease is only transmitted between birds that have contact with infected feces, secretions, contaminated food and water or improper handling of dead birds.  

    56 Cambodian children killed by unknown disease in 3 months

    ..The Cambodian Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization (WHO) said late Friday that the initial investigation results showed that 56 children had died of the undiagnosed disease in the last three months and an active investigation is still going on.
    The death toll was lower than the 61 deaths announced on Wednesday.

    "Preliminary findings identified a total of 74 cases who were hospitalized from April to 5 July 2012," said a joint statement of the ministry and the WHO....

    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/health/2012-07/07/c_131700297.htm

    PHL officials on alert for Cambodia respiratory disease

    July 7, 2012 7:34am

    Philippine authorities are now on alert for a mysterious respiratory disease that has so far killed at least 56 children in Cambodia.

    The Bureau of Quarantine has intensified its medical inspection of passengers from Southeast Asia especially from Cambodia, radio dzBB reported Saturday....


    The DOH is now monitoring (the disease). Airports will screen inbound travelers as standard operating procedure,” he said.
    So far, he said little is known of the disease other than that it “affects children, (and is) very fatal,” with its mode of transmission unknown, and causative organism unknown.

    In other posts on his Twitter account, Tayag said symptoms of the disease include fever and respiratory and/or neurological symptoms followed by death within 24 hours.

    0Another sign of the disease includes an elevated white blood cell count, he added.

    So far, he said none of the hospital staff who took care of the children with symptoms had gotten sick.

    WHO: 74 cases identified, at least 56 fatal

    The World Health Organization said the Cambodian Ministry of Health is actively investigating the syndrome.

    It said preliminary findings identified 74 cases who were hospitalized from April to July 5...


    http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/264501/news/nation/phl-officials-on-alert-for-cambodia-respiratory-disease