Tuesday, August 11, 2009

115 new cases Swine flu

115 new cases Swine flu

India on Tuesday reported 119 new cases of swine flu, highest so far for a single day, taking the total number of the infected people to 1,079.
Among the new cases, Pune reported 62, Mumbai 24, Delhi 15, Manipal 2, Ahmedabad 1, Bangalore 4, Nagpur 3, Osmanabad 1, Nashik 1, Goa 1, Hyderabad 2, Thiruvananthapuram 2 and Jammu 1.
Of the 15 cases reported from Delhi, only one has a travel history. The 19-year-old man had returned from Manila via Hongkong.
Among Pune’s new cases, one had returned from Saudi Arabia and the 61 others are indigenous cases.
Mumbai reported 24 cases during the day, two of whom have travelled from abroad. All other cases from Maharashtra are indigenous. All cases from Karnataka are from local contract.
While Ahmedabad reported one indigenous case, the patient in Goa had returned from Spain. Of the two cases in Hyderabad one patient has a travel history. The case in Jammu had returned from Mumbai and Pune. One of the two cases in Thiruvanathapuram has returned from Doha.

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Swine flu claims 14.

Swine flu claims 14.

Three people, including a woman, died of swine flu in Maharashtra Wednesday,

Sanjay Mistry, 35, died in the Sassoon Hospital here early Wednesday. The resident of Pimpri, near Pune, was hospitalised Sunday in a critical condition and put on a ventilator, according to an official of the State Swine Flu Control Room.

Shravani Deshpande, 29, died of the same disease.Deshpande breathed her last around 3 a.m. She had been hospitalised here three days ago with pneumonia and later found to be suffering from swine flu. She was then put on ventilator.

Rakesh Gargunde, a medico in Nashik Civil Hospital, also succumbed to swine flu around 3 a.m., said civil surgeon A.D Bhal Singh.Gangurde was admitted to hospital in an unconcious state two days ago and put on a ventilator. The test report confiriming that he had swine flu was recieved by the hospital late Tuesday night.

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Pune update – 3 new cases

3 confirmed,8 suspected cases of H1N1 were admitted and quarantined at the Aundh general hospital on


Tuesday.

8: 5 students

2 From Aundh school

1 from Pimpri school, 1 from Wakad school(8 year old) and 1 from Dehu Road School.

1 is a 34-year-old professional from Pimple Gurav, who had stayed in Germany for a month and had come to Pune on July 24 via Dubai and Mumbai, tested positive for H1N1 virus.
The man was admitted to a private hospital for two days, but was shifted to Aundh general hospital on Tuesday morning after realising that his symptoms were similar to that of H1N1.

1 is a 32-year-old woman also from Wakad who had travelled abroad two weeks back were confirmed for H1N1.

Out of the other adult patients who were admitted, a 27-year-old woman a resident of Paud road, who works in a private company and another 28-year-old man from Warje were admitted on Tuesday as both had come in contact with confirmed H1N1 cases.

Another 23-year-old man, a private company employee, who lives in old Sangvi, was also admitted because he showed symptoms similar to that of H1N1, though he has not travelled abroad or come in contact with a confirmed case.

“Four of the five students were admitted as suspected cases because they showed symptoms similar to H1N1 and their history was not known. The remaining student showed symptoms similar to that of H1N1 and also has a relative who came back from the US on August 1. The relative, an uncle, is asymptomatic,”

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Pune Chaos at Naidu Hospital

The staff at the Naidu hospital was clearly understaffed to handle the sheer numbers and was couldn’t manage the crowd when furious parents barged into the quarantine ward. Lines were broken, tempers lost and medical staff were left trying to get some order in place.

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2 Girls from St Annes School Pune Test positive.

A Class Ten student from St Annes School tested positive – She was identified as Netra Bafna.
Civic Medical Officer R R Pardeshi said a fourth-standard girl from the same school was also admitted to the Naidu civic hospital, a referral centre fror Swinfe Flu, in the morning today with symptoms of the disease.

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Details of 9 new cases in Pune

Details of 9 new cases in Pune

Of the nine affected,
3 girls are students of St Anne’s school.
Two more schools – St Helena and Loyola, have reported one each positive case of the virus

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Critical Swine flu patient admitted in pune

Critical Swine flu patient admitted in pune

A 35-year-old Swine flu patient was tonight admitted to government Sassoon General Hospital in a critical condition, according to official sources.The male patient, brought from private Nobel Hospital in Hadapsararea, has been put on ventilator.The patient was seen in civic Naidu Hospital yesterday where this throat swabs were taken for H1N1 testing and taken back to NobelHospital in an ambulance. After his blood samples tested positive for swine flu at NIV today, he was immediately taken to the isolation ward of Sassoon General Hospital.

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Pune- Symbosis Closed- as 2 test Positive. - Swine flu

Symbiosis complex in Pune, home to a cluster of educational institutions, announced it will be closed for one week after 2 girls tested positive for H1N1

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Swine flu roots traced to Spanish flu

Swine flu roots traced to Spanish flu

Tags : Swine flu , Spanish swine flu , swine flu in all over world.
Pigs might have spread the current strain of influenza to humans, attracting worldwide attention, but new Canadian-led research suggests that we might have given pigs the flu in the first place, during the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic.

A group of Canadian and U.S. researchers, writing in the May issue of the Journal of Virology, say experimental testing of how pigs responded to the 1918 Spanish flu supports the theory that the virus was passed on from humans to pigs in 1918, during the Spanish flu pandemic.

Both the human influenza virus known as the Spanish flu and a swine respiratory disease occurred at roughly the same time. The first human cases of Spanish flu appeared in spring of 1918 while the first reports of the swine illness were in the fall of that year.

Some strains of swine flu, including the one that has emerged recently from Mexico, are known to belong to the same subtype — H1N1 — as the Spanish flu. But the classical swine flu virus (an H1N1 subtype of type A influenza virus) wasn't isolated from a pig until 1930, so the connection between the Spanish flu and swine flu hasn't been clear.

One of the reasons the two strains of the virus were not strongly connected was because they had dramatically different impacts.

The Spanish flu, first identified in May 1918 in Spain, was lethal, killing at least 21 million people worldwide. It also was known to induce a lethal infection in a host of other animals, including ferrets, mice and macaques, a primate found in Europe and Asia.

The swine flu that first appeared in 1918, on the other hand, did not have the same impact on pigs, causing only a mild respiratory illness, leaving some to suggest they were not closely related.

2009 Swine flu not as lethal as Spanish flu: U.S. officials
The most recent version of the swine flu also doesn't appear to share the Spanish flu's virulence, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC said Friday the new virus isn't as deadly, because it lacks the genes that made the 1918 pandemic strain so lethal.

But to examine the swine flu's origin further, Canadian Food Agency researcher Hana Weingartl and her colleagues tested the resistance of pigs to both the 1918 pandemic virus and the 1930 swine virus. They performed the tests at a biosafety Level 4 laboratory and animal cubicle at the National Centre for Foreign Animal Disease in Winnipeg, where Weingartl works.

They discovered that there wasn't a significant difference in the effects on the pigs between the two viruses, as both caused a mild respiratory disease, mirroring the symptoms first reported in 1918 and 1930.

"These results support the hypothesis that the 1918 human influenza virus and the virus causing the hog flu during the 1918 pandemic were the same," wrote Weingartl and her colleagues.

Weingartl suggests the susceptibility of pigs to the human virus and the timing of the first report of pigs contracting swine flu — in October 1918, five months after the first reported human case — suggest pigs contracted the virus from humans.

"After that, the pigs were likely contributing to the spreading of the virus also back to humans," she said.

Since then, the swine flu virus has changed substantially. The strain that has emerged recently is "quite different" from the original strain of H1N1 virus first identified in Spain in May 1918, said Weingartl.

The CDC in the U.S. said on Friday the new strain is "a very unusual" combination of human genes and genes from swine and avian flu viruses found in North America, Asia and Europe.

The current strain of the virus has killed at least 10 people, nine in Mexico and one in the United States, the World Health Organization said Friday.

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Swine flu: FAQ

Swine flu: FAQ

Mexican authorities in April 2009 reported they were investigating a new strain of swine influenza. The outbreak had spread quickly in the country, killing more than 100 people. Two months later, in June 2009, the World Health Organization declared a swine flu pandemic — the first time a global flu pandemic had been declared in 41 years.

As the number of cases continue to slowly increase, pandemic disease experts are preparing for a possible second wave. Canada has a stockpile of anti-viral drugs to treat about one-quarter of the population and the Public Health Agency of Canada will stockpile ventilators, eventually keeping 500 on hand. Still, there is uncertainty in how the spread of the swine flu will play out.

"No one can give you an accurate play-by-play, guaranteed, certified guide on what the pandemic is going to look like," said Dr. Michael Gardam, director of infectious disease prevention at Ontario's Public Health Agency.

Here is a summary of frequently asked questions about swine influenza, prepared using information from the Public Health Agency of Canada, the World Health Organization, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.




Swine flu: FAQ What is new influenza A (H1N1)
Swine flu (also referred to as novel H1N1 virus) is a new virus that hasn't spread before among humans. The virus was first detected in people in March 2009.



Swine flu: FAQ Why is this strain of flu causing so much concern?
It's a brand new mutation that's never been seen before. That's why it's not just hitting people in the highest risk groups — those over 65 and younger than two.

Flu is not usually a huge worry among the vast majority of healthy people because over the course of our lives, we are exposed to several flu strains. We develop some immunities. When we get the flu, we'll normally just feel really awful for a week or two. But when you have no immunities at all to a new strain, normally healthy people face as much of a risk as higher risk groups.



Swine flu: FAQ How does swine flu kill?
Swine flu — just like any other flu — is a respiratory infection. It exploits a weakened immune system to attack major organs — especially your lungs. When it gets into your lungs, it can lead to pneumonia, which can kill you. The flu can also cause secondary infections in your body — any of which can lead to failure of vital organs and death.

Swine flu: FAQ Can people catch swine flu from eating pork?
No. Swine flu viruses are not transmitted by food. You cannot get swine flu from eating pork or pork products. You won't get swine flu from handling uncooked pork either. You can get sick from putting uncooked or undercooked pork in your mouth, but you won't get swine flu.

On May 7, 2009, the World Health Organization once again said that it is generally safe to eat pork. The world health body said existing sanitary and animal health checks were sufficient to safeguard the food supply against the swine flu virus. The statement came a day after an official said it was possible the virus could survive freezing if a slaughtered animal was sick. However, it is illegal to slaughter a sick or dead animal.

If you eat meat from an animal that was sick or had died before it was slaughtered you are taking major risks, the least of which is swine flu.

It's also impossible to catch swine flu from eating fruits and vegetables imported from Mexico or any other country that has recorded cases of swine flu. Swine flu — like all influenza viruses — is not a food-borne illness.



Swine flu: FAQ What are the symptoms of swine flu in humans?
The symptoms of swine flu in people are expected to be similar to the symptoms of regular human seasonal influenza and include fever, lethargy, lack of appetite and coughing. Some people with swine flu also have reported runny nose, sore throat, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.


Swine flu: FAQ Is there a vaccine to treat swine flu?
A vaccine against H1N1 is being prepared and is expected to be tested in September. The U.S. The Public Health Agency of Canada says early research shows two prescription antiviral drugs — oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir (Relenza) — can be used to treat this strain of the swine flu. PHAC notes however that antivirals should only be used in moderate to severe cases and if a patient is in danger of complications.

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Swine flu FAQs

Didn’t we have swine flu before?

Swine flu has been present for years and commonly infects people who work with pigs. An outbreak at the Fort Dix army base killed and hospitalized soldiers there and led to an ill-fated mass-vaccination campaign under President Ford. An outbreak of swine flu happened in the Philipines in 2007. Although there were tragic deaths it did not lead to millions dying as happened with the flu pandemic at the end of WWI. According to A tale of swine flu from 1977: “The killer never came. The fact that it was feared is one of many things to show how little experts understand the flu, and thus how shaky are the health initiatives launched in its name. What influenza needs, above all, is research.”

Was the new swine flu genetically engineered as a bioweapon?

It is perhaps possible to engineer a virus, but the precursors to this present strain of influenza has been seen in the wild for years and so it would seem highly unlikely that it was synthesised. Is there a lab that could synthesise a whole new viable viral species from combined segments of human, bird, and pig influenza viruses?

But how did porcine, avian, and human viruses get mixed together?

These flu viruses have a segmented genome containing eight pieces of RNA. If two strains infect a single cell their progeny undergo reassortment so that new strains emerge. Pigs are a particularly good biological mixing bowl for flu viruses, it takes just one lucky reassortment that can infect humans to then make the species leap. This has happened several times in the past.

What is WHO doing about the outbreak?

The World Health Organisation will meet in Geneva on Tuesday (April 28) to discuss whether to raise the pandemic alert level. UPDATE: It did and raised to Phase IV (Phase VI is highest). Later it upgraded to Phase V.

Has Europe been affected?

The first case of swine flu has been tested positive in Spain and the European Union is advising citizens to avoid unnecessary travel to Mexico and the USA. Cases in Scotland, Germany and Israel have now been confirmed.

Will a face mask protect me from flu?

Doubtful. If someone is infected and has come into contact, sneezed, or coughed on door handles you touch, food you eat, hands you shake, the mask won’t protect you. What a mask can do is reduce the amount of contaminated droplets of spittle you might spread if you are infected.

What is a pandemic, it sounds scary?

The word pandemic usually refers to the distribution of a disease, in this case H1N1. It simply means an epidemic that has spread beyond a single geographical region to cover all regions within any defined area. WHO says we are the verge of a disease pandemic on a global scale. I.e. an epidemic that is worldwide.

The words pandemic and epidemic have Greek etymology. Pandemic means “pertaining to all people”. “pan” means “all”, “demos” means “people”. The “epi” prefix in epidemic means “among”, so suggesting some kind of localisation.

*Footnote on mortality rates. The often-quoted mortality rate of the 1918-9 pandemic is 2.5%, but most researchers agree that between 50 and 100 million people died during that outbreak. The world population was 1.8 billion at the time, so wouldn’t the overall world mortality rate have been between 3 and 5%, not 2.5%?

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Why pigs?

Why pigs?

Influenza viruses can exist endemically in pigs as well as birds and other species. The current strain of interest, swine flu, is endemic in pig populations in Mexico but has now spread to people. But, influenza viruses are notoriously promiscuous and can rearrange genetic material to produce hybrid strains. An emerging strain that is both virulent, relatively lethal and can be transmitted between people is the one to worry about.



Tags : Swine flu , swine flu news , swine flu updates

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Whatever happened to bird flu?

Whatever happened to bird flu?

Strains of avian influenza, or bird flu, are still around, these viruses exist in host species in Asia and potentially elsewhere and could still make the leap to humans at any time. Alternatively, another host species harbouring a different type of virus altogether might emerge at another time.

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What does H1N1 mean?

What does H1N1 mean?


The “H” refers to the viral hemagglutinin protein, and the “N” refers to the neuraminidase protein (enzyme). There are H1N2, H3N1, H3N2, and H2N3 strains of swine flu endemic in pig populations.

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Kolkata swine flu news

Kolkata swine flu update



Kolkata: With one more person, a six-year-old girl, testing positive for swine flu, West Bengal has recorded nine positive cases of H1N1 infection.

Six of them have been sent home after treatment.


A resident of Salkia in Howrah, Pranjali Mondal, who along with her mother were referred to the National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases with all flu symptoms, tested positive. Her mother tested nagative.

Pranjali has been admitted to the Beliaghata ID hospital where she has been kept at the isolation ward.
_____________________________________________________

Of the 17 new cases that tested positive for swine flu

5 each Pune and New Delhi,

2 each from Mumbai and Calicut

and

1 each from Kolkata, Goa and Gurgaon,



Tags Goa swine flu update, Gurgaon swine flu update, India- swine flu update, Kolkatta swine flu update, calicut swine flu update, mumbai swine flu update . Kolkata swine flu , In kolkata Swine flu more cases. Swine flu is going to spread.

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Canada expects spurt in Swine flu cases

Canada expects spurt in Swine flu cases


Canada Medical Authorities believe there will be many more cases as the number of people that visit Mexico every month is very high and as the SF virus takes 2 to 7 days for incubation, they feel that there will be a spurt in swine flu cases.

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medicines to treat H1N1 (swine) flu

Are there medicines to treat H1N1 (swine) flu?
Yes. CDC recommends the use of oseltamivir (brand name Tamiflu Æ) or zanamivir (brand name Relenza Æ) for the treatment and/or prevention of infection with these H1N1 (swine) influenza viruses. Antiviral drugs are prescription medicines (pills, liquid or an inhaler) that fight against the flu by keeping flu viruses from reproducing in your body.

Read more...

How does the H1N1 virus spread?

How does the H1N1 virus spread?
Spread of the H1N1 virus is thought to be happening in the same way that seasonal flu spreads. Flu viruses are spread mainly from person to person through coughing or sneezing by people with influenza. Sometimes people may become infected by touching something with flu viruses on it and then touching their mouth or nose.

Read more...

How do you catch H1N1 (swine) flu?

How do you catch H1N1 (swine) flu?
Spread of H1N1 (swine) flu can occur in two ways: One, through contact with infected pigs, or environments contaminated with swine flu viruses. Two, through contact with a person with H1N1 (swine) flu. Human-to-human spread of H1N1 (swine) flu has been documented also, and is thought to occur in the same way as seasonal flu. Influenza is thought to spread mainly person-to-person, through coughing or sneezing of infected people.

Read more...

H1N1 virus sometimes called ‘swine flu’

H1N1 virus sometimes called ‘swine flu’


This virus was originally referred to as ‘swine flu’ because laboratory testing showed that many of the genes in this new virus were very similar to influenza viruses that normally occur in pigs in North America.


Tags H1N1 virus sometimes called ‘swine flu’ , H1N1 Virus

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Mexico Swine Flu First case

First case of Swine Flu – Mexico.



1st SUSPECTED SWINE FLU case in MEXICO was in February not
that has been mentioned that it appeared in the SOUTHERN STATE OF OAXACA -
Information above seems to be incorrect as it was said that
A four-year-old boy in the eastern state of Veracruz
had suffered from the virus as early as February.
He survived the influenza.

A sample from the boy was sent to a US laboratory
for anaylsis after swine flu was discovered in America.
"It came back confirmed," Mr Cordova said.
The announcement came as the probable death toll
from the virus rose to 152.

The boy was one of about 1,800 people who suffered from
a potent flu in the region in February, leading to calls
to investigate if there was some kind of new epidemic.

However, Mr Cordova said there had been no evidence that a
mutant human-to-human flu strain had emerged at that time.

"We never had this kind of epidemic in the world," he said.
"This is the first time we have this kind of virus."

Mexico's Agriculture Department said that inspectors found
no sign of swine flu among pigs in the region, adding that
no infected pigs have been found yet anywhere in Mexico.

Swine flu has hospitalized almost 2,000 people in Mexico.



tags Swine flu started from Oaxaca- Mexico . first case, Mexico, started, swine flu . Max M , In Mexico first case in started.

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Mangalore Swine fue News

Mangalore Swine fue Update :


Four persons were found to be infected with the H1N1 virus after their throat swab samples were tested positive in Manipal on Monday.

They are Balasubramanya, III BE student of Manipal Institute of Technology (MIT) and

Tarun, a worker at the MIT food court.

Two more students of MIT have also tested positive.

Balasubramanya had been to London for a study tour and returned on July 24. He complained of fever on August 8.

Tarun (20), a resident of Kamatipalya in Bangalore had returned from Bangalore on August 4. He had complained of feeling uneasy while breathing, and was admitted to KMC on Sunday. Both patients have been quarantined and are under medication, Dr Rohini said.

Two more suspected swine flu cases were reported in Mangalore on Monday.

One of them is a student of KMC, Mangalore and the other, a local.

With this, the suspected number of swine flu cases in Mangalore has increased to 23.

Speaking to Deccan Herald, District Health Surveillance Officer Dr Rajesh said, “We have received the report of 17 cases, of which six tested positive. Four samples of throat swabs of students of NITK have been sent to KMC, Manipal. The report is awaited.”

Meanwhile, the first patient to test positive for H1N1 in Mangalore, has been discharged from hospital.

FAQs answered

Here is a comprehensive look at the many frequently-asked critical questions about H1N1, answered through information gathered and compiled by the Centre for Disease Control (CDC), World Health Organisation (WHO), Indian Medical Association (IMA) and other sources:

What is H1N1 (swine) flu?
H1N1 (referred to as “swine flu”) is a new influenza virus causing illness in people. This new virus was first detected in people in the United States in April 2009. Other countries, including Mexico and Canada, have reported people sick with this new virus. This virus is spreading from person-to-person, probably in much the same way that regular seasonal influenza viruses spread.

Why is H1N1 virus sometimes called ‘swine flu’?
This virus was originally referred to as ‘swine flu’ because laboratory testing showed that many of the genes in this new virus were very similar to influenza viruses that normally occur in pigs in North America.

How do you catch H1N1 (swine) flu?
Spread of H1N1 (swine) flu can occur in two ways: One, through contact with infected pigs, or environments contaminated with swine flu viruses. Two, through contact with a person with H1N1 (swine) flu. Human-to-human spread of H1N1 (swine) flu has been documented also, and is thought to occur in the same way as seasonal flu. Influenza is thought to spread mainly person-to-person, through coughing or sneezing of infected people.

How does the H1N1 virus spread?

Spread of the H1N1 virus is thought to be happening in the same way that seasonal flu spreads. Flu viruses are spread mainly from person to person through coughing or sneezing by people with influenza. Sometimes people may become infected by touching something with flu viruses on it and then touching their mouth or nose.

Are there medicines to treat H1N1 (swine) flu?
Yes. CDC recommends the use of oseltamivir (brand name Tamiflu Æ) or zanamivir (brand name Relenza Æ) for the treatment and/or prevention of infection with these H1N1 (swine) influenza viruses. Antiviral drugs are prescription medicines (pills, liquid or an inhaler) that fight against the flu by keeping flu viruses from reproducing in your body.

Read more...

Himachal Swine Flu News Update

Himachal Swine Flu News Update

The hill state Himachal Pradesh is also not untouched from Swine Flu threat.

Eight people of different age groups ,
two in Shimla and

six in Dharamshala are being suspected as swine flu cases.

Blood samples of two suspects from Shimla and six samples from Dr Rajender Prasad Medical College , Tanda (Kangra) have been sent for examination to NIC lab, New Delhi.

“While one suspect is a 27 year old male engineering student in Pune another suspect is 20 year old youth who returned from New Delhi on Monday.

We have sent their blood samples to NIC lab . Both have been discharged and have been advised home quarantine,” S.S. Minhas , senior medical superintendent , Indira Gandhi Medical College and Hospital (IGMCH) said.

Six street children between the seven to 12 year age group in Dharamshala are also being suspected as Swine flu cases. These children were admitted to Dr Rajender Prasad Medical College, Tanda ( Kangra) on Friday.

“These children live in different localities in Mcleodgang , Dharamshala.



Tags : Himachal Swine Flu News Update , Himachal 8 cases swine flu , HP in news swine flu.

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Rajasthan swine flu- Ajmer News

Rajasthan has swine flu- Ajmer


20-year-old man, who was admitted to a hospital in Ajmer after his return from Dubai last week, has tested positive for swine flu, taking the number of confirmed cases detected so far in the state to five.

“ Vasudev whose positive report came today had on August 3 returned from Dubai and hospitalized in his hometown Kishangarhafter he showed flu-like symptoms, but later referred to JLN Hospital, Ajmer,”

Earlier, four persons including two minors of a family in Jaipur tested positive for the deadly virus on July 25 but were later discharged from the hospital.

Meanwhile, two persons, one each in Jaipur and Ajmer, were hospitalized today after showing symptoms of swine flu.

“Omprakash, 40, who returned from Dubai this morning, was detected with swine flu-like symptoms at Sanganer Airport and admitted to SMS hospital, while a 25-year-old man who studies in Pune and recently arrived in Ajmer via Jaipur was admitted to JLN hospital there,”he said.




Tags : Swine flu update., Ajmer swine flu update, Jaipur Swine flu update . ajmer, rajasthan, swine flu

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Gurgaon- Swine flu update

Gurgaon- Swine flu update

As many as 11 positive cases of influenza A H1N1 are reported from Haryana are under treatment in various hospitals and out of these

eight cases have been reported from Gurgaon, two from Panipat and one from Sirsa.
Stating this here today, a spokesman of Haryana Health Department said that there were two suspected cases in Panchkula







Tags : Swine Flu in gurgaon , Gurgaon boy shows swine flu symptoms, news swine flu, update on swine flu.

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Gurgaon boy shows swine flu symptoms

Gurgaon boy shows swine flu symptoms




Gurgaon, June 17: A 14-year-old DPS student, who returned here from the US after participating in a NASA programme, was on Wednesday found to be suffering from suspected swine flu.


The victim had gone to the US along with other students of a school in Jalandhar, an official said.

He and his three friends returned here and the boy was found to be suffering from nasal discharge and sore throat, symptoms for the viral ailment, he said.

After receiving the information, a rapid action team rushed to the boy's home and samples were taken. They have been sent to NICD lab in Delhi, the official said.



Tags : Swine Flu in gurgaon , Gurgaon boy shows swine flu symptoms, news swine flu, update on swine flu.

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