Tag Archives: deaths

CDC H1N1 (Swine Flu) Response Actions and Goals

default

CDC H1N1 (Swine Flu) Response Actions and Goals

[media id=10 width=500 height=400]

This podcast discusses the actions and goals of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, related to the current outbreak of H1N1 flu (swine flu).

WHO’s decision to raise the pandemic alert level to Phase 6 is a reflection of the spread of the virus, not the severity of illness caused by the virus. It’s uncertain at this time how serious or severe this novel H1N1 pandemic will be in terms of how many people infected will develop serious complications or die from novel H1N1 infection. Experience with this virus so far is limited and influenza is unpredictable. However, because novel H1N1 is a new virus, many people may have little or no immunity against it, and illness may be more severe and widespread as a result. In addition, currently there is no vaccine to protect against novel H1N1 virus.

In the United States, most people who have become ill with the newly declared pandemic virus have recovered without requiring medical treatment, however, CDC anticipates that there will be more cases, more hospitalizations and more deaths associated with this pandemic in the coming days and weeks. In addition, this virus could cause significant illness with associated hospitalizations and deaths in the fall and winter during the U.S. influenza season.

CDC H1N1, CDC H1N1 Health, CDC H1N1 Health Latest, CDC H1N1 Information, bealthy breakfast information, CDC H1N1 Photo, CDC H1N1 Latest, CDC H1N1 latest, CDC H1N1 Story, CDC H1N1 story, CDC H1N1 Video, CDC H1N1 video, CDC H1N1 History, CDC H1N1 history, history, CDC H1N1 Asia,  CDC H1N1 asia, CDC H1N1 Gallery, CDC H1N1 gallery, CDC H1N1 Photo Gallery, CDC H1N1 photo gallery, CDC H1N1 Picture, CDC H1N1 picture, CDC H1N1 Web, Malaysia Health, web Health ,picture, video photo, virus, flu, drug, gejala, video, photo, operation, bf1, SwineFlu,  Flu,  Influenza,  Pandemic, Flu,  CDC,  CDCstreaminghealth,  ehealth,  social, media,  H1N1


Vaccines, hygiene could stop diarrhea deaths: U.N

30peanut_span

Vaccines, hygiene could stop diarrhea deaths: U.N

Diarrhea causes one in five child deaths across the world but getting important vaccines to Africa and Asia could help save many lives, two U.N. agencies said on Wednesday.

Some 1.5 million children die each year from diarrhea, — more than AIDS, malaria, and measles combined — yet only 39 percent of children with diarrhea in developing countries get the right treatment, the World Health Organization and the United Nations children’s fund UNICEF said in a report.

Vaccinations against rotavirus, the leading cause of severe gastroenteritis with vomiting and diarrhea in babies and children, as well as better sanitation and proper rehydration treatment would help solve the problem, they said.

Rotavirus causes around 40 percent of hospital admissions from diarrhea in children under five worldwide, according to the report, and vaccination against it has recently been recommended for all national immunization programs.

Only a few, mostly developed and richer nations include rotavirus vaccine in routine childhood immunization programs, but the WHO has been working to make two vaccines — Rotateq from Merck & Co and Rotarix from GlaxoSmithKline — more widely available in developing countries.

“Accelerating its introduction in Africa and Asia, where the rotavirus burden is greatest, needs to become an international priority,” said the report.

It also said two mainstays of diarrhea treatment — zinc supplements and low-osmolarity oral rehydration salts — are still hard to come by in many poorer countries.

“We know what works to reduce child deaths from diarrhea and what actions will make a lasting reduction in the burden of diarrhea,” Tessa Wardlaw of UNICEF and Elizabeth Mason of the WHO said in a commentary in The Lancet medical journal.

Vaccines, Vaccines Health, Vaccines Health Latest, Vaccines Health Information, Vaccines Health information, Vaccines Health Photo,Vaccines   for Weight Health photo, Vaccines  Health Latest, Vaccines  Health latest, Choreography for Weight  Health Story, Vaccines  Video, Vaccines  video, Vaccines  Health History, Vaccines   Health history, Vaccines over Picture, history, Vaccines  Asia, Vaccines  asia, Vaccines   Gallery, Vaccines   for Weight gallery, Vaccines   Photo Gallery, Vaccines    Picture, Vaccines  picture, Vaccines    Web, Malaysia Health, web Health, web Health picture, video photo, video surgery, gallery, laparoscopy, virus, flu, drug, video, Health Health, calories, photo, nutrition, health video, symptoms, Vaccines, medical, beating, diet, physical, Training, organic, gym, blister, exercise, weightloss, surgery, spiritual, eating, tips, skin, operation, bf1,

Vaccines could halve sickle-cell deaths in Africa

151107vaccine

Vaccines could halve sickle-cell deaths in Africa

Vaccination against bacterial infections using vaccines readily available in developed countries could save the lives of thousands of children with sickle-cell anemia in Africa, researchers said on Thursday.

Tom Williams, an expert in tropical diseases from the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), said 90 percent of children born with sickle-cell anemia in Africa die before they are diagnosed and can get treatment, and half of those lives could be saved if sufferers were protected from bacterial infections.

“The problem here in Africa is that there is hardly anyone doing any screening,” Williams said. “So, as a result, most of the children in Africa who are born with sickle-cell anemia are dead before they are even diagnosed.”

Experts estimate that sickle-cell anemia kills more children in Africa than HIV, Williams said, but while HIV commands vast attention from the international community sickle-cell anemia is “virtually invisible.”

In a study conducted in rural Kenya and published in the Lancet medical journal, Williams and colleagues at the KEMRI/Wellcome Trust program in Kilifi screened almost 40,000 admissions to hospital and identified 2,000 cases of bacterial infection.

While in the general population fewer than three in 1,000 children were found to have sickle cell anemia, this figure increased more than 20-fold — to more than 60 per 1,000 — for children admitted to hospital with bacterial infections.

Sickle-cell anemia affects millions of people worldwide, but more than 80 percent of cases are in Africa, where around 200,000 children are born with the disease every year.

It is a genetic disease in which red blood cells deform into a sickle shape and cluster, blocking blood flow and causing pain, vulnerability to infections and organ damage.

The findings confirm that, just as in richer nations, African children with sickle-cell anemia are at huge risk of bacterial infections because the disease hampers blood flow and causes episodes of acute anemia, Williams said.

The most common causes of bacterial infection among children with sickle-cell were Streptococcus pneumoniae (41 percent of cases) and Haemophilus influenzae type b (12 percent of cases).

Vaccines against both — a pneumococcal vaccine and another called Hib — are given routinely in the United States and Europe, but have been slow getting to Africa because funds have largely been focused on other priorities.

Dan Thomas of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) in Geneva, said his group provides the Hib vaccine, which is made by a range of drug companies, to 35 African nations as part of a 5-in-1 shot.

GAVI has also introduced a pneumococcal vaccine made by Wyeth, a U.S. drug company which is being bought by Pfizer, to Rwanda and Gambia, and is “working on rolling an improved pneumococcal vaccine out across Africa in the next few years,” he said.

Vaccines, Vaccines Health, Vaccines Health Latest, Vaccines Health Information, Vaccines Health information, VaccinesHealth Photo,Exercising for Weight Health photo, Vaccines Health Latest, VaccinesHealth latest, Exercising for Weight  Health Story, Healthy Minnesota  Health story, Vaccines Video, Vaccines video, Vaccines Health History, Vaccines Health history, Vaccinesover Picture, history, Vaccines Asia,  Healthy Minnesota  asia, Vaccines Gallery, Exercising for Weight  gallery, Vaccines Photo Gallery, Healthy Minnesota  photo gallery, Vaccines Picture, Vaccines picture, Vaccines Web, Malaysia Health, web Health, web Health picture, video photo, video surgery, gallery, laparoscopy, virus, flu, drug, video, Health Health, calories, photo, nutrition, health video, symptoms, cancer, medical, beating, diet, physical, Training, organic, gym, blister, exercise, weightloss, surgery, spiritual, eating, tips, skin, operation, bf1, Vaccines, could, halve, sickle-cell, deaths, in, Africa