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Friday, March 22, 2013

Investigate the infection of patients'' Nozhukhomaal''


Saturday, March 23, 2013
I got, the day before yesterday, an investigation committee of the Ministry of Health in order to stand on what happened in one of the private clinics in Setif, and committee consists of three consultants have been deployed, following reports of injury four patients bacterium, where he was admitted intensive care hospital .e.na Abdel Nour. 
The Commission has to listen to all of the director the Setif Professor Mhatv Hospital Abdul Karim, as well as some based on the interests of infectious diseases at the hospital and in the interest of prevention Department of Health.
These developments came after the entry of patients to perform various operations, including three cases underwent surgery in the lung, is the lack of hygiene clinic led to infected with make up to be called'' Nozhukhomaal'' or what is known is infected with Staphylococcus aureus, which shortened the name'' Stadtalecoq Oris '' pathogenic infection, which someone summoned transferred to the France due to the complexity of his condition. 

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Experts sound global alert over deadly bat virus

By  | March 21, 2013


CANBERRA, Mar 21 – Experts on infectious diseases on Thursday warned people to stay away from bats worldwide after the recent death of an eight-year-old boy bitten in Australia.
The boy last month became the third person in the country to die of Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV), for which there is no effective treatment.
Doctors Joshua Francis and Clare Nourse of Brisbane’s Mater Children’s Hospital warned an infectious diseases conference that human-to-human transmission of the virus may be possible.
Francis said the boy was bitten during a family holiday to Queensland in December 2012, but did not tell his parents.
Three weeks later he began to suffer convulsions, abdominal pain and fever, followed by progressive brain problems.
Doctors frantically tried to establish what was wrong and on day 10 of his admission the lyssavirus was detected.
He fell into a coma and died on February 22.
Francis told the Canberra conference the warning to avoid bats around the world was issued not just because of the danger posed by the animals themselves, but due to the risk, however remote, that the virus could be spread between humans.
“Human to human transmission of lyssaviruses has not been well documented, but it is theoretically possible,” he said.
International guidelines recommend post-exposure prophylaxis for anyone who has been exposed to the saliva or neural tissue of an infected person through broken skin or mucous membrane contact.
“ABLV has proved fatal in all cases reported to date. There is a need for increased public awareness of the risk associated with bat contact,” Francis said. “In short, people should stay away from bats.”
ABLV was first identified in Australian bats and flying foxes and is common in both, though human infection is extremely rare.
Two adult cases were confirmed in 1996 and 1998. One was a woman bitten by a flying fox after wrestling it off a child, the other a carer who looked after the animals.
Other lyssavirus strains circulate in bats in the United States and Europe and the experts said their warning applies to wherever bat or flying fox populations exist.  http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2013/03/experts-sound-global-alert-over-deadly-bat-virus/

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

UN: Syria didn’t formally request a chemical weapons probe




MARCH 20, 2013
The United Nations said Wednesday that Syria has made no formal request for a UN investigation into government claims that opposition rebels have used chemical weapons.
UN spokesman Martin Nesirky appeared to counter a statement by Syria’s UN envoy Bashar Jaafari that Syria had asked for the “independent” inquiry into the claims.
Nesirky said he had briefed Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon on Jaafari’s comments to reporters. “I think we will have something further to say once we have received a formal request which we have so far not received,” Nesirky told reporters.
Just before, Jaafari said “my government has requested, a few minutes ago, the secretary general of the United Nations to form a specialized, independent and neutral technical mission to investigate the use by the terrorist groups operating in Syria of chemical weapons yesterday against civilians.”
President Bashar al-Assad’s government says chemical arms were used Tuesday in the town of Khan al-Assal near the conflict hotspot of Aleppo.
The Syrian opposition has accused government forces of using chemical weapons and also demanded an independent investigation.
Ban has been in touch with the head of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which implements the Chemical Weapons Convention, over the allegations.
“The secretary general remains convinced that the use of chemical weapons by any party under any circumstances would constitute an outrageous crime,” said Nesirky.
Ban and OPCW secretary general Ahmet Uzumcu agreed to “maintain close contacts as developments unfold,” said Nesirky.
UN Security Council nations are remaining cautious about the claims.
“We simply don’t have any information to corroborate, verify, substantiate” the allegations by either side, a senior UN diplomat said.
NOW

WHO sending supplies to Aleppo, can't confirm chemical use


GENEVA, March 19 (Reuters) - The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday that it would send medical supplies to the Syrian city of Aleppo on Wednesday, but could not verify if chemical weapons or some other toxin had been used there.
"At this stage we cannot confirm the use of chemical weapons, nor what agent, if any, was used," WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told Reuters in Geneva.
Syria's government and rebels accused each other of launching a deadly chemical attack near the northern city of Aleppo on Tuesday in what would, if confirmed, be the first use of such weapons in the two-year conflict.
A number of patients are seeking medical care in the public hospital in Aleppo, however total casualty figures for wounded and killed could not be verified, Jasarevic said.
Experts contracted by WHO were visiting Aleppo health facilities to identify immediate health needs and the United Nations agency was providing "technical support on the treatment of chemical toxins", available on its website, WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl said.
"It is not in response to a request, it is an initiative we took," Hartl told Reuters.
"Tomorrow (Wednesday) morning WHO will send medical supplies (for trauma cases) to Aleppo from its prepositioned stocks in Tartous," Jasarevic said, referring to Syria's Mediterranean port on its western coast. (Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Hundreds of Sudden Death Chickens in Karanganyar


Metrotvnews.com, Karanganyar: Hundreds of chickens in Karanganyar, Central Java, died suddenly in the last week. People started to panic with suspected bird flu virus. incident occurred in the village Bolong, District Karanganyar City.According to residents, almost every day of chickens died suddenly. Polynomial.Husbandry Department official said of reports of 120 chickens had died. Officers have taken a sample of fluid from the anus chicken carcasses. However, bird flu virus attacks proved to be negative. Officers suspect the chickens died of Newcastle Disease attacks. Officers remain alert and asked residents not mengomsumsi chickens that have died. Chicken carcasses would not be thrown away but burned or buried.

Poultry markets under bridges: Very toxic to buyers




TP - Under the bridge for him (Ward 14, Go Vap District, Ho Chi Minh City) is the existence of a live bird markets business, works pretty busy.
Business market has about a dozen households, hundreds of birds are kept in cages, sold openly. Some people sold on demand. Buyers can choose comfortable and by seller slaughter.
As noted by Pioneer , the main sources of the market is supplied from Tay Ninh province.Every day, brought BKS 70C 01 275 down truck, the truck full of eggs and poultry. "I" in a number of houses near the market.
The birds died in transit, fur, organs were thrown straight to Tham Luong channel. Pressing some locals said that the market exists for more than 10 years.
In addition to pollution, the risk of re-avian influenza, in the slaughter process, instead of boiling water embedded, poultry sellers embedded in chemicals to clean hair, faster makes buyers vulnerable to poisoning.

Ban movement of poultry from Cambodia to Vietnam



(TNO) this afternoon 19.3, at a meeting of the National Steering Committee to prevent avian influenza , Pham Van Dong, director of the Veterinary Department (MARD) requirements of the provinces bordering Cambodia to apply drastic measures in the fight against  this dangerous disease .

"Prohibition of all forms of transport, slaughter and consumption of poultry and poultry products across the border with Cambodia to Vietnam," said East.
This ban is set for the purpose to prevent bird flu  spreading from Cambodia to Vietnam. Currently, bird flu are complicated in Cambodia and had 8/9 people with bird flu death.
According to the East, in the past two weeks, on the whole country, not bird flu outbreak. Kien Giang Dien Bien province and has successfully controlled this dangerous disease, the only country only Khanh Hoa province have bird flu less than 21 days but more consecutive days without incurring additional infected poultry.
"In the near future, due to the weather change reduces the resistance of poultry, re breeding herd increased, avian influenza virus is still circulating in the herd waterfowl, bird smuggled status still not over yet ... so the risk of outbreak continues to be very high, especially in the area of ​​the old outbreak, the areas with high density of aquatic birds such as the Red River Delta area, North Central, South Central and the Mekong Delta, "said East note. 

As Deadly Virus Spreads, Saudis Defend Role



A SARS-like virus has infected 15 people, nine of whom have died, mostly in Saudi Arabia, worrying some Western scientists who question whether the kingdom is sharing enough critical data on the outbreak.
But a top Saudi Arabia health official rejected those complaints on Tuesday and said the virus posed a low risk of pandemic.
Saudi Arabia has rejected accusations that it is covering up details of a deadly new SARS-like virus, which has recently been shown to be capable of spreading from person to person. Betsy McKay reports. Photo: AP.
The disease—similar to the SARS virus that emerged a decade ago that killed nearly 1,000 people—was recently found capable of spreading person-to-person. Of the deaths confirmed in humans since April, six have occurred in Saudi Arabia, including three since February, said the World Health Organization, which has issued a global alert.
The latest victim, a 39-year-old Saudi, died March 2 after visiting a farm with goats, camels and sheep outside the Saudi capital, Riyadh, deputy health minister Ziad Memish said in an interview. Saudi families know such suburban farms as istirahas, and countless Saudi families with the means keep such rural homes as weekend retreats.
Two other of those infected, a Saudi and a Qatari, also had visited farms—one with sick goats—shortly before falling ill, Dr. Memish said. Saudi health officials are monitoring the animals, but haven't yet seen enough proof to establish links between the farm animals and the outbreaks, or to call for quarantines, he said.
The Saudi health official also resisted calling the outbreak a Saudi one, saying the likely reason eight of the victims have been Saudis is that the kingdom alone had ordered hospitals countrywide to test for the virus among all patients who come to intensive care with severe respiratory problems.
When other countries step up testing, they too will likely see more cases, he said. The other cases were from the U.K., Qatar and Jordan, international health officials say.
"We don't take it lightly, we're watching very closely, and we think the whole scientific community should be doing the same," said Dr. Memish, a Canadian-trained Saudi specialist in infectious diseases.
Still, with only 15 confirmed cases globally in almost a year, "so far the risk is low," Dr. Memish said. "We certainly don't want to terrify people, or scare people off, unnecessarily," he added.
In the SARS outbreak a decade ago, China drew international criticism for issuing slow and contradictory accounts of the first cases.
Some European and American scientists who played central roles in the SARS outbreak have expressed concern that Saudi Arabia isn't sharing critical information on the new coronavirus, which has been known to cause everything from the common cold to SARS.
"I worry this is a replay of the China SARS syndrome," said Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy at the University of Minnesota, and a former special adviser to the U.S. government on bioterrorism and public-health preparedness. "We all hoped that would never happen again."
Instead, he said, "what's going on inside Saudi Arabia is a black hole for public health," he said. "It's possible the Saudis are doing more and haven't told us. It's possible they're not."
But Peter Daszak, president and disease ecologist at EcoHealth Alliance, an organization that researches the animal origins of emerging viruses, said the Saudi government has been open to outside experts. A team from EcoHealth Alliance, working with scientists at Columbia University, went to Saudi Arabia a few weeks ago to help investigate the wildlife species source of the virus.
"They were proactive in inviting us," Dr. Daszak said of the Saudi government. "I don't think there has been such a lack of transparency there."
While the new coronavirus is of major concern, "I don't think there's a huge outbreak going on that we're not hearing about," Dr. Daszak said. Still, "the more you hear about clusters of cases, the more likely it is to go pandemic."
British investigators recently confirmed the first person-to-person transmission in the new coronavirus. The case occurred in a man who traveled to Pakistan and to the Islamic holy city of Mecca on a pilgrimage, then returned home to infect two family members in the U.K.
That confirmation led the WHO and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to urge testing for any travelers who developed symptoms including fever, cough or shortness of breath within 10 days of travel to the Arabian Peninsula or adjoining countries, including Israel and Syria. Neither agency has issued any travel advisory.
In the Saudi Red Sea city of Jeddah, one of the main transit points for the 10 million annual Muslim pilgrims to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, and for international travelers to Saudi as a whole, none of a dozen travelers questioned Monday and Tuesday said they had heard word of the outbreak from their governments or from Saudi Arabia's.
"No, no, nothing," Fara Poham of Jakarta, newly returned from a pilgrimage to Mecca with her husband and two young sons, said in Jeddah, hand to chin as she searched her memory.
None noticed any signs of special health precautions in Mecca, which is closed to non-Muslims.
"We are not afraid of any virus. Fifteen cases in six months? That's nothing," a Turkish man, wearing the simple draped white cloth of a pilgrim to Mecca, said in the lobby of the Jeddah Hilton. He refused to give his name.
"It would be better if they make people aware. At least say what the symptoms were, and how to prevent it," said Chip Lilly, a teacher returning to his home in Stanton, Virginia after a year in Jeddah, and the only person questioned who had heard seen a press report on the outbreak. Asked if he would take any precautions, Mr. Lilly, standing in front of the departure board in the Jeddah airport, said, "Yes. I'm going home."  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324323904578370504178096628.html

Saudis Reject Claims of SARS-Like Virus



HTTP://LIVE.WSJ.COM/VIDEO/SAUDIS-REJECT-CLAIMS-OF-SARS-LIKE-VIRUS/4DDE46F6-D6A8-4335-A3BE-8F4F78A28F3B.HTML#!4DDE46F6-D6A8-4335-A3BE-8F4F78A28F3B

Saudi Arabia has rejected accusations that it is covering up details of a deadly new SARS-like virus, which has recently been shown to be capable of spreading from person to person. Betsy McKay reports.

Fatal skin disease in C. Vietnam caused by mouldy rice -- official


HANOI, March 19 (Xinhua) -- The mysterious skin disease which has affected 215 people in Vietnam's central Quang Ngai province is caused by Aflatoxin, a toxin produced by fungus in mouldy rice, reported by local Vietnam News on Tuesday quoting sources from the Vietnamese Ministry of Health (MOH).
Phan Trong Lan, deputy head of MOH's Preventive Medicine Department, told local media that last Thursday scientists took samples of rice from families of those infected at Reu village in Ba To district where the disease started to rise, for tests.
Results showed that 100 percent of the infected patients ate mouldy rice, which was contaminated with the toxin nine times higher than the safe level. The toxic agent even causes liver cancer in men.
The local residents' habits of rice-eating were also surveyed. Accordingly, they dry grain before use, but store them in timber barns and do not care about the rice's quality, which often decreases due to moisture.
The disease, which causes skin peeling off, was first reported in the province in 2011 and it was believed to have been controlled last August. However, it re-occurred from Feb. 19, infecting 17 and killing one, so far this year.
So far, the disease affected a total of 215 people, mainly from Ba To district of central Quang Ngai province, about 730 km south of capital Hanoi; of whom 23 people died, according to MOH.  http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/health/2013-03/19/c_132245885.htm

Six-year-old boy in Shenzhen dyed Influenza A H5N1 influenza caused encephalitis




Core Tip: Shenzhen Mr. Tan-year-old son, unfortunately infected with a stream, lead to encephalitis, now without any ability to independently regulate the authority of doctors for help to friends, to save this young life.
  Recently, a help authoritative doctors microblogging forwarded by users. Shenzhen Mr. Tan-year-old son unfortunately been infected by a stream, lead to encephalitis, is nowwithout any independent ability to regulate the authority of doctors for help to friends, to save the life of this young. So, our reporter went to the hospital to interview together look.
  On the afternoon of the 18th, Mr. Tan and his family waiting outside in the pediatric ward of the maternal and child health care hospital in Shenzhen , anxious to receive calls, find ways to save the son.
  According to Mr. Tan, the son of a small peak March 6, slight fever, eating is still not improved after antipyretics. The next day they took him to the community health center hit fluids, encouraged him to go to school. Noon on March 8, the small peak body temperature suddenly soared to 40.3 ℃, the parents sent him to the hospital emergency room. Doctor symptomatic hit antipyretics and antibiotics, and physical cooling, but the small peak is always high fever did not retire. Even convulsions , rescue process , two breathing and heartbeat stop. After that, a small peak began to rely on ventilator to sustain life.
  Mr. Tan: "The first day, the doctor can not find the cause, but also confirmed not the next day by checking Laboratory confirmed influenza virus H5N1."
  It is understood, H5N1, also known as human infection of highly pathogenic avian influenza , in a multi-species communication, but not interpersonal spread. The virus can lead to death and some other animals, according to the statistics of the World Health Organization, the H5N1 infection mortality rate of over 50%.
  Small peak was diagnosed, Maternal and Child Health Hospital, Shenzhen invited Shenzhen Children's Hospital, the Third People's Hospital of Shenzhen and Guangzhou experts to consultation. Virus invasion of the the brain central trunk nerve, a small peak can not be independent respiratory and circulatory fall unconscious state. Mr. Tan With our reports to the community for help to save his son's life.
  Mr. Tan: "Before all still very smooth, but yesterday, today, a little fever , fever symptoms doctor has just issued a long time (coma), the various organs of the body has been failure and infection are very dangerous, my only recourse now, see if you can have a more clever doctors have experienced the same situation experts give some advice to give the child a chance to survive. beg to give us a help. " http://news.39.net/shwx/130320/4142618.html

Monday, March 18, 2013

Interim surveillance recommendations for human infection with novel coronavirus



As of 18 March 2013
Update
This document provides updated surveillance guidance for novel coronavirus (nCoV). WHO will continue
to update these recommendations as more information becomes available.
Current numbers and descriptions of reported cases are found on the main WHO novel coronavirus
page.
The primary changes included in this revision are:
• Addition of a recommendation to test individuals with unusually severe respiratory disease even
in the presence of another aetiology if the other agent does not fully explain the patient’s illness.
Specific revised recommendations for countries where the novel coronavirus has been detected. 
• Recommendations for investigations and studies to be carried out where cases are detected,
which may help describe critical clinical and epidemiological features of the virus.
Background 
A number of unanswered questions remain, including the virus reservoir, the means by which seemingly
sporadic infections are being acquired, the mode of transmission between infected persons, the clinical
spectrum ofinfection and the incubation period. In 2013 a third cluster of cases now provides clear
evidence of limited, non-sustained human-to-human transmission
{ http://www.hpa.org.uk/NewsCentre/NationalPressReleases/2013PressReleases/120319Updateoffamil
yclusterofnovelcoronavirus/}. The mode of transmission has not been determined. One of the cases in
the cluster originally tested positive for influenza A and was not initially thought to have infection with
nCoV.
One laboratory-confirmed case and one probable case have presented with relatively mild illness with
an uneventful recovery; however, most patients have had severe pneumonia. To date, there have been
15 laboratory-confirmed cases of nCoV infection, of which nine have died. Complications of their clinical
course have included severe pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring mechanical
ventilation, multi-organ failure, renal failure requiring dialysis, consumptive coagulopathy and
pericarditis. At least two cases had a history of recent travel, which occurred five to ten days before
onset of illness. Currently the virus has been found in a limited number of countries,mainly in the WHO 
Eastern Mediterranean Region.1
However, given the non-specific clinical presentation of the infection 
the presence of the virus in other areas cannot be ruled out in the absence of laboratory testing.
Objectives of surveillance
The primary objectives of the enhancements described in this document are to:
1
See: http://www.emro.who.int/landing-pages/countries/countries.html

1. Detect early,sustained human-to-human transmission.
2. Determine the geographic risk area for infection with the virus.
Additional clinical and epidemiological investigations (see table below) are needed to:
1. Determine key clinical characteristics of the infection,such as incubation period, the spectrum
and natural history of the disease.
2. Determine key epidemiological characteristics of the virus,such as exposures that result in
infection, risk factors, reservoir of the virus, secondary attack rates, and modes of transmission.
The following persons should be evaluated epidemiologically and tested for novel coronavirus:
1. A person with an acute respiratory infection, which may include history of fever and cough and
indications of pulmonary parenchymal disease (e.g. pneumonia orthe acute respiratory distress
syndrome [ARDS]), based on clinical or radiological evidence of consolidation, who requires
admission to hospital.
AND any of the following:
• The disease occurs as part of a cluster2
that occurs within a 10-day period , without
regard to place of residence or history of travel, unless another aetiology has been
identified.3
• The disease occurs in a health care worker who has been working in an environment
where patients with severe acute respiratory infections are being cared for, particularly
patients requiring intensive care, without regard to place of residence or history of
travel, unless another aetiology has been identified.
3Develops an unexpectedly severe clinical course despite appropriate treatment, without
regard to place of residence or history of travel, even if another aetiology has been
identified, if that alternate aetiology does not fully explain the presentation or clinical
course of the patient.
2. A person with an acute respiratory illness of any degree of severity who, within 10 days before
onset of illness, had close contact
with a confirmed or probable case of novel coronavirus
infection, while the case was ill.

3. For countries where the novel coronavirus has already been detected, the minimum standard 
for surveillance should be testing of patients with severe respiratory disease requiring 
mechanical ventilation. The minimum standard should include all those in three categories listed 
above—patients with unexplained pneumonia or ARDS occurring in clusters; health care workers 
requiring admission for respiratory disease and patients with unusual presentation or clinical 
course. However, countries where the novel coronavirus has already been detected are also 
strongly encouraged to consider adding testing for nCoV to current testing algorithms as part of 
routine sentinel respiratory disease surveillance and, if local capacity can support it, some 
testing of patients with milder, unexplained, community-acquired pneumonia requiring 
admission to hospital.
4. 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 be applied.
Reporting
Health care providers should report all cases meeting the confirmed or probable case definition
immediately, to national authorities, through established reporting channels.
National Authorities are requested to report all probable and confirmed cases within 24 hours of
classification, through the Regional Contact Point for International Health Regulations at the appropriate
WHO Regional Office. See current definitions for probable and confirmed cases
at: http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/case_definition/en/index.html. 
Investigations and applied epidemiological studies around cases of novel coronavirus infection
Many of the critical questions regarding the clinical manifestation and epidemiological characteristics of
novel coronavirus infection will be answered only by careful, detailed investigations around cases. The
following provides some guidance on the types of studies that should be considered. WHO is currently
working with technical partners to develop standard protocols and data collection instruments for this
purpose, which will be posted when they are finalized. Contact WHO at the email address listed at the
bottom of this document if technical support is needed.
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/coronavirus_infections/InterimRevisedSurveillanceRecommendations_nCoVinfection_18Mar13.pdf


Tainan outgoing suspected bird flu outside


TTainan night said there would be suspected imported cases of avian influenza, but still could not confirm the Disease Control Unit; living man in the new camp last month traveled to Indonesia after the mosquito bites, fever, aches, cough and other symptoms, followed by coma and hospitalized in stable condition after his return to Taiwan, last night immediately admitted to the Tainan City, a hospital, the Health Bureau said, what is the flu with severe complications, or avian influenza, may need further examination.
[2013/03/17

http://udn.com/NEWS/BREAKINGNEWS/BREAKINGNEWS3/7766678.shtml#ixzz2NvKvVyY8 
Power By udn.com 

Virus responsible for swine flu pandemic becoming increasingly resistant to Tamiflu



2009 outbreak may have caused the deaths of up to 579,000 people

The virus responsible for the “swine flu” pandemic of 2009 is becoming increasingly resistant to the main drug used to treat it, new research has shown.
An increasing number of cases of the virus, H1NI, are being found with developing resistance to oseltamivir – trade name Tamiflu – which was stockpiled in large amounts by Governments, including the British Government, when it was feared the new swine flu mutation would irresistibly sweep the world.
First detected in Mexico, the 2009 virus was a new strain of H1N1 – itself responsible for the disastrous flu pandemic of 1918 – which combined with a Eurasian pig flu virus to become newly potent.
The resultant pandemic struck over 74 countries, and although deaths were initially assessed by the World Health Organisation at 18,500, the WHO later admitted this was probably a gross underestimate.
A 2012 medical study by the journal ITALS Lancet Infectious Diseases OFFITALS suggested that in fact it may have caused the deaths of up to 579,000 people. 
Tamiflu, made by the giant Swiss pharmaceutical company, Hoffman-La Roche, was the main drug against the outbreak – but now Australian scientists are finding that it is encountering increased resistance.
Dr Aeron Hurt, of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Influenza in Melbourne, analysed with colleagues circulating H1N1 strains, and found that although the overall frequency of Tamiflu resistance was relatively low (approximately two per cent of strains tested) an increasing proportion of these viruses were being detected from patients not being treated with Tamiflu.
This suggests a resistant strain could be emerging since it must be being transmitted to these patients never treated with that drug. 
A widespread cluster of cases of Tamiflu-resistant influenza in Newcastle, New South Wales, in 2011 detected by surveillance conducted by Dr Hurt and colleagues, represents the most widespread outbreak of Tamiflu-resistant H1N, and generated significant concern that these strains may spread outside of Australia.
Similar resistant strains have since been detected in Europe, but at this stage only on an ad hoc basis. “However, the trend observed in Australia of a greater proportion of resistant cases being detected in untreated community patients is also being observed both in the USA and Europe,” says Dr Hurt.
Dr Hurt’s research was presented at the annual scientific meeting of the Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases (ASID) in Canberra.  http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/virus-responsible-for-swine-flu-pandemic-becoming-increasingly-resistant-to-tamiflu-8539601.html

China river's dead pig toll passes 13,000 but officials say water quality is 'normal'


 To the chagrin of Shanghai city residents, there’s more “pork chop soup” on the menu for the foreseeable future. 
More than a week since authorities in Shanghai started pulling thousands of dead pigs from one of the city’s major waterways, the Huangpu River, municipal authorities in that city of 23 million are continuing to pull hundreds of carcasses from its waterways each day, bringing the total since last week to over 13,000. 
Workers on Sunday pulled nearly 500 pigs from the Huangpu, bringing the total found from that river alone to over 9,500. The Huangpu River supplies over a fifth of Shanghai’s drinking water...  http://behindthewall.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/18/17357810-china-rivers-dead-pig-toll-passes-13000-but-officials-say-water-quality-is-normal?lite

Foot-and-mouth disease confirmed in NW China

English.news.cn   2013-03-18 

BEIJING, March 18 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) said Monday that foot-and-mouth disease infections were confirmed in cows in northwest China's Qinghai Province.
A cow farm in Ershilipu Township of Xining reported that two cows showed suspected signs of the disease on March 15, according to the MOA.
The National Foot-and-Mouth Disease Reference Laboratory on Monday confirmed the case as type A foot-and-mouth disease.
To prevent the disease from spreading, local authorities have sealed off and sterilized the infected area, where 63 cows have been culled and safely disposed of, according to the MOA.
Foot-and-mouth disease is a contagious and sometimes fatal viral disease that affects cloven-hoofed animals, including domestic and wild species within the family Bovidae.  http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/china/2013-03/18/c_132243379.htm

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Over 12,000 dead pigs fished out in China


Worries mount over the water supply as more bodies floated into Shanghai's main river.
Last Modified: 17 Mar 2013 07:30
The swine effluent raised concerns over the safety of the country's most popular meat [AFP]
Chinese workers have fished more than 12,000 dead pigs out of a main waterway in the cities of Shanghai and Jiaxing over the week, in a scandal that has spotlighted China's troubles with food safety, according to officials.
The South China Morning Post newspaper quoted government sources as saying on Sunday that nearly 9,000 swine carcasses were found in a river in Shanghai, and 3,600 others in Jiaxing, with the search continuing in both cities.
Authorities have also found traces of a common pig virus in some of the animals floating in the Huangpu River this week.
"Shanghai's animal control authority found porcine circovirus, a common disease among hogs that was not known to infect humans, in 13 of 20 samples of internal organs taken from dead pigs retrieved from the Huangpu," the newspaper quoted Ministry of Agricultural as saying.
The swine effluent discovered flowing down the Huangpu river - which supplies a fifth of the commercial hub's drinking water - has added the country's most popular meat to a growing list of food items rocked by scandal.
Authorities also said that after intensified checks they have not found any substandard pork products on the market and were closely monitoring water quality.
Food-safety scandals
Shanghai has blamed farmers in neighbouring Zhejiang province for casting pigs thought to have died of disease into the river upstream, although officials from the area have admitted to only a single producer doing so.
Pork accounted for 64 percent of total meat output last year, and China's increasingly wealthy urban residents consumed 21 kilograms (45 pounds) of the meat per person in 2011.
Despite laws against the practice, animals that die from disease in China can end up in the food supply chain or improperly disposed of.
China faced one of its biggest food-safety scandals in 2008 when the industrial chemical melamine was found to have been illegally added to dairy products, killing at least six babies and making 300,000 people ill. Levy
Cheap recycled cooking oil is available nationwide, made illegally from leftovers scooped out of restaurant drains. Amid public disgust, authorities arrested more than 30 people over its sale, but the practise continues.
In another recent incident, the American fast-food giant KFC faced controversy after revealing that some Chinese suppliers provided chicken with high levels of antibiotics, in what appeared to be an industry-wide practice.  http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia-pacific/2013/03/201331754454370437.html

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Lanka on alert for coronovirus



By Kumudini Hettiarachchi�
Sri Lanka is on alert for the new virus that could lead to serious illness but there is no cause for panic, assured a top health official.�All hospitals have been alerted to be vigilant for any severe respiratory infections as well as any change in patterns in the light of the novel coronavirus (nCoV) detected in West Asia, said Chief Epidemiologist Paba Palihawadana, explaining that the infection generally seemed to present itself as pneumonia.
A large number of Sri Lankans work in West Asia and there is massive movement between Sri Lanka and those countries. The nCoV, although not previously identified in humans, is not showing a fast spread like some we have seen worldwide in the past 10 years. �The nCoV had been around for nearly a year now, she said, reiterating that “our reporting and surveillance systems are in place to detect patients”.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) had not seen the need yet to screen those coming into the country from abroad, Dr. Palihawadana said.So far, according to the WHO, it has been informed of a global total of 15 confirmed cases of nCoV, with nine deaths, mostly in Saudi Arabia. A ‘confirmed case’ is a person with laboratory confirmation of infection with nCoV.
The US Centre for Disease Control (CDC) reported that the other cases were from Jordan, Qatar and Britain.Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses which cause a range of diseases, from the common cold to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), it is learnt. Pointing out that the WHO has not recommended any travel or trade restrictions due to nCoV, Dr. Palihawadana was quick to allay fears by explaining that reporting systems were in place since H1N1. The notification system for any unusual patterns in severe acute respiratory infections also applies to private hospitals.
If there are any suspected cases, there are some tests that can be carried out in Sri Lanka, but for confirmation of the virus, the specimens of respiratory secretions would be sent to the reference laboratories in Pune (India), Thailand or Hong Kong, said Dr. Palihawadana.The other option, of course, would be for Sri Lanka to establish its own laboratory facilities, with WHO assistance, but the establishment of controls and importation of reagents would take time, it is learnt.
While the WHO website explained that the cases of nCoV occurring in the same family raised the possibility of human-to-human transmission, it could also be that they were exposed to the same source of infection in a household or workplace. Bats may be one possibility, but the origin of the virus is yet to be established.Investigations are underway to determine the virus source, types of exposure that lead to infection, mode of transmission and the clinical pattern and course of disease, the WHO said, adding that there is no vaccine currently available. There is no specific treatment for nCoV as well. However, many of the symptoms can be treated.
Comparing nCoV to SARS which was identified in 2003, it says that they are “distantly related” as they belong to the same large family but an important difference seems to be that nCoV does not appear to transmit easily between people unlike the SARS virus which was much more transmissible.
Explaining how the name ‘coronaviruses’ came about, the CDC states that they are named for the crown-like spikes on their surface. “They are common viruses that most people get in their lifetime which usually cause mild to moderate upper-respiratory tract illnesses,” it says, adding that they may also infect animals, usually only one animal species or, at most, a small number of closely related species. However, SARS can infect people and animals, including monkeys, civets, rodents, cats and dogs.

Hundreds checked for rabies after transplant death


Public health agencies in five states are assessing the rabies risk for hundreds of people who may have had close contact with an infected organ donor and four transplant recipients, one of whom died, officials said Saturday.
About 200 medical workers, relatives and others were assessed for potential exposure in Maryland, where the man who received an infected kidney died, state veterinarian Katherine Feldman said. She said fewer than two dozen were urged to get the rabies vaccine as a preventive measure.
In Florida, about 90 people were identified as potentially exposed, and three were offered the rabies vaccine as of Friday, state health department spokeswoman Ashley Carr said.
Illinois Department of Public Health spokeswoman Melaney Arnold said the only potential exposures there were people who worked with the patient or the transplanted organ. She said only the organ recipient is receiving rabies treatment.
Health officials in Georgia and North Carolina are also involved in the epidemiological investigation prompted by the Maryland man's death from rabies in late February, nearly 18 months after he got the kidney from a donor in Pensacola, Fla. However, officials in those states didn't respond to requests from The Associated Press about the number of people they're assessing.
Doctors in Florida didn't test the 20-year-old donor for rabies before he died in September 2011. His heart, liver and other kidney went to recipients in Florida, Georgia and Illinois. They started getting the vaccine this month, and none has had rabies symptoms. A rabies expert unconnected to the case, Dr. Rodney Willoughby of Milwaukee, said they have a strong chance of surviving since they haven't shown any symptoms.
Health officials say the virus can be spread through the infected person's saliva and mucous membranes, but human-to-human transmission is rare. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta says there has been only one documented instance of transmission by a bite in the U.S.
Feldman said Friday that the search for potential exposure subjects in Maryland was wrapping up. She said medical workers typically take precautions, and "we don't share saliva with that many people in our day-to-day goings about."
CDC spokeswoman Melissa Dankel said investigators are still trying to learn how the transplant donor got infected with the raccoon rabies virus that was found in his brain tissue and that of the Maryland man. She said the donor was an outdoorsman who might have been bitten by a wild animal in his native North Carolina before moving to Florida and beginning training as an Air Force aviation mechanic 17 weeks before his death.
He visited a clinic at the Pensacola Naval Air Station in August 2011 for abdominal pain and vomiting and was transferred to a civilian hospital four days later, said Defense Department spokeswoman Cynthia Smith. He later developed encephalitis, a brain inflammation that can have a host of causes, including rabies, but he wasn't tested for the disease, CDC officials say.
Smith said the airman died of severe gastroenteritis - inflammation of the stomach and small intestine - complicated by dehydration, electrolyte abnormalities and seizure. The Florida Department of Health said he died of encephalitis of unknown origin.
Federal rules require organ banks to disclose any known or suspected infectious conditions that might be transmitted by donor organs. CDC officials say they don't know what information was communicated.
Federal guidelines published last year for evaluating organ donors with encephalitis urge "extreme caution" if the suspected cause is a viral pathogen, such as rabies.
Dr. Michael Green, a University of Pittsburgh professor who heads the committee that wrote the guidelines, said the guidelines hadn't been published when the Florida patient died. He also said rabies transmission through solid organ transplants is rare. There have been just two other documented instances worldwide - one in Germany and a 2004 U.S. case in which all four recipients died. The CDC says there have been eight documented instances of rabies being transmitted by transplanted corneas.
"Nonetheless, if asked whether or not I would use organs where concern for rabies was active in the potential donor, I would urge extreme caution before using organs from this person," Green said.
One of the patients who died in the 2004 case was 18-year-old Joshua Hightower, of Gilmer, Texas, after a kidney transplant. He had kidney problems since he was a child. His mother, Jennifer, said Saturday that if rabies is suspected in a transplant donor, doctors should go ahead and transplant the organs, and then give recipients the rabies vaccine.
"The word has got to get out there and something's got to change," she said. "These people, like my son, he thought the transplant was going to give him a new life and a new opportunity to move forward, and it killed him - over somebody's negligence and their plain old stupidity, and that's what it is."  http://www.newschannel5.com/story/21658890/other-people-who-had-contact-sought-in-rabies-case

Morang high alert under bird flu

BIRATNAGAR, March 16: A high alert has been adopted in Morang against bird flu hazard, owing to an outbreak of avian influenza (H5N1) in Indian border district, Purniya of Bihar. 

According to the regional livestock quarantine office Biratnagar, import of poultry and poultry products, feeds and vaccine from India has been banned in the district, bearing in mind the possibility of bird flu outbreak. The bird flu virus was detected in chickens at a Madhuwani-based poultry farm at Lankatole few days back.

Security bodies in Morang and Sunsari, local administrations, customs offices, traders and livestock quarantine offices have been alerted on the possibility of bird flu outbreak in the districts. Surveillance at border areas has been increased to check the illegal import of fowls and fowl-related products, office chief Dr Ram Sharan Saha  http://www.myrepublica.com/portal/index.php?action=news_details&news_id=51649

Guan Yi: Mainland infectious disease research restricted area



At 12:45 on March 16th, 2013 Saturday




SARS in 2003, the University of Hong Kong from the Mainland to get samples of the first to discover the SARS virus from civet cats. The past decade, the face of the Mainland strict legal infectious disease experts, collecting samples, published research, restrictions far more.
HKU School of Public Health Professor Guan Yi is an expert on avian flu, SARS period in person to the Guangzhou samples brought back to Hong Kong to study, from which he Shenzhen Dongmen market sample, the first found that the SARS virus from civet cats, prompted Mainland fasting game.
However, it is difficult to collect samples in the Mainland, more and more senior.
2005, Guan Yi in the medical journal research report published by the outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza in migratory birds in Qinghai Lake, the source of southern China.
Immediately by the Ministry of Agriculture to refute, that his illegal collection of the sample, and then change the regulations, regardless of the samples, information dissemination, and must be approved by the Ministry of Agriculture, otherwise they will be held criminally liable.
Guan Yi of the current collection of infectious disease samples to do scientific research, only go gray area.
He believes that the state has put more resources for scientific research, but local officials have denied the real lessons of SARS lessons, subject to the test of time. http://news.now.com/home/international/player?newsId=62515