Beijing Reports First Victim of Child Virus
By Anna Boyd
13:01, May 14th 2008
102 votes
Vote this story
Beijing Reports First Victim of Child Virus

China’s capital, on Wednesday, confirmed the first two-child deaths of hand-foot-mouth disease, bringing the national toll to 42 children, state media reported, citing health officials.

Beijing Health Bureau representative Deng Xiaohong said the two victims were from Chaoyang District and Hebei Province, a neighbor of Beijing, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reports.

The child from Chaoyang died on the way to a hospital on Sunday. The other child died in the capital after being transferred from Hebei Province for medical treatment. They both tested positive for enterovirus 71 (EV71), a virus that has caused the majority of HFMD deaths in China.

“Under the regulations of the Ministry of Health, the child from Hebei should not be included in Beijing’s HFMD death toll,” Deng said, as quoted by the same local source.

There have been reported 3,606 hand-food-mouth infections in Beijing as of Monday with 32 patients still in hospital under treatment. Eight of them are in serious condition.

EV71 is a childhood illness found worldwide that spreads with saliva, feces, fluid secreted from blisters or mucus from the nose and throat. Symptoms typically include fever, skin rashes and sores inside the mouth and on fingers and toes. The illness has no specific treatment, but children usually recover quickly without problems. However, there are cases when the illness can result in a more serious form that can lead to paralysis, brain swelling or death.

As in the case of many other diseases, early detection and early treatment can lead to better healing. In China’s case, early detection can also curb the outbreak.

The HFMD outbreak started weeks ago in the eastern province of Anhui’s Fuyang city, which is the hardest hit region. More than 24,934 cases have been reported in China with the number of new cases in Anhui province starting to decline. Deaths have been reported in Anhui, Guangdong, Hainan, Hunan, Zhejiang, Beijing, Hubei and Guangxi.

The HFMD outbreak prompted Chinese authorities to issue a nationwide alert, closing some kindergartens and sending officials to visit nurseries and primary schools to educate on hygiene and prevention steps. Also, the local authorities were strengthening supervision of food safety and water quality in an effort to stop the disease from spreading.

“Local Communist Party and government officials are on high alert. Health authorities are urgently taking measures to prevent the disease and treat seriously ill children,” the health ministry said in a statement last week.

The outbreak of EV71 comes amid preparations for the Beijing Olympic Games in August, already tarnished by unrest among Tibetans in western China and an international torch relay disrupted by protests. But, WHO China representative Hans Troedsson told a news conference last week that the outbreak is not “a threat to the Olympics or any upcoming events…This is a disease mainly affecting young children,” the Associated Press quoted him.

He also added that the illness usually peaks in June or July, which means there could still be an increase in infections as the weather warms up. The disease thrives in hot climates, and Asia has seen increased occurrences in recent years, including in Singapore, Vietnam and Taiwan.



© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Will Fast Food Ads Be Banned?

Will Fast Food Ads Be Banned?

Health experts around the world have concluded that it’s time to ban some ads for fast food restaurants, as previously done three decades ago, when the government banned cigarette ads from the...

Stem Cell Airway Transplant Succeeded

Stem Cell Airway Transplant Succeeded

As any other science, medicine is also constantly changing, evolving, improving for the benefit of patients worldwide. One of the most major achievements of modern Western medicine is undoubtedly the...

Research Proves Gingko Biloba Is No Good

Research Proves Gingko Biloba Is No Good

The widely used herbal supplement, Ginkgo biloba, does not appear to prevent the Alzheimer disease in healthy elderly people or those with mild cognitive impairment, U.S. researchers mentioned a...

Heartless For 118 Days

Medicine advances on a regular basis, leading to major breakthroughs in the field. The perseverance, knowledge, curiosity and innovation of scientists and doctors are for the benefit of the entire...

Universal Health Coverage, In Discussion

As medicine, technology and science advance at a very fast rate, medical breakthroughs now happen quite often. The advances are quite stunning if you consider that in our day and age, functional...

dotclear
Latest videos in Health
Landmark windpipe transplant
High Heels: Upward Trend...
AIDS cure hope after German...
Dangers Of Childhood Obesity
China smoking costs mount

dotclear
Health You are here: Health
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Health
Vitamin C, E Supplements Fail To Reduce Cancer RiskVitamin C, E Supplements Fail To Reduce Cancer Risk

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
Congress to automakers: "Show us a plan"

» read full story
dotclear