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Pipeline
Hero Username: Pipeline
Post Number: 10575 Registered: 05-2009 Posted From: 161.141.1.1
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Monday, September 08, 2014 - 02:58 pm: |
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idi CNN vodi hype emo? yes cases are too many but is it a deadly virus? |
   
Sesani
Comedian Username: Sesani
Post Number: 1619 Registered: 08-2014 Posted From: 170.200.144.4
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Monday, September 08, 2014 - 02:45 pm: |
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Man_of_masses:
Chaaa.. contagious by contact anta kada bhayya... and there is no vaccine yet.. scary... kids ki vasthe parents ki entha problem.. mental trauma..  |
   
Man_of_masses
Megastar Username: Man_of_masses
Post Number: 29476 Registered: 01-2008 Posted From: 198.175.154.213
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Monday, September 08, 2014 - 02:43 pm: |
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http://fox2now.com/2014/09/08/virus-hitting-midwest-could-be -tip-of-iceberg-cdc-official-says/ Success Doesn't Guarantee Happiness.. http://i42.tinypic.com/54g1g2.png
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Man_of_masses
Megastar Username: Man_of_masses
Post Number: 29475 Registered: 01-2008 Posted From: 198.175.154.213
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Monday, September 08, 2014 - 02:40 pm: |
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(CNN) â A respiratory virus is sending hundreds of children to hospitals in Missouri and possibly throughout the Midwest and beyond, officials say. The unusually high number of hospitalizations reported now could be âjust the tip of the iceberg in terms of severe cases,â said Mark Pallansch, a virologist and director of the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionâs Division of Viral Diseases. âWeâre in the middle of looking into this,â he told CNN on Sunday. âWe donât have all the answers yet.â Ten states have contacted the CDC for assistance in investigating clusters of enterovirus â Colorado, North Carolina, Georgia, Ohio, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Kentucky. Enteroviruses, which bring on symptoms like a very intense cold, arenât unusual. Theyâre actually common. When you have a bad summer cold, often what you have is an enterovirus, he said. The season often hits its peak in September. The unusual situation now is that there have been so many hospitalizations. The virus has sent more than 30 children a day to a Kansas City, Missouri, hospital, where about 15% of the youngsters were placed in intensive care, officials said. In a sign of a possible regional outbreak, Colorado, Illinois and Ohio are reporting cases with similar symptoms and are awaiting testing results, according to officials and CNN affiliates in those states. In Kansas City, about 475 children were recently treated at Childrenâs Mercy Hospital, and at least 60 of them received intensive hospitalization, spokesman Jake Jacobson said. âItâs worse in terms of scope of critically ill children who require intensive care. I would call it unprecedented. Iâve practiced for 30 years in pediatrics, and Iâve never seen anything quite like this,â said Dr. Mary Anne Jackson, the hospitalâs division director for infectious diseases. âWeâve had to mobilize other providers, doctors, nurses. Itâs big,â she said. The Kansas City hospital treats 90% of that areaâs ill children. Staff members noticed an initial spike on August 15, Jackson said. âIt could have taken off right after school started. Our students start back around August 17, and I think it blew up at that point,â Jackson said. âOur peak appears to be between the 21st and the 30th of August. Weâve seen some leveling of cases at this point.â No vaccine for virus This particular type of enterovirus â EV-D68 â is uncommon, but not new. It was first identified in the 1960s and there have been fewer than 100 reported cases since that time. But itâs possible, Pallansch said, that the relatively low number of reports might be because EV-D68 is hard to identify. EV-D68 was seen last year in the United States and this year in various parts of the world. Over the years, clusters have been reported in Georgia, Pennsylvania, Arizona and various countries including the Philippines, Japan and the Netherlands. An analysis by the CDC showed at least 30 of the Kansas City children tested positive for EV-D68, according to the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. Vaccines for EV-D68 arenât currently available, and there is no specific treatment for infections, the Missouri agency said. âMany infections will be mild and self-limited, requiring only symptomatic treatment,â it said. âSome people with several respiratory illness caused by EV-D68 may need to be hospitalized and receive intensive supportive therapy.â Some cases of the virus might contribute to death, but none of the Missouri cases resulted in death and no data are available for overall morbidity and mortality from the virus in the United States, the agency said. Symptoms include coughing, difficulty breathing and rash. Sometimes they can be accompanied by fever or wheezing. Jackson said physicians in other Midwest states reported cases with similar symptoms. âThe full scope is yet to be known, but it would appear itâs in the Midwest. In our community, meticulous hand-washing is not happening. Itâs just the nature of kids,â Jackson said. âWorst Iâve seenâ Denver also is seeing a spike in respiratory illnesses resembling the virus, and hospitals have sent specimens for testing to confirm whether itâs the same virus, CNN affiliate KUSA said. More than 900 children have gone to Childrenâs Hospital Colorado emergency and urgent care locations since August 18 for treatment of severe respiratory illnesses, including enterovirus and viral infections, hospital spokeswoman Melissa Vizcarra told CNN. Of those, 86 have been sick enough to be admitted to the Aurora facility. And Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children had five children in intensive care and 20 more in the pediatric unit, KUSA said last week. âThis is the worst Iâve seen in my time here at Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children,â Dr. Raju Meyeppan told the outlet. âWeâre going to have a pretty busy winter at this institution and throughout the hospitals of Denver.â Will Cornejo, 13, was among the children in intensive care at Rocky Mountain Hospital for Children after he came down with a cold last weekend and then woke up Tuesday night with an asthma attack that couldnât be controlled with his medicine albuterol. His mother, Jennifer, called 911 when her sonâs breathing became shallow, and her son was airlifted to the Denver hospital, she told KUSA. Her son was put on a breathing tube for 24 hours. âIt was like nothing weâve ever seen,â Jennifer Cornejo told KUSA. âHe was unresponsive. He was laying on the couch. He couldnât speak to me. He was turning white and his lips turned blue. âWeâre having a hard time believing that it really happened,â she added. âWeâre much better now because he is breathing on his own. Weâre on the mend.â Restricting kidsâ visits with patients In East Columbus, Ohio, Nationwide Childrenâs Hospital saw a 20% increase in patients with respiratory illnesses last weekend, and Dr. Dennis Cunningham said patient samples are being tested to determine whether EV-D68 is behind the spike, CNN affiliate WTTE reported. Elsewhere, Hannibal Regional Hospital in Hannibal, Missouri, reported ârecent outbreaks of enterovirus infections in Missouri and Illinois,â the facility said this week on its Facebook page. Blessing Hospital in Quincy, Illinois, saw more than 70 children with respiratory issues last weekend, and seven of them were admitted, CNN affiliate WGEM reported. The hospitalâs Dr. Robert Merrick believes that the same virus that hit Kansas City is causing the rash of illnesses seen at the Quincy and Hannibal hospitals, which both imposed restrictions this week on children visiting patients, the affiliate said. âMostly weâre concerned about them bringing it in to a vulnerable patient. We donât feel that the hospital is more dangerous to any other person at this time,â Merrick told WGEM. Blessing Hospital is working with Illinois health officials to identify the virus, the hospital said in a statement. While there are more than 100 types of enteroviruses causing up to 15 million U.S. infections annually, EV-D68 infections occur less commonly, the Missouri health agency said. Like other enteroviruses, the respiratory illness appears to spread through close contact with infected people, the agency said. âUnlike the majority of enteroviruses that cause a clinical disease manifesting as a mild upper respiratory illness, febrile rash illness, or neurologic illness (such as aseptic meningitis and encephalitis), EV-D68 has been associated almost exclusively with respiratory disease,â the agency said. Clusters of the virus have struck Asia, Europe and the United States from 2008 to 2010, and the infection caused relatively mild to severe illness, with some intensive care and mechanical ventilation, the health agency said. To reduce the risk of infection, individuals should wash hands often with soap and water for 20 seconds, especially after changing diapers; avoid touching eyes, nose and mouth with unwashed hands; avoid kissing, hugging and sharing cups or eating utensils with people who are sick; disinfect frequently-touched surfaces such as toys and doorknobs; and stay home when feeling sick, the Missouri agency said. CNNâs John Newsome reported from Atlanta, and Michael Martinez wrote and reported from Los Angeles. CNNâs Deanna Hackney and Leslie Wade contributed to this report. Success Doesn't Guarantee Happiness.. http://i42.tinypic.com/54g1g2.png
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