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April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd April 30, 2009 @ 2:33 pm

CDC being sued by attorney who had Tuberculosis….

COMMENT:  Oh, remember the good old days…..we just had TB Andy to talk about! 

http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/04/30/tb.lawsuit/

Lawyer in 2007 TB scare sues CDC

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — An Atlanta, Georgia, lawyer, whose well-publicized bout with tuberculosis caused an international health scare, is suing the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for invasion of privacy.

Congress held hearings in June 2007 to discuss Andrew Speaker's TB case and the ensuing health scare.

Congress held hearings in June 2007 to discuss Andrew Speaker’s TB case and the ensuing health scare.

In the suit filed this week, Andrew Speaker alleges that the CDC released his name and sensitive medical information to the media in 2007, an act that harmed his reputation, his occupation and led to the ruin of his marriage.

Speaker did not specify a dollar amount he was seeking in damages in the suit filed in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, Georgia.

On May 29, 2007, the CDC held a press conference stating a patient with a rare form of tuberculosis, extensively drug-resistant TB which often proves fatal, had taken an international flight.

The CDC , the suit alleges, did not in that press conference or other press conferences, tell the public that the organization told Speaker that he was not contagious and that the CDC knew Speaker had planned to take the trip to Greece for his wedding.

Instead, the CDC unlawfully released extensive information about Speaker such as "the fact that he had flown to Greece to get married, the fact that he was a lawyer in Atlanta, and most importantly, his identity — none of which needed to be released to the general public in order to accomplish any legitimate public health purpose," the suit said.

On July 3, 2007, Speaker’s doctors changed his diagnosis to multi-drug resistant TB , a less dangerous but still potentially fatal form of the illness.

The suit alleges that the CDC’s inaccurate release of information about him caused major harm.



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April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd @ 2:23 pm

Hundreds of schools shuttered throughout the U.S.

Current Event, Disasters - Disease Outbreak, Infectious Disease, Outbreak & Pandemic, Influenza

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/30/AR2009043001734.html?hpid=topnews

Nearly 300 Schools Shut Amid Swine Flu Scare
Nearly 300 Schools Shut Amid Swine Flu Scare

By Maria Glod and Daniel de Vise
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, April 30, 2009 2:37 PM

 

Nearly 300 schools nationwide have shuttered as education and health officials take precautions to avoid the spread of swine flu, the U.S. Education Department reported today.

As of yesterday at noon, the department had counted about 100 school closures.

The department’s new count of 298 school closures nationwide corrected an earlier, mistaken tabulation of more than 4,000 closures today, officials said. There have been reports of flu cases at several colleges, but no reported closures.

The Fort Worth, Tex., school system closed its 80,000-student district for 10 days after confirmation of one case of swine flu at one campus and the announcement that there are probable cases at three other schools. In New York, where several schools have been hit by outbreaks, such decisions have been handled individually at the schools.

In Maryland, schools in Anne Arundel and Baltimore counties with probable flu cases have remained open under advice from health officials. Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) and state health officials said there was no need to cancel school because the infected students had not been in school since last Friday — a span of time beyond the suspected incubation period — and because they could tie each case to a relative who had been to Mexico.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have released guidelines to help school leaders make the difficult call of whether to cancel class. CDC officials, along with the U.S. Department of Education, held a conference call with school leaders Monday and planned a second call today.

Massie Ritsch, an Education Department spokesman, said the department is encouraging school officials to work closely with federal, state and local health departments. Schools should strongly closing if a student or employee is confirmed to have the flu, if there is a suspected case linked to a confirmed case or if there is a confirmed case in the community.

"Every school district in every community needs to do what’s right for them," Ritsch said. He said if schools do close, then other activities should be cancelled as well, and families should be encouraged to stay home.

The spread of the virus has put parents on edge. At Anne Arundel’s Folger McKinsey Elementary School in Severna Park, where one student is suspected to have swine flu, 45 percent of students did not show up today. Milford Mill Academy in Baltimore County, which also has a suspected case, was also open, with 68 percent attendance.

Anne Arundel school officials took extraordinary measures to assuage parent fears, wiping down surfaces "from one end to the other" with Spectra 9, a powerful disinfectant last used to combat MRSA, county schools spokesman Bob Mosier said.

An e-mail blast to parents said buses were being disinfected as well, and new air filters installed throughout the building. The cleaning crew would return tonight.

Parents were told their students could have an excused absence.

"I have a fourth-grader in this school system," Mosier said. "You have to be sympathetic. And our superintendent understood that immediately. . . . We’re a society that likes things ordinary. And when things are out of the ordinary, anxiety heightens."

Other school districts worked to assure parents they are watching the situation closely.

In a letter to parents this week, Arlington Superintendent Robert G. Smith said that there were no plans to shut the doors but that the situation was being monitored closely. "The health and safety of our children are our primary concern," the letter said.

Similar letters have been sent over the last few days to parents across the region. One principal in the District informed parents that door handles were being disinfected and student desktops cleaned. Most letters gave parents advice on how to keep their children healthy and prevent the spread of the flu — from covering one’s nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing to keeping a sick student at home.

"At this time, there are no cases in Virginia; however, we expect that could change as the numbers and locations of cases around the nation and the world continue to grow," a Fairfax County letter sent to parents yesterday said. It added that there were no plans to close the schools but that parents would be notified if that changed. "This is a rapidly evolving situation, and we ask that you stay informed. This is a good time for you to review your family preparedness and childcare contingency plans."

Public health nurses and school clinic aides in Fairfax are looking out for symptoms of the virus. They are also monitoring absenteeism more closely to see where there is a spike in the number of children who are out and the reasons students are staying home, said Rosalyn Foroobar, director of patient-care services for the Fairfax County Health Department. Foroobar said the 169,000-student school system represents "a barometer of the health of the community" and can help give county health officials an early warning if something is wrong.

"We are prepared and plans are in place," she said.

Prince George’s County Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. sent a letter home telling parents that bathrooms would be stocked with soap and towels to encourage hand washing. John White, a spokesman for Prince George’s County schools, said if any students are confirmed to have cases of swine flu, they would be prevented from returning to school until they had fully recovered and that any decision to close a school would be made in consultation with the county health department. White added that school administrators had responded to the threat of swine flu "calmly, but we’re trying to get out in front of it."

For parents, questions about the flu outbreak are mounting.

Charlene Hyland of Arlington said the after-school routine for her 9-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son have changed in recent days. Now when they get home from school, she makes sure they take a bath and change their clothes.



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April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd @ 5:14 am

Taiwan to have a seat at the WHO Conference table!

Current Event, Diplomacy, Public Health / World Health Organization, WHO

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/29/AR2009042904666.html

In a Switch, Taiwan to Take Part in WHO Conference

By Jane Rickards
Special to The Washington Post
Thursday, April 30, 2009

 

TAIPEI, Taiwan, April 29 — The Taiwanese government said Wednesday that it will send observers to a United Nations health conference next month, its first participation in a formal U.N. activity since 1971, when the world body switched recognition to mainland China .

The announcement is a sign of considerable warming between Taiwan and the People’s Republic of China, which had used its influence in the past to block Taiwan from participating in the U.N.’s World Health Organization. China apparently gave a green light this week for the WHO to invite Taiwan to the 62nd World Health Assembly, a gathering of the WHO’s governing body, which begins May 18 in Geneva.

The move comes as the WHO seeks international cooperation to combat a potential pandemic of swine flu. During a similar crisis in 2003, Taiwan complained that its exclusion from the WHO complicated its response to an outbreak of the virus responsible for severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.

Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, who took office last May on a platform of improving ties with China, has taken steps to end decades of simmering tensions with the communist mainland. In recent months, Taiwan and China have instituted direct flights, boosted tourism and agreed to loosen restrictions on investments across the straits.

The WHO invitation marks a spreading of the goodwill into a particularly prickly area, Taiwan’s participation in international organizations.

Margaret Chan, the WHO’s director general, issued the formal invitation Tuesday night, asking Taiwan to send nonvoting observers to the Geneva gathering under the banner of "Chinese Taipei." Taiwan’s health minister, Yeh Ching-chuan, said Wednesday that he had accepted the offer. Participating in the conference will give Taiwan "more channels for accessing health information," Yeh told reporters.

Experts on relations between Taiwan and the mainland said they believed the two sides had been secretly negotiating the matter for months.



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April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd @ 4:59 am

An ounce of preparation is worth?

Disasters - Mitigation, Preparedness & Training

http://gsn.nti.org/gsn/nw_20090429_9762.php

Antiterrorism Training Helped Prepare U.S. for Swine Flu, Expert Says

Extensive biological terrorism preparedness training helped U.S. health workers prepare for a deadly swine flu outbreak now spreading across North America and abroad, Newsweek reported this week (see GSN , April 28).

  After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, U.S. hospitals began preparing to handle victims of a deliberately released disease agent (see GSN , April 24). Those efforts equipped the country’s medical community to respond to the swine flu outbreak more effectively than its counterpart in Mexico, where the disease had killed more than 150 people as of yesterday, one expert said.

"The level of preparedness is unprecedented," said Gregory Gray, head of the University of Iowa’s Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases. "We’ve been drilling for this potential eventuality, not just for influenza but for other biological emergencies."

The United States has a number of other advantages over Mexico, where the outbreak is believed to have originated, according to Newsweek.

"We have many more resources: more hospitals, better critical care, more facilities for doctors and nurses, much better diagnostic capabilities. They’ve done an excellent job for a resource-limited country, but we have more resources," said David Weber, medical director of hospital epidemiology for the University of North Carolina Medical Center.

The United States has also had more opportunity to prepare for the virus and could benefit from aggressive national and international efforts to restrict the spread of the disease. The U.S. Health and Human Services Department has designated the outbreak as a public health emergency, while the World Health Organization on Monday said there is a significant threat of pandemic.

"This is in recognition that this is a serious event, and we’re taking it seriously and acting aggressively," said Richard Besser, acting head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "But what it also does is it gives us additional authority. It allows us to move products and dispense drugs in a way that we couldn’t before" (Kate Dailey, Newsweek , April 27).

There have been nearly 100 cases of swine flu in the United States and one death, a Mexican child less than 2 years old, the Associated Presse reported (Lauran Neergaard, Associated Press/Yahoo!News , April 29).

The flu has turned up in at least nine nations, including Austria, Canada, Germany, Israel, New Zealand and Spain, Reuters reported (Maggie Fox, Reuters , April 29).



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April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd @ 4:45 am

Coloring book pulled from FEMA website

FEMA, R U Kidding? / Strange news / bizarre

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124107787893172453.html#printMode

FEMA pulls Minnesota crisis coloring book

Last update: April 30, 2009 – 12:10 AM

"A Scary Thing Happened" contains a colored drawing depicting the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, including a plane approaching one tower while another is ringed in flames.

The book was removed from the website of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on Tuesday, said Rose Olmsted, whose Freeborn County Crisis Response Team created the book in 2003, after tornadoes struck in Glenville. Olmsted said it’s the first time anyone has criticized the book or its content.

In a statement, FEMA spokesman Clark Stevens said, "The coloring book, which was put online in 2003, was removed last week, and FEMA is currently reviewing all Web content designed and posted by the previous administration." Stevens declined to take any questions, including about any complaints the agency may have received.

Olmsted said she was not told "who complained or how many complained. They felt that they had to take it off the website."

The book has been used extensively around the country to help children who have been "traumatized by a number of different things," she said, including the I-35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis in 2007.

"I’m gong to be putting together to FEMA a letter detailing the many ways that this book has been used," Olmsted said, adding that she’ll be including a letter she has on file from FEMA praising the book.



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April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd @ 4:35 am

WHO: World-Wide Pandemic Imminent

Current Event, Disasters - Communications, Disasters - Disease Outbreak, Healthcare Crisis, Infectious Disease, Outbreak & Pandemic, Influenza, Public Health / World Health Organization

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124107787893172453.html

  • APRIL 30, 2009, 5:18 A.M. ET
  • WHO Warns of Imminent World-Wide Pandemic

    U.N. Agency Raises Alert Level to Phase 5, Citing Sustained Person-to-Person Transmission in the U.S. and Mexico

    [Flu Moves Toward Pandemic Level] Associated Press

    Margaret Chan, director general of the World Health Organization, with deputy Anarfi Asamoa-Baah, said Wednesday that "all countries should immediately activate their pandemic preparation plans."

    The World Health Organization warned countries Wednesday that a global pandemic from a new strain of flu appeared imminent, as the number of ill continued to grow and the first death outside Mexico was reported in Texas.

    The United Nations public-health agency raised its global pandemic alert level to phase 5 from phase 4, indicating the A/H1N1 virus has caused outbreaks in at least two countries in one region. "All countries should immediately activate their pandemic preparation plans" and be on "high alert" for outbreaks, said WHO Director-General Margaret Chan.

    Associated Press

    Microbiologist Gilbert Ortiz handles samples while testing for swine flu at Houston Department of Health Wednesday.

    Tracking the Spread

    Key developments on swine flu outbreaks, according to CDC, WHO and government officials:

    Deaths: 159 in Mexico, seven confirmed as swine flu and rest suspected. One confirmed in U.S., a boy from Mexico who died in Texas.

    Sickened: 2,498 suspected and 19 confirmed in Mexico. Confirmed elsewhere: at least 93 in U.S.; 13 in Canada; 14 in New Zealand; five in Britain; three in Germany; 10 in Spain; two in Israel; one in Austria; and one in Switzerland.

    U.S. cases confirmed by CDC and state officials: 51 in New York, 14 in California, 16 in Texas, three in Maine; two in Kansas, two in Massachusetts, and one each in Indiana, Ohio, Arizona and Nevada. CDC also said Michigan had two, but state officials said only one was confirmed.

    Swine Flu Pandemic Level Raised to 5

    1:48

    WHO Director-General Margaret Chan issues a statement on the decision to raise the influenza pandemic alert to phase 5 and urging everyone to take the alert seriously. Video courtesy of Fox News.

    Dr. Chan said the decision was made after the agency established that sustained person-to-person transmission was occurring in the U.S., in addition to Mexico. The outbreak at a private school in the New York City borough of Queens caught the attention of WHO officials, because students who had traveled to Mexico returned to campus and infected others. Several hundred people associated with the school are believed to have caught the flu strain.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that 51 people in New York have been confirmed with swine flu. The total number of cases in the U.S. grew Wednesday to 91 people in 10 states.

    The WHO had raised its pandemic alert level to 4 from 3 earlier this week. Wednesday’s move reflected the rapid spread of the disease by international travelers. The WHO said nine countries had reported 148 cases, though several countries had many more suspected cases.

    Mexico says its death toll may be as high as 159 people. The country’s top government epidemiologist said Wednesday it was "highly improbable" that a pig farm in the state of Veracruz suspected of originating the new strain was responsible for the global outbreak.

    Keiji Fukuda, the WHO’s top flu official, said the agency could soon declare a pandemic, which is designated as level 6. "We think we are in the process of moving there," he said. "The spread of this is clearly related to travel. It is possible we will move to seeing established transmission in other countries relatively quickly."

    The escalating alert levels reflect the speed with which the virus is spreading, not its lethality, officials and scientists said.

    Swine Flu: Complete Coverage

    Some Mexican doctors say they believe many more people had the virus than initially thought and have since made a full recovery, suggesting it could turn out to be a relatively mild pandemic — like new viruses that swept the world in 1957 and 1968. Or, say flu scientists, it could evolve into a deadlier bug, like the one in 1918.

    Dr. Chan said the WHO could not risk waiting to determine the precise mortality rate of this strain before acting. "The biggest question right now is this: How severe will the pandemic be?" she said.

    "The virus is very unpredictable, and we are still at an early stage," she said. "It may be possible that the virus will die out and stop. But it can turn the other way, which is why it’s important for us to continue to be vigilant and track its movements."

    In Texas, a toddler who traveled from Mexico with his family died in a Houston hospital, the first confirmed U.S. death.

    The boy, who was a few weeks shy of his second birthday, came down with a fever on April 8, four days after traveling with his parents and grandparents to Brownsville, at the southern tip of Texas. He was admitted to a hospital a few days later and treated for flu symptoms.

    By then, "the child was very sick," said state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr., who was briefed by medical authorities. "He appeared to be suffering from a compromised immune system from a previous illness."

    The boy’s condition deteriorated rapidly, Mr. Lucio said; his kidneys began to fail and he was put on a ventilator. He was transferred to a Houston hospital, where he died Monday. Tests later showed the new strain.

    Gov. Rick Perry issued a disaster proclamation in Texas, where probable cases ranged in age from an 11-month-old patient to a 72-year-old. Some were in contact with people ill with the virus, while others had no known contact, nor had they traveled to Mexico.

    State officials canceled or postponed academic, athletic and arts competitions that would have brought together students from across the state.

    President Barack Obama said the boy’s death underscored the government’s decision to take aggressive action. He said the U.S. continued to closely monitor the outbreak. "This is obviously a serious situation — serious enough to take the utmost precaution," he said.

    A spokesman for the U.S. Department of Education said 104 schools, with about 56,000 students, had been closed in eight states by noon Wednesday. Seventy-four of the schools were shuttered because of confirmed or suspected cases of swine flu. The remainder were closed as a precaution. About 44,000 of the affected students were in Texas, he said.



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    April 30th, 2009 posted by Kelly Burkholder-Allen, RN, MSEd @ 4:24 am

    Cholera & Dysentary Update…courtesy of Promedmail.org

    Current Event, Disasters - Complex / Humanitarian Aid / Refugees, Disasters - Disease Outbreak, Infectious Disease, Outbreak & Pandemic, Public Health / World Health Organization, WHO

    COMMENT:  We can’t lose sight of the fact that there are more virulent disease outbreaks out there that require attention as well!

     

    Subject :   PRO/EDR> Cholera, diarrhea & dysentery update (2009) (17)
    Date :   Wed 04/29/2009 05:11 PM
     
    CHOLERA, DIARRHEA & DYSENTERY UPDATE 2009 (17)
    **********************************************
    A ProMED-mail post
    <http://www.promedmail.org>
    ProMED-mail is a program of the
    International Society for Infectious Diseases
    <http://www.isid.org>
    
    In this update:
    Americas
    [1] Cholera - Paraguay: PAHO
    Africa
    [2] Cholera - Zimbabwe: WHO
    [3] Cholera - Southern Africa
    [4] Cholera - Somalia (Puntland)
    [5] Cholera - Somalia (Southern regions)
    [6] Cholera - Kenya
    Asia
    [7] Cholera - Malaysia (Selangor)
    [8] Cholera - India: Matlab variant
    [9], [10] Cholera - Viet Nam (Ha Noi)
    [11] Diarrhea - Viet Nam (Dong Nai)
    [12] Cholera - Indonesia (West Nusa Tenggara)
    [13] Cholera, possible - Myanmar (Rangoon)
    
    ******
    [1] Cholera - Paraguay: PAHO
    Date: Wed 22 Apr 2009
    Source: PAHO, Epidemiological alerts [edited]
    
    <http://new.paho.org/hq/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1239&Itemid=1091>
    
    On 7 Apr 2009, the Ministry of Public Health and Social Welfare of
    Paraguay (MSPBS) received laboratory confirmation of a case of
    cholera arising from _Vibrio cholerae_ O1 Ogawa, biotype El Tor,
    toxin producing, which occurred in a 33-year-old male patient. The
    date on onset of symptoms was 6 Mar 2009, originating in the
    indigenous community of Ebetoque (Ayoreo ethnic group), located in
    the district of Filadelfia in the Paraguayan Chaco region. The case
    required a 3 day hospital stay, and the patient has recovered.
    
    On the basis of this confirmed case, an epidemiological investigation
    was carried out, in which 3 outbreaks of acute diarrheal disease were
    detected (one in the district of Loma Plata, and 2 in the district of
    Filadelfia) during the period between epidemiological week (EW) 51,
    2008, and EW 15, 2009.
    
    1. The 1st outbreak was reported between EWs 51 and 53, 2008; it
    affected the Enchlet community in the district of Loma Plata. The
    precise number of persons affected could not be determined, and 1
    (adult) death was reported.
    
    2. The 2nd outbreak was reported between EWs 3 and 4, 2009, and
    affected the Lengua community in Barrio Obrero (Filadelfia district).
    A total of 9 cases were reported, including 2 deaths (in older
    adults). The fatality rate was 22.5 percent.
    
    3. The 3rd outbreak was reported between EWs 9 and 10, 2009, and
    affected the Ayorea community in Ebetogue (Filadelfia district in the
    Paraguayan Chaco region). It was in this community that the
    laboratory-confirmed cholera case was identified. A total of 5 cases
    were reported, all requiring hospitalization. No related mortality
    was reported. In a water sample taken from a reservoir at the site
    where the index case was before the onset of symptoms, a strain of
    _Vibrio_ was identified.
    
    There have been no reports of similar diarrheal profiles from March
    2009 to 16 Apr 2009.
    
    In all the affected communities, the diarrhea outbreaks were
    contained following intervention by the regional health authorities,
    who took measures of assure safe drinking water in local water
    sources (chlorination, boiling water, purchase of mineral water).
    There is still no available evidence of the presence of _Vibrio
    cholerae_ O1 in water coming from the affected communities. However,
    the containment of the outbreaks following the implementation of safe
    drinking water strategies leads us to believe that transmission was
    waterborne.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail Rapporteur Marianne Hopp
    
    [How many of the other cases of diarrhea were cholera is unclear but
    it is likely that some were due to _V. cholerae_. This is the 1st
    case of cholera reported to the World Health Organization from
    Paraguay since 1996 (World Health Organization. Global Health Atlas
    (accessed 28 Apr 2009), available at
    <http://www.who.int/globalatlas/dataQuery/default.asp>). - Mod.LL]
    
    [The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Paraguay is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aS>. - CopyEd.MJ]
    
    ******
    [2] Cholera - Zimbabwe: WHO
    Date: Sun 26 Apr 2009
    Source: N Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA),
    ReliefWeb, Government of Zimbabwe; WHO report [edited]
    
    <http://reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/JBRN-7RJJ3B?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe>
    
    Zimbabwe: daily cholera update and alerts, 26 Apr 2009
    ------------------------------------------------------
    Highlights of the day:
    - 11 cases and 0 deaths added today (in comparison with 18 cases and
    0 deaths yesterday [25 Apr 2009])
    - cumulative cases: 97 198
    - cumulative deaths: 4 244 of which 2 606 are community deaths
    - 68.3. percent of the reporting centres affected have reported today
    [26 Apr 2009] (41 out of 60 affected reporting centres)
    - cumulative institutional case fatality rate: 1.7 percent
    - daily institutional CFR: 0 percent.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [After a very prolonged interval, over the past 6 weeks the outbreak
    of cholera in Zimbabwe has slowed to a trickle for now with almost
    100 000 reported cases and a very high case fatality rate of almost
    4.4 percent. The 26 Apr 2009 full report can be found at 
    
    <http://reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900sid/JBRN-7RJJ3B/$File/full_report.pdf>.
    
    A map of Zimbabwe with provinces can be found at
    <http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/map/profile/zimbabwe.pdf>.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Zimbabwe is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aK>. - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [3] Cholera - Southern Africa
    Date: Thu 23 Apr 2009
    Source: CRIENGLISH.com, Xinhua News Agency report [edited]
    <http://english.cri.cn/6966/2009/04/23/2041s477667.htm>
    
    The cholera epidemic in southern Africa continues to abate, but
    international and local health authorities stress the need to remain
    vigilant, the United Nations reported on Wednesday [22 Apr 2009].
    
    "Overall, the duration and magnitude of the epidemic underscores the
    need for strengthening surveillance, preparedness and underscores
    plans in all countries," according to the UN Office for the
    Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). There were a total of
    4579 new cases on 3-17 Apr 2009 in the 9 countries, Angola, Botswana,
    Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, and
    Zimbabwe, affected by the often fatal disease since August 2008.
    During the 2 weeks preceding 3 Apr 2009, 6460 new cases were
    reported, OCHA said.
    
    Authorities warn, however, that cholera could re-appear in the coming
    1 to 3 weeks, when waters from flooding in the region, which has
    affected more than 1.2 million people, subside and become stagnant.
    Those displaced by the deluge lack access to shelter, water, and
    sanitation facilities and are at higher risk of contracting the
    disease, OCHA said. To prevent that from happening, UN Country Teams
    and humanitarian partners plan to expedite their aid to flood
    victims. In a number of countries, national cholera policies and
    contingency planning is also taking place, in partnership with the UN
    World Health Organization (WHO), the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), and
    other organizations.
    
    The cumulative total of cholera cases reported in southern Africa
    stands at 155 692, including 96 718 cases in Zimbabwe, the worst
    affected country.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [A map of Africa showing the affected countries can be found at
    <http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/map/profile/africa.pdf>. - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [4] Cholera - Somalia (Puntland)
    Date: Mon 20 Apr 2009
    Source: Horseed Media [edited]
    <http://english.horseedmedia.net/news/17321.shtml>
    
    On Monday [20 Apr 2009], authorities in Bander Bayla town (east
    region, Puntland) confirm the death of 5 people in the latest cholera
    outbreak. Farah Hoshle, the mayor of Bayla town, told Horseed Media
    that the victims were 2 elderly women. More medical staff were sent
    to help the local health care centers, said the Mayor.
    
    The latest outbreak comes as the UN is warning about the possibility
    of major cholera outbreaks in southern and central Somalia.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [Puntland is a region in northeastern Somalia, centered on Garowe
    (Nugaal region), whose leaders declared it an autonomous state in
    1998. A third of the Somali people live in the province. It is
    location can be found at
    <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puntland>.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Somalia is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aM>. - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [5] Cholera - Somalia (Southern regions)
    Date: Tue 14 Apr 2009
    Source: Press TV [edited]
    <http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=91373&sectionid=351020501>
    
    At least 20 people died of cholera on Tuesday [14 Apr 2009] with
    minors accounting for a major part of the toll. More than 11 children
    died in the Bakool region while another 8 fell victim to the virulent
    disease in Middle Shabelle and one in Lower Shabelle, a Press TV
    correspondent reported.
    
    According to medics, a total of around 111 women and children have
    been sent to regional hospitals in southern Somalia. The cases mainly
    have occurred in areas such as Bay and Bakool, and Lower and Middle
    Shabelle regions, where aid workers have stopped operating amid
    ceaseless hostilities and ongoing tussles between rival factions.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [The regions mentioned can be found on a map of the country of Somalia
    at
    <http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/map/profile/somalia.pdf>. -
    Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [6] Cholera - Kenya
    Date: Mon 13 Apr 2009
    Source: The Standard [edited]
    <http://www.eastandard.net/InsidePage.php?id=1144011440&cid=4>
    
    Health experts are warning of a cholera outbreak in Nairobi and
    Mombasa, as city dwellers return from the Easter break upcountry. It
    is feared that the epidemic, that has claimed 55 lives of the nearly
    2000 cases reported countrywide, could also spread to Central
    Province that has been free of the disease so far, according to the
    Kenya Red Cross. The outbreak is traced to a few cases reported in
    Nyanza Province last December 2008. It has spread to 8 other
    districts in the region and spilled over to other provinces.
    
    So far, Nairobi and Mombasa appear safe although the Easter
    festivities, for which thousands of city residents travelled to their
    rural homes, will almost certainly bring cholera to the cities'
    doorstep.
    
    Latest statistics from the Ministry of Health, as contained in the
    Kenya Red Cross Bulletin Number 3, indicate that there have been 1931
    cases reported so far, with 55 casualties:
    - in Western Province, the outbreak has been reported in 4 districts:
    Bungoma East, Kakamega Central, Busia, and Butere, with 173 reported
    cases.
    - the most recent outbreak was in Bungoma East where 10 people have
    died and a couple of other cases treated at Bungoma District
    Hospital, Bokoli Sub-District Hospital, Lugulu Mission Hospital, and
    Webuye District Hospital.
    - in Rift Valley province, the 1st outbreak was reported in March
    2009 in Nandi South at Chemase, Kaptumo, and Nandi Hills Town. The
    2nd outbreak was at the Nakuru Prison where 10 cases were reported
    and 1 casualty.
    
    [Byline: Peter Orengo]
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [A map of Kenya showing the areas mentioned can be found at
    <http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/map/profile/kenya.pdf>.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Kenya is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aN>. - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [7] Cholera - Malaysia (Selangor)
    Date: Wed 29 Apr 2009
    Source: The Star [edited]
    
    <http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/4/29/nation/20090429145312&sec=nation>
    
    50 people, including a child, suspected of having cholera have been
    admitted to the hospital so far, said Hospital Tengku Ampuan Rahimah
    director Dr Ghazali Hasni Md Hassan. One patient is confirmed with
    cholera and is still receiving treatment at the hospital.
    
    "We are investigating another 14 patients to see they are also down
    with cholera or just suffering from food poisoning," he told
    reporters after Selangor Police Chief Datuk Khalid Abu Bakar visited
    the hospital in conjunction with the 202nd Police Day celebration. Dr
    Ghazali said the patients were from various place in Klang and Shah
    Alam and were sent to the hospital after consuming contaminated food.
    
    [Byline: Christina Tan]
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [A map of Malaysia can be found at
    <http://travelmalaysiaguide.com/images/Maps/malaysia-overview-map.jpg>.
    The areas mentioned are in the Selangor state where Kuala Lumpur is
    located.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Malaysia is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aO>. - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [8] Cholera - India: Matlab variant
    Date: Sat 11 Apr 2009
    Source: The Times of India (TNN) [edited]
    
    <http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Deadly-cholera-strain-hits-India/articleshow/4386452.cms>
    
    A highly virulent and deadly form of cholera strain "the El Tor
    hybrid" [also called the Matlab variant - Mod.LL] has now been found
    in India. First discovered in Bangladesh in 2006 and subsequently
    found in parts of Africa, this recombinant strain is more dangerous
    than the El Tor strain, with the power to kill more people and cause
    prolonged outbreaks.
    
    What's worse, scientists at the National Institute of Cholera and
    Enteric Diseases (NICED) in Kolkata fear that almost 100 percent of
    all new cholera infections in West Bengal and Orissa are being caused
    by this strain.
    
    "Usually in cholera, with proper oral rehydration therapy, case
    fatalities shouldn't exceed one percent. Alarmingly, with the El Tor
    hybrid, case fatalities in Ghana is 24 percent and 8 percent in
    Orissa," said NICED director Dr G B Nair, who had actually discovered
    the strain in Bangladesh in 2006.
    
    ICMR [Indian Council of Medical Research] director general Dr V M
    Katoch said the present strain has better survival techniques in the
    environment. "El Tor hybrid has higher case fatality rates, higher
    surviving power in the environment, and the ability to cause
    prolonged outbreaks," Dr Katoch said.
    
    The most severe warning about the risks of the El Tor hybrid,
    however, came from Dr Nair. According to him, the classical strain
    was more virulent and less infectious while El Tor was less virulent
    and more infectious. "The El Tor hybrid has picked up both attributes
    and is more virulent and more infectious," Dr Nair said.
    
    [Byline: Kounteya Sinha]
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [Formally, the 2 established biotypes of _Vibrio cholerae_, classical
    and El Tor, can be distinguished from one another by a number of
    phenotypic properties including hemolysis of sheep red blood cells,
    agglutination of chicken red blood cells, the Voges-Proskauer
    reaction, as well as susceptibility to polymyxin B and to
    biotype-specific viral bacteriophages. Hybrid biotypes, so-called
    Matlab variants, are also described (Nair GB, Faruque SM, Bhuiyan NA,
    et al: New variants of _Vibrio cholerae_ O1 biotype El Tor with
    attributes of the classical biotype from hospitalized patients with
    acute diarrhea in Bangladesh. J Clin Microbiol 2002; 40(9): 3296-9;
    abstract available at
    <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12202569>.)
    
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of India is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/008o> - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [9] Cholera - Viet Nam (Hanoi)
    Date: Tue 28 Apr 2009
    Source:  Viet Nam News (VNS) [edited]
    <http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=02SOC280409>
    
    A 2nd cholera patient in 2009 was admitted to hospital on Sunday [26
    Apr 2009] after suffering acute diarrhea. The patient, who tested
    positive for the _Vibrio cholerae_ bacterium, was a 91-year-old man
    from Phung Hung Street, Hoan Kiem District, [Hanoi]. The Ministry of
    Health said the man suffered serious diarrhea after eating dog meat,
    shrimp sauce, and raw vegetables.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-MBDS
    <promed-mbds@promedmail.org>
    
    [A map of Viet Nam showing Hanoi in the north can be found at
    <http://www.angelfire.com/co/hongnam/vnmap.html>.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Viet Nam is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aI> - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [10] Cholera - Viet Nam (Hanoi)
    Date: Sat 25 Apr 2009
    Source: Thanh Nien News [edited]
    <http://www.thanhniennews.com/healthy/?catid=8&newsid=48198>
    
    Local authorities closed four [Hanoi] dog meat shops after confirming
    that 2009's 1st cholera patient had eaten at one of the restaurants,
    said an official in the capital. All 4 of the venues received their
    dog meat from the same supplier, said Nguyen Huu Khiem, chairman of
    the Xuan Dinh Commune People's Committee in Ha Noi.
    
    Viet Nam confirmed its 1st cholera case for the year [2009] after the
    man ate dog meat, shrimp sauce, and uncooked vegetables. The patient
    was discharged from hospital after his condition improved, said Khiem.
    
    "There is substantial risk of another cholera outbreak this year
    [2009]," said Nguyen Huy Nga, director of the Department of
    Preventive Medicine and a health ministry spokesman. "We have asked
    local governments to be on high alert to prevent the spread of summer
    epidemics."
    
    The nation had its worst cholera outbreak in a decade in 2008. The
    disease had infected 722 people in Viet Nam by 20 Aug of 2008, the
    country's health ministry said 26 Aug [2008].
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    ******
    [11] Diarrhea - Viet Nam (Dong Nai)
    Date: Mon 27 Apr 2009
    Source: Thanh Nien News [edited]
    <http://www.thanhniennews.com/healthy/?catid=8&newsid=48253>
    
    An acute diarrhea outbreak, which occurred in southern Dong Nai
    Province's Xuan Loc District and affected more than 500 locals, is
    now under control officials say. Cao Trong Nguong, director of the
    southeastern province's Preventive Health Department, said Sunday [26
    Apr 2009] that water samples in the area had been taken for testing.
    As well, blood tests were being conducted on local residents.
    
    According to the Xuan Loc District Preventive Health Bureau, the
    outbreak began on 20 Apr 2009 in Gia Ui Village of Xuan Tam Commune
    and Trang Tao Village of Xuan Thanh Commune. It spread quickly and
    caused a total of 513 locals to suffer diarrhea, fever, and vomiting.
    
    [Byline: Hoang Tuan]
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-MBDS
    <promed-mbds@promedmail.org>
    
    [The etiology of this outbreak is unknown at this point. Dong Nai is
    located in the country's southern area and can be found on a map at
    <http://www.angelfire.com/co/hongnam/vnmap.html>.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Viet Nam is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aw>. - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [12] Cholera - Indonesia (West Nusa Tenggara)
    Date: Fri 24 Apr 2009
    Source: The Jakarta Post [edited]
    
    <http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2009/04/24/cholera-outbreak-east-lombok-kills-two.html>
    
    The West Nusa Tenggara Health Office has declared a cholera outbreak,
    which has killed 2 residents and infected 255 others in East Lombok
    regency. "The decision to declare the extraordinary occurrence was
    taken because of casualties and the number of people infected by the
    disease jumped over the last 2 weeks," I Ketut Pasek, head of the
    local health office, said in Mataram on Wednesday [22 Apr 2009]. The
    cholera outbreak was recorded to have infected residents in 5 of the
    20 districts in the regency since 14 Apr 2009.
    
    "Most of those infected by the disease are adults, only several of
    them were children below 5," Pasek said, adding that the 2 who died
    suffered from acute dehydration and were not treated in time.
    
    "The 5 districts affected by the disease are located along the same
    river below Mt Rinjani. The habit of the people to take a bath, cook
    and wash kitchen utensils in the river has apparently help speed up
    the spread of the disease," he added.
    
    --
    Communicated by:
    ProMED-mail
    <promed@promedmail.org>
    
    [West Nusa Tenggara is a province in south-central Indonesia. It
    covers the western portion of the Lesser Sunda Islands, except for
    Bali and can be found on a map at
    <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Nusa_Tenggara>.
    The HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of Indonesia is available at
    <http://healthmap.org/r/00aQ> - Mod.LL]
    
    ******
    [13] Cholera, possible - Myanmar (Rangoon)
    Date: Thu 23 Apr 2009
    Source: The Irrawaddy [edited]
    <http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=15524>
    
    The diarrhea epidemic that has plagued Rangoon's North Okkalapa
    Township recently has not abated, raising concerns about an outbreak
    of cholera, said sources in the former Burmese capital. Government
    and NGO health officials are maintaining a 24 hour emergency response
    center in the northern township after more than 100 residents were
    admitted into local hospitals suffering from severe diarrhea within
    the last week.
    
    A physician who runs a private clinic in North Okkalapa told The
    Irrawaddy on Thursday [23 Apr 2009] that he had sent more than a
    dozen patients with diarrhea to the response center. Speaking on
    condition of anonymity, the doctor said, "As far as I know, some
    patients have been diagnosed with cholera." However, no other medical
    sources have confirmed cases of cholera in North Okkalapa Township.
    
    Outbreaks of diarrhea have also been reported in South and North
    Dagon Myothit, Thaketa, Dawbon, and Thanlyin townships in Rangoon
    Division. Local residents claimed that some deaths have occurred;
    however, officials at the Ministry of Health as well as several
    hospitals in Rangoon, including the North Okkalapa General Hospital,
    declined to comment on the issue.


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    April 30th, 2009 posted by Paul Rega, MD, FACEP @ 12:16 am

    WHO: 148 cases in 9 countries

    Swine flu, WHO

    WHO, 29 April 2009 (http://www.who.int/csr/don/2009_04_29/en/index.html) – The situation continues to evolve rapidly. As of 18:00 GMT, 29 April 2009, nine countries have officially reported 148 cases of swine influenza A/H1N1 infection. The United States Government has reported 91 laboratory confirmed human cases, with one death. Mexico has reported 26 confirmed human cases of infection including seven deaths.

    The following countries have reported laboratory confirmed cases with no deaths – Austria (1), Canada (13), Germany (3), Israel (2), New Zealand (3), Spain (4) and the United Kingdom (5).

    Further information on the situation will be available on the WHO website on a regular basis.

    WHO advises no restriction of regular travel or closure of borders. It is considered prudent for people who are ill to delay international travel and for people developing symptoms following international travel to seek medical attention, in line with guidance from national authorities.

    There is also no risk of infection from this virus from consumption of well-cooked pork and pork products. Individuals are advised to wash hands thoroughly with soap and water on a regular basis and should seek medical attention if they develop any symptoms of influenza-like illness.



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    April 30th, 2009 posted by Paul Rega, MD, FACEP @ 12:13 am

    What do you do if there are few to no swine flu cases in your area?

    Swine flu

    CDC Link:  http://www.cdc.gov/swineflu/screening.htm

    Interim Guidance for Screening for Swine-Origin Influenza A (H1N1) by State and Local Health Departments, Hospitals, and Clinicians in Regions with Few or no Reported Cases of Swine Influenza A (H1N1)

    April 29, 2009 12:30 PM ET

    This document provides interim guidance for state and local health departments, hospitals, and clinicians in regions with few or no reported cases of swine-origin influenza A (H1N1) (S-OIV) regarding which patients to evaluate for possible infection with swine influenza A (H1N1). As of April 29 1:00 PM, there were 91 laboratory confirmed cases of S-OIV infection identified in 10 states in the United States. Human cases of S-OIV infection also have been identified internationally. Based on the rapid spread of the S-OIV thus far, public health officials believe that more cases will be identified over the next several weeks, including in regions that currently have few or no reported cases.  

    CDC recommends that state and local health departments, hospitals, and clinicians in regions with few or no reported cases of S-OIV consider the following recommendations for testing of the following persons for S-OIV infection with a nasopharyngeal swab by PCR:

    1. Patients presenting to providers participating in the US Outpatient Influenza-like Illness Surveillance Network (ILINet) who meet the case definition of influenza-like illness (ILI), or
    2. Patients with an ILI who have traveled within 7 days to a community either within the United States or internationally where there are one or more confirmed swine influenza A (H1N1) cases, or
    3. Patients admitted to the hospital with an ILI.

    ILI is defined as fever (temperature of 100°F [37.8°C] or greater) and a cough and/or a sore throat in the absence of a KNOWN cause other than influenza.

    Specimen Collection and Testing

    If swine flu is suspected, clinicians should obtain a respiratory swab for S-OIV testing and place it in a refrigerator (not a freezer). Once collected, the clinician should contact their state or local health department to facilitate transport and timely diagnosis at a state public health laboratory. State public health laboratories should perform subtype testing on all influenza A positive samples identified. State public health laboratories should submit all specimens that cannot be subtyped as human influenza A (H1N1) or (H3N2) to CDC for identification. Please notify CDC of all pending shipments by email at eocsciresource@cdc.gov or if email is not available, by phone at 404-553-7724. Please include shipment tracking information.

     

    Investigation of Cases

    Officials should conduct thorough case and contact investigations to determine the source of the swine influenza virus, extent of community illness and the need for timely control measures.

     

    Interim Guidance



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    April 30th, 2009 posted by Paul Rega, MD, FACEP @ 12:09 am

    Confirmed Swine Flu Cases Across the U.S.

    Infectious Disease, Outbreak & Pandemic, Influenza, Swine flu

    U.S. Human Cases of Swine Flu Infection
    (As of April 29, 2009, 11:00 AM ET)
    States
    # of laboratory confirmed cases
    Deaths
    Arizona 1  
    California 14  
    Indiana 1  
    Kansas 2  
    Massachusetts 2  
    Michigan 2  
    Nevada 1  
    New York 51  
    Ohio 1  
    Texas
    16
    1
    TOTAL COUNTS 91 cases 1 death
    International Human Cases of Swine Flu Infection
    See:
    World Health OrganizationExternal Web Site Policy.


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