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View Full Version : Swine flu brought in from US onboard MH 091


Mat Sabo
15th May 2009, 10:05
Here is news bulletin about the first swine flu case in Malaysia :


Malaysia confirms first H1N1 flu case
Posted: 15 May 2009 1432 hrs
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A health officer wearing a protective mask stands next to an infection control notice at a hospital in Penang. (file pic)
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia's top health official Friday confirmed the country's first case of Influenza A (H1N1) amid fears that some of those exposed to the infected patient could have gone on to Indonesia.

"I can confirm (that it) is the first case in Malaysia," health ministry director general Ismail Merican told AFP.

Acting health minister Kong Cho Ha, who addressed a hastily-convened press conference later, said the patient was a 21-year-old male student who arrived on a flight from the United States on May 13, giving no further details on his identity.

He said the patient came down with fever, sore throat and body aches the next day and was admitted to the Sungai Buloh quarantine facility in central Selangor state on the same evening and is now in stable condition.

He said five family members who live with the patient have been placed under home quarantine in order to monitor their condition.

The government has urged all passengers who travelled on Malaysian Airlines flight MH091 from Newark in the United States to Kuala Lumpur, that landed at 7.15am on May 13 to contact the ministry for further instructions.

"No passengers have been quarantined, we are still trying to trace them," Kong said of the 199 passengers and crew onboard the flight. "We will segregate them (when located). If they have no signs (of the disease) they can go after a certain number of days," he added.

However, he said there was a fear that some of those exposed to the infected patient may have gone on to Indonesia.

"We mention Indonesia because that flight is a code share with (Indonesian carrier) Garuda so the assumption is that there could be some passengers going to Indonesia," he added.

Officials could not immediately confirm how many Indonesians were on board nor if any passengers continued onto Indonesia.

Kong said Malaysia's alert level would remain the same despite its first confirmed H1N1 flu case as the country was already at its highest state of preparedness since the World Health Organisation raised its flu alert to phase five out of six.

"We have been on full alert," said Kong. "We are on a level of full preparedness."

Malaysia is also pushing for the WHO to get affected countries to implement exit screening in order to stop the spread of the disease amid concerns that a second wave of the H1N1 disease could be deadlier.

"If we can have travellers from affected countries screened before they are allowed to travel out, this will help us to contain the spread of such virus to other places," health minister Liow Tiong Lai told state media before heading off for the 62nd WHO General Assembly in Switzerland from May 18 to 22.

The world health body has not recommended travel restrictions following the outbreak but has advised those who are ill to delay their travel plans and urged returning travellers who fall ill to seek medical treatment.

Health officials could not immediately confirm if Malaysia would be implementing exit screening after confirming its first H1N1 case.

On Tuesday, the government urged its citizens to defer travel to the US, Mexico, Canada, Spain and Britain following reported cases of H1N1 flu in those countries.

Malaysian health authorities have installed 20 thermal scanners at the country's entry points to help detect cases with 9,324 passengers screened so far.

The latest World Health Organisation figures show the number of laboratory-confirmed H1N1 flu cases worldwide is 7,520 in 33 countries. A total of 65 people have died from the disease, most of them in Mexico, WHO figures show.

- AFP/so/ir



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chintanmanis
16th May 2009, 01:06
Are they going to track down ALL the other pax and quarantine them? I thought the normal practice are to locate those within 3 seats away from the stricken pax. What about the crew? I understand the incubation time for this virus is less than 72 hours; how will this affect the search for the other pax?

alvega
16th May 2009, 01:56
I think the question we all should be asking ourselves nowadays is Qui Bono, who gains with all this story. To me it is very simple, the pharma industry. Look at the chronology, first the financial crash, now the flu scare blamed on the poor pigs and whatever else is coming next. Do your own research and don't always believe what you read or see on the news or what you are told by the politicians, they are in it for the money, all of them. One example, Tamiflu, the "wonder drug" (that can kill you) developed by Gilead Sciences and approved in 1999 while a criminal named Donald Rumsfeld (yes, the very same that managed to push Aspartame through approval by the FDA in 1981, the very same that sold the nuclear technology to North Korea, the very same that delivered the weapons of mass destruction to Iraq and later lied about it) was its CEO and is still pocketing on the commercial rights of this drug. Going to the chronology again, why did the outbreak scare started on the very day B. Obama left Mexico after a brief visit there (probably to warn the mexican government that they should leave the cocaine cartels alone because they were ruining the business that provides the biggest source of income to the U.S.).
Do your own research and stay out of the mainstream media, they are not telling the truth. Time to wake up.

Akali Dal
16th May 2009, 02:11
Touche! Alvega, right on the money. A classmate who collaborated with a Russian researcher told me some 5 years ago that Russian intelligence knew that SARS was an artificially created viral pathogen as a warning to the ambitious Middle Kingdom on who's the boss and the ramifications of threatening a unipolar world!

EY777
18th May 2009, 08:35
Getting back to the topic, the susoected pax also caused more inconvenience to Air Asia ..... :}

A (H1N1): Search for 76 passengers on 2 flights (Update 4)
By FOONG PEK YEE and NELSON BENJAMIN


KUALA LUMPUR: The Health Ministry is still searching for 76 passengers on board on AirAsia AK5358 and MAS MH091 on May 13 who were exposed to two patients infected with the virus.

Health Ministry Deputy Director General Datuk Dr Ramlee Rahmat said that all those passengers must join the others in home quarantine and call 03 88810200/300 immediately.

He said that seven passengers who were yet to be located had been on the MAS flight from Newark, United States while another 69 were on the AirAsia flight from the Low Cost Carrier Terminal in Sepang to Penang.

He urged those who showed any flu symptom to admit themselves into the nearest hospital.

He said that of the 11 suspected cases in Malaysia, so far, only two had tested positive.

He said that there had been no local transmission of the virus, so far, and if the nine current suspected cases did not develop symptoms, they could be declared A (H1N1) free on wednesday as the virus took seven days to incubate.

Dr Ramly said that the World Health Organisation had yet to recommend travel restrictions.

Meanwhile, the man who fainted in an AirAsia Kuala Lumpur-bound flight from Sandakan Sunday was not suspected of having A (H1N1) flu.

Dr Ramlee Rahmat said the man had not visited any countries affected by the flu recently.

The emergency landing in Kuching to allow him to be warded at Sarawak General Hospital was the usual practice airlines, he said.

In Johor Baru, state health department director Dr Mohd Khairi Yaakob said that the female passenger from MH091, who has been warded in Johor from Sunday after developing a fever, had tested negative for the A (H1N1) flu.

He said she was expected to be discharged Monday.

In Kuching, Assistant Public Health Minister Datuk Dr Soon Choon Teck said that two passengers on MH091 from Newark, New Jersey, who were warded at the Sarawak General Hospital after developing fever at the weekend have tested negative.

He said one of the passengers, a woman who was admitted on Saturday, was still in hospital but no longer in the isolation ward.

“She is no longer considered a suspected case of H1N1 and I think she will go home very soon,” he told reporters at the lobby of the Sarawak State Assembly here Monday.

The other passenger was a man in his 20s who was admitted on Sunday.

“As far as we are concerned there are no H1N1 suspected cases in the hospital at the moment,” Dr Soon said.

The two were among nine passengers from the flight who were now in Sarawak.

Dr Soon said the other passengers had been traced and placed under home quarantine.



Meanwhile, mild cases of fever has been treated seriously by all concerned :D

Man rushed to hospital after fainting on plane


KUCHING: A Kuala Lumpur-bound AirAsia flight from Sandakan, Sabah, was forced to make an emergency landing here after a passenger fainted on board.

The unidentified 30-year-old man from Johor was rushed by ambulance to the Sarawak General Hospital at 2pm yesterday.

The hospital authorities are treating him as a suspected influenza A (H1N1) patient as he had a fever.

The man, who was still unconscious on arrival at the hospital, had travelled to Sandakan with two other friends on a business trip last Friday.

According to one of his friends, who declined to be named, the man had sustained serious head wounds in a road accident a year ago but it was not known if the fainting spell was linked to the past injury.

He said the man had not travelled abroad in recent months