PETALING JAYA: (4) A 20-year-old woman suffering from Influenza A(H1N1) died at 9am on Tuesday, the fourth person to die in Malaysia due to the virus.

The woman, who had contracted the virus through a local transmission, died at the Malacca Hospital.

Health Ministry director-general Tan Sri Dr Ismail Merican said the woman had only been admitted to hospital on July 26, 10 days after contracting the disease.

He added that the woman suffered from obesity and had died of pneumonia.

In TANJUNG MALIM in Perak, Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris has been closed for seven days starting Wednesday after an unconfirmed number of students showed flu-like symptoms.

State Health Committee chairman Datuk Dr Mah Hang Soon said the concerned students had been sent to the Tanjung Malim Hospital for a check-up.

Those who have exhibited symptoms have been quarantined on campus, while thousands of other students have been sent home.

In GEORGE TOWN, three schools and a university campus were also affected.

Penang Health, Welfare, Caring Society and Environment Committee chairman Phee Boon Poh confirmed that the MRSM Kepala Batas and two classes at SK Kepala Batas were closed, starting Tuesday, for a week.

“The other two are the Universiti Sains Malaysia engineering campus near Nibong Tebal and Jit Sin A Primary School in Bukit Mertajam which are closed starting today (July 29) for a week,” he said Wednesday.

He did not reveal the numbers of students infected but said they were “cluster cases of influenza-like illness.”

H1N1 situation getting worse

H1N1 situation getting worse

PUTRAJAYA: Malaysia has recorded its first influenza A (H1N1) related death from a local transmission, signalling a worsening of the situation in the country.

The (3) 42-year-old man, who died on Monday, was the third death caused by the virus.

Two earlier deaths were linked to imported cases involving (2) a 46-year-old Malaysian man who worked in Belgium, who died last Sunday and a (1) 30-year-old Islamic finance student from Indonesia who died on July 21.

Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said the third victim was reported to have died of severe pneumonia with multi-organ failure at 4.40pm on Monday after being treated for 10 days in a private hospital in Kuala Lumpur.

He said the victim had received outpatient treatment from several private clinics and hospitals since July 6 before being referred and admitted to the private hospital on July 18.

“He was diagnosed as suffering from diabetes mellitus and chest X-ray showed that he also had pneumonia,” he told a press conference yesterday.

Liow said the victim was transferred to the intensive care unit after suffering breathing difficulties and requiring a ventilator but his condition continued to deteriorate.

A throat swab taken on July 22 confirmed that the man was H1N1 positive.

“The swab was taken very late on July 22. All three victims died in the hospitals and now we’ve found out that the treatment came to them very late. I’m very concerned.”

Liow said he had directed all private clinics and hospitals to be more vigilant and to be on high alert as well as have the anti-viral drug, Tamiflu, to handle the H1N1 cases.

“Everyone must be responsible. We are already at level six. If you have flu and cough, take it seriously,” he said, adding that the death risk for those infected with H1N1 was 0.4% to 0.5%.

He advised the public to wear masks, take care of their personal hygiene and to practice social distancing if they were having sore throat and cough.

He said those with flu-like symptoms must go to the hospital and if confirmed to have the H1N1, to take Tamiflu.

Asked whether local users had suffered side-effects after taking Tamiflu as experienced by some foreign users, Liow said: “No. Not in Malaysia.

“At the early stage, the Health director-general had warned the public not to simply take Tamiflu. Take it only when you have the symptoms.”

He also said 95 new local H1N1 cases were reported yesterday making the total number thus far to 1,219.

Of the figure, 53% or 645 are local infections while 47% or 574 are imported cases.

“Local transmission cases have exceeded imported cases. Our local infections is spreading so fast throughout the country with 19 new clusters. This is a bad sign,” Liow said.

sumber : the star online
Perbandingan antara demam
selsema dan influenza..please take note of your health peeps (teramat lah scary)..

3 comments:

bagus3...jimat belanja.

huhu jimat ler ckit tp mkn byk masa..kmaity ni silap entry kan patut kat atas

hoho...slalu blog komen kat bhgn bwh, yg awak punya kat bhgn atas ekekekeke...