 |
|
| View previous topic :: View next topic |
| Author |
Message |
Nictoe The Wise One

Joined: 22 Sep 2005 Posts: 7589
|
Posted: Fri Jun 01, 2007 3:46 am Post subject: TB OUTBREAK ! |
|
|
California tuberculosis case sparks alert
May 31 05:10 PM US/Eastern
Authorities in the southern Californian city of San Diego on Thursday were on the alert for outbreaks of tuberculosis after a student contracted a mild form of the disease.
The student, who was not identified, came down with a less severe strain of the disease than the 31-year-old US lawyer who sparked a global health alert this week by traveling transcontinentally against doctors' orders.
The sick student attended classes at San Diego's University of Phoenix and could have been contagious from February 26 to May 21, according to Wilma Wooten, interim county deputy public health officer.
"We are focusing on those students and faculty members who were known to have repeated and prolonged exposure to the student," she said.
"The risk of fellow students actually contracting TB is low," Wooten said, adding that authorities were "erring on the side of caution."
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=070531211004.tt3c7brv&show_article=1 |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
theLIBERTARIAN El Loco

Joined: 24 Sep 2005 Posts: 10192
|
Posted: Fri Jun 01, 2007 11:39 am Post subject: |
|
|
I thought it could have been related to that other TB scare recently. It perked my interest... But I bet these things hpapen all the time, right?? Maybe we should not travel that much this year... _________________ Bing News - The Best Place To Get Your News
Bing Search
 |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Nictoe The Wise One

Joined: 22 Sep 2005 Posts: 7589
|
Posted: Fri Jun 01, 2007 12:20 pm Post subject: |
|
|
There's all kinds of epidemics raging around the world these days. A friend of mine is reporting a dengue outbreak in Brazil.  |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Biscuit Forum Guru
Joined: 02 Nov 2006 Posts: 7750 Location: Here
|
Posted: Fri Jun 01, 2007 12:37 pm Post subject: |
|
|
| It mostly comes from the Latin and Arab countries. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
bestsynd Site Admin

Joined: 31 Dec 1969 Posts: 2361 Location: Southern CA
|
Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2007 7:41 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Speaker on ABC GMA
Best Syndication) The man that flew from the United States to Europe and back while infected with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) may is scheduled for surgery in July to remove part of his infected lung. The 31 year old Andrew Speaker has been in quarantine in at a hospital in Denver, and by all accounts is in good mental and physical health.
To help him overcome this rare form of TB, doctors will remove a tennis ball sized portion of his lung. "Andrew Speaker is an excellent candidate for surgery," said Dr. Charles Daley, head of the hospital's infectious disease division. "The infected area of his lung is relatively small and well contained. He is also young and otherwise healthy."
Complete Best Syndication Article |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
bestsynd Site Admin

Joined: 31 Dec 1969 Posts: 2361 Location: Southern CA
|
Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2007 4:16 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Speaker and Wife on CNN
(Best Syndication) The type of tuberculosis American Lawyer Andrew Speaker has may not be as bad as once thought. Although his diagnosis has been downgraded, the world traveler is still not out of the woods. This was determined after the Center for Disease Control (CDC) analyzed a bronchoscopy sample.
Speaker had planned to undergo surgery this month and his doctors have still not ruled that out. This new diagnosis means that drugs alone may be used to treat the TB. He has MDR-TB. Doctors say the drugs used to treat MDR-TB are less toxic than those used to treat XDR-TB. Speaker is being treated at Denver's National Jewish Medical and Research Center.
Complete Best Syndication Article |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
theLIBERTARIAN El Loco

Joined: 24 Sep 2005 Posts: 10192
|
Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2007 5:43 pm Post subject: |
|
|
This guy is a piece of work. He was asked by the US government to not board any commercial flights. What does he do?? He travels on commercial flights while knowing he had a drug resistant TB. Then he comes to the US and now he says the CDC should apologize? No, he should apologize. Typical lawyer. I wonder if this is the way his dad raised him. _________________ Bing News - The Best Place To Get Your News
Bing Search
 |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Biscuit Forum Guru
Joined: 02 Nov 2006 Posts: 7750 Location: Here
|
Posted: Wed Jul 04, 2007 6:16 pm Post subject: |
|
|
| Maybe he was coached at Silverado HS. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Guitarras Reyes Forum Guru
Joined: 18 Nov 2006 Posts: 7910
|
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Nictoe The Wise One

Joined: 22 Sep 2005 Posts: 7589
|
Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2008 11:26 am Post subject: |
|
|
Drug-Resistant TB at Record Levels
By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN
February 26, 2008
Multiple-drug-resistant tuberculosis cases in parts of the former Soviet Union have reached the highest rates ever recorded and could soar even higher, spreading the bacterial disease elsewhere, the World Health Organization said on Tuesday in releasing findings from the largest global survey of the problem.
The highest rate was in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, where 22.3 percent of new tuberculosis cases were resistant to the standard anti-tuberculosis drug regimen during the survey period from 2002 to 2006. That exceeded the previous high of 14.2 percent, in Kazakhstan.
Studies in China also suggest that multiple-drug-resistant TB is widespread in the inner Mongolia and Heilongjiang regions, W.H.O. said.
The new survey, the first in four years, shows that earlier predictions were correct and that governments have lost control of tuberculosis in many areas. The reason, health officials say, is that countries have failed to invest enough to build, equip and staff the laboratories needed to detect the disease. The countries also failed to assure sufficient amounts of standard drugs and then to monitor patients to ensure that they complete a full course of therapy.
Inadequate therapy often leads to development of multiple-drug-resistant strains of the tuberculosis bacterium.
Drug-resistant tuberculosis, like drug-sensitive TB, can be transmitted from an infected individual to a noninfected person in droplets through coughing, sneezing, singing and other activities. The drug resistant form can take two years to treat with drugs that are 100 times more expensive than the first-line regimen, the health agency, a unit of the United Nations, said.
The survey also found alarmingly high rates in Moldova (19.4 percent), Donetsk in the Ukraine (16 percent), Tomsk Oblast in Russia (15 percent) and Tashkent in Uzbekistan (14.8 percent).
Those levels surpassed the highest levels that nearly all experts once thought were possible, Dr. Mario C. Raviglione, who directs the health organization’s Stop Tuberculosis program, said in an interview.
“We are seeing levels of multiple-drug-resistant TB that we never expected — 20 percent is a very high level,” Dr. Raviglione, said. The Global Plan to Stop TB is a road map for reducing by half TB prevalence and deaths by 2015 compared with 1990 levels.
When W.H.O. started a drug surveillance project in 1994, he said, “the general thinking was that multiple-drug-resistant TB would never be a real problem since it was felt to be confined to immunosuppressed patients.”
A decade ago, when W.H.O. first received reports of 9 to 10 percent rates of multiple-drug-resistant TB in some areas, many scientists thought the figure was inaccurate due to a misclassification that mixed new, previously treated and chronic cases together. Experts also said higher rates were not possible, Dr. Raviglione said, but “we see now it is possible, it tells you they are really doing something wrong in places where this form of TB is spreading.”
Overall, about one in 20 new cases of tuberculosis in the world is resistant to first line drugs, which translates into nearly 500,000 of the 9 million new tuberculosis cases that are detected each year, according to the W.H.O. survey, which involved 90,000 patients in 81 countries.
The World Health Organization says that there is a financial gap of $2.5 billion of the estimated $4.8 billion needed this year for overall TB control in low- and middle-income countries.
For the first time, the survey included analysis of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, or XDR-TB, a virtually untreatable form of the respiratory disease because the causative bacteria are resistant to virtually all the most effective anti-TB drugs.
XDR-TB has been reported in 45 countries, but because few countries have the necessary laboratories to detect it, the data were limited.
The true extent of the problem remains unknown in some pockets of the world because only six countries in Africa, the region with the world’s highest incidence of TB, could provide drug resistance data for the report, Dr. Raviglione said. Other countries in the region could not conduct surveys because they lack the laboratory equipment and trained personnel needed to identify drug-resistant TB.
Outbreaks of drug resistance are likely going undetected, Abigail Wright, the principal author of the W.H.O. report, said.
Although the W.H.O. report highlights the extent of drug resistance, Dr. Raviglione said there were successes where governments invested in control measures. He cited the Baltic countries of Estonia and Latvia as “the model” because they were the drug resistant tuberculosis “hot spots” 13 years ago. Today, following a substantial investment and a sustained assault on multiple-drug-resistant TB, rates in these two countries are stabilizing and rates of new TB are falling. _________________ ____________
"I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny, and I say secession now, secession tomorrow, secession forever." |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
theLIBERTARIAN El Loco

Joined: 24 Sep 2005 Posts: 10192
|
Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2008 11:34 am Post subject: |
|
|
Thanks Nictoe, I have a pretty bad cough right now. _________________ Bing News - The Best Place To Get Your News
Bing Search
 |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
|