Chao Ah Tiong Going To Start Black Death Version 2.0 Soon...

Quick pass it to chao neh

Quick pass it to chao ah neh bring it to India... no need to worry CECA flood Singapore...
China Reports 2 Cases Of The Most Dangerous Type Of Plague
November 15, 201911:17 AM ET
AMY CHENG
EMILY FENG

flea-1_custom-e7a6e06e0d31c8a3f0a8fbffde71ad75c1827771-s1200-c85.jpg

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Fleas transmit plague — but the pneumonic plague, the type reported from China this week, can spread from person to person as well.

Oxford Science Archive/Print Collector/Getty Images

Two patients have been diagnosed in Beijing with the most dangerous form of the plague – the medieval disease also known as the Black Death.

The announcement sent shock waves rippling through China's northeastern capital as authorities attempted to tamp down fears of an epidemic by censoring Chinese-language news of the hospitalization.

On Tuesday, Beijing authorities announced a municipal hospital had taken in a married couple from Inner Mongolia, a sparsely populated autonomous region in northwest China, seeking treatment for pneumonic plague. One patient is stable while the other is in critical condition but not deteriorating, according to Beijing's health commission.

The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention assured the public on Weibo, a Chinese social media site that is the equivalent of Twitter, that chances of a plague outbreak are "extremely low." The city's health commission has quarantined the infected patients, provided preventative care for those exposed to the couple and sterilized the relevant medical facilities, the center said.

Police are also guarding the quarantined emergency room of Chaoyang hospital, where the infected patients were first received and diagnosed, according to Caixin, an independent Chinese news outlet.

Of the three versions of the disease, pneumonic plague is the only one that can be transmitted from one person to another by coughing, for example. The other variants are typically spread by infected fleas or animals.

Pneumonic plague has symptoms of respiratory failure similar to pneumonia. Left untreated, it is fatal.

Genetic sequencing research shows the Black Death actually originated in or near China before variations of the plague spread to Europe and Africa and killed tens of millions during the 14th century .

Chinese health authorities reassured Beijing's residents this week that the most recent two cases of pneumonic plague did not pose a threat. "City residents should go to work normally and continue to seek medical treatment from hospitals. There is no need to worry about the risk of infection," the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention said on its social media account.

That has not allayed widespread concern that the government is intentionally downplaying or even omitting information about the cases.

The government publicly confirmed the illness on November 12. But Li Jifeng, a doctor at Chaoyang Hospital where the plague patients received treatment, wrote in a personal blog post on Wednesday that the infected couple was first transported to Beijing nine days earlier, on November 3.

The doctor's blog post, published on China's popular messaging platform WeChat, was quickly removed by censors.

In her post, Li Jifeng claimed to be on duty at the hospital emergency room when the couple was brought in with symptoms of pneumonia. She encountered a middle-aged man who had already been feverish for ten days and his wife, who fell ill after taking care of her husband.

"After years of specialist training, I am very familiar with diagnosing and treating the majority of respiratory diseases," Li wrote online. "But this time, I kept on looking but could not figure out what pathogen caused the pneumonia. I only thought it was a rare condition and did not get much information other than the patients' history."
On Weibo, which is China's equivalent of Twitter, users expressed dissatisfaction with the delays in making the plague cases public.

"Don't hide things like this. Let's face whatever it is together. Cover-ups only make things worse!" one user commented in response to a Chinese news report.

For some people, official statements left much to be desired. "People must ask themselves: Are China's local hospitals qualified to diagnose and treat pneumonic plague? Do provincial level health commissions have the capacity to prevent and control the disease? Furthermore, how were the two patients infected in the first place? What's the source? These questions await further investigation and information," another Weibo user asked.

A third user quipped, "I'd thought the threats of pneumonic plague were exaggerated. But the first thing I was asked at the hospital today was, 'Have you been to Inner Mongolia recently? Do you have a fever?'"

Perhaps to allay public fears, Chinese state media has largely stayed quiet on the two newest cases of the plague. The central government has also asked digital news aggregators to "block and control" online postings related to the plague, according to The New York Times.

China has a checkered record in managing public health crises. In 2002, the central government initially refused to acknowledge a nationwide outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, an illness with flu- and pneumonia-like symptoms.
The virus traveled across borders for five months until Beijing publicly announced the epidemic. In a rare moment of honesty, Beijing officials admitted in March 2003 that the city had ten times as many infected cases as they had claimed mere months earlier. Ultimately, 329 people died.

Wary of another epidemic, China has closely monitored recent outbreaks of the plague.

Mongolia, which borders the autonomous region where the infected Chinese couple lives, reported two fatal cases of bubonic plague just this year, after the patients ate raw marmot, a species of wild rodent that often carry the offending bacterium. In Mongolia, eating marmot is thought to be good for health.

Meanwhile, these experiences with treating plague patients have led China to take a role in helping other countries contain outbreaks.

In 2017, China dispatched six public health officials to help control a local pneumonic plague outbreak in Madagascar, one of three countries hit hardest by the disease in the recent decade.
 
3rd case now


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Beijing’s Chaoyang hospital in Beijing, where two infected people from Inner Mongolia sought treatment on 12 November.
Show caption
China
China records third case of deadly bubonic plague
Confirmed case in autonomous region of Inner Mongolia comes after two cases in Beijing
Reuters
Mon 18 Nov 2019 01.50 EST
China’s Inner Mongolia has reported a fresh, confirmed case of bubonic plague despite an earlier declaration by the country’s health officials that the risk of an outbreak was minimal.
The health commission of the autonomous region said a 55-year-old man was diagnosed with the disease after he ate wild rabbit meat on 5 November.
Bubonic plague is the most common form of plague globally and can advance and spread to the lungs, becoming a more severe type called pneumonic plague, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two people diagnosed with pneumonic plague in China
The Inner Mongolia case follows two that were confirmed earlier this month in Beijing. In both cases, the two patients from Inner Mongolia were quarantined at a facility in the capital after being diagnosed with pneumonic plague, health authorities said at the time.

The Inner Mongolia health commission said it found no evidence so far to link the most recent case to the earlier two cases in Beijing.
The patient in Inner Mongolia is now isolated and treated at a hospital in Ulanqab, the health commission said.
A total of 28 people who had close contact with the patient are now isolated and under observation, and the commission said there are no abnormal symptoms found in them.
Outbreaks in China have been rare, but large parts of the northwestern city of Yumen were sealed off in 2014 after a 38-year-old resident died of bubonic plague, known as Black Death in the Middle Ages and caused by the same bacterium as the pneumonic variant.

Rodent populations have risen in Inner Mongolia after persistent droughts, worsened by climate change. An area the size of the Netherlands was hit by a “rat plague” last summer, causing damages of 600 million yuan ($86 million), Xinhua said.

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Jeebye why don’t you post this before Sunday?

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Jeebye why don’t you post this before Sunday?

For now, try to stay away from the hospitals and the three Dongbei provinces + Inner Mongolia.

Things will get really fun when the Tiongs in mainland China and Sinkieland balik kampung for CNY 2020, which I believe will be in January. :biggrin:
 
China reports fourth case of bubonic plague this month
A villager shovels cast-off tailings of crushed mineral ore that contain rare earth metals in Xinguang Village, located on the outskirts of the city of Baotou in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in this Oct 31, 2010 picture. (Photo: REUTERS/David Gray)
28 Nov 2019 04:00PM
(Updated: 28 Nov 2019 04:06PM)
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BEIJING: Chinese health authorities on Thursday (Nov 28) reported a fresh case of bubonic plague in the country's northern Inner Mongolia region, bringing the total number of plague cases to four since the beginning of the month.
A rural herder in Siziwang county was diagnosed with the disease in a local hospital, according to a statement released by the Inner Mongolian health commission.
Prior to the diagnosis the herder had been active in an area where plague sources had been identified, it said.
The person is in a stable condition after treatment at a local hospital and four other people have been quarantined.
The bubonic plague, known as "Black Death" in the Middle Ages, is a highly-infectious and often fatal disease that is spread mostly by rodents. It also has a deadlier variant called pneumonic plague.
Earlier this month three people from Inner Mongolia were hospitalised for plague in two separate cases that were linked to eating wild animals. Two of the people were diagnosed with pneumonic plague and one with bubonic plague. Authorities previously said the two cases were unrelated.
The latest reported case is not in the same region of Inner Mongolia as either of the two earlier cases, and so far there have been no fatalities reported.
Plague cases are not uncommon in China, but outbreaks have become increasingly rare. From 2009 to 2018, China reported just 26 cases and 11 deaths.
Source: Reuters/nr
 
Mystery ‘pneumonia’ hits China’s Wuhan city; 27 hospitalised with 7 in serious condition
  • Most patients worked at a seafood market and health workers are still trying to identify virus responsible.
  • Seven patients in serious condition, while two are recovering and expected to leave hospital
Mandy Zuo

Mandy Zuo
in Shanghai
Published: 2:35pm, 31 Dec, 2019



Wuhan’s Huanan seafood market, where most of the mystery viral pneumonia cases have originated. Photo: Handout

Wuhan’s Huanan seafood market, where most of the mystery viral pneumonia cases have originated. Photo: Handout

Health authorities are looking into nearly 30 cases of “unknown pneumonia” in central China’s Wuhan city on Tuesday.
State television reported that a team of experts from the National Health Commission had arrived in Wuhan to lead the investigation into the nature of the disease, while People’s Daily, quoting local hospital sources, said the exact cause remained unclear and it would be premature to speculate.
Mainland media were alerted to the outbreak after a notice from the city health department went viral on social media on Monday night. The note instructed hospitals to report further cases, which led to some comparisons on social media with the outbreak of SARS, an acute respiratory illness which killed hundreds of people in China in the early 2000s.
Since the start of December, hospitals in the city have admitted 27 patients – most of them stall holders at the Huanan seafood market – with a viral pneumonia of unknown origin. Doctors are yet to identify which virus is to blame for the outbreak, People’s Daily reported on Tuesday, citing Hubei provincial authorities.
Central Hospital in Wuhan, the central Chinese city where an “unknown pneumonia” has so far affected nearly 30 people. Photo: Handout

Central Hospital in Wuhan, the central Chinese city where an “unknown pneumonia” has so far affected nearly 30 people. Photo: Handout
The Wuhan health department said on Tuesday that seven of the patients were in a serious condition. Two people had nearly recovered and were about to leave hospital, according to the People’s Daily report. The affected patients were in quarantine while testing of the virus and a disinfection programme were underway.


The department said the remaining patients were in stable condition.

It said initial investigations, which included clinical diagnosis and initial laboratory tests, suggested all 27 cases were of viral pneumonia, and so far no human-to-human infection had occurred, and no medical staff had contracted the disease. More pathological tests and probes into the cause of infection were continuing.
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Several hospital sources in the city said it was more likely that another virus was responsible for the current cluster of cases, rather than SARS, which infected more than 5,300 people and killed 349 nationwide in China between late 2002 and mid-2003, according to the report.

State health authorities define “pneumonia of unknown cause” as cases where the patient suffers a fever higher than 38 degrees Celsius, has characteristics of pneumonia or acute respiratory distress syndrome present in imaging findings, has a normal or lowering white blood cell level or a falling absolute lymphocyte count, with no improvement after three to five days of antibacterial treatment.
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/pol...hits-chinas-wuhan-city-nearly-30-hospitalised
 
China probes pneumonia outbreak for SARS links: state media - The Online Citizen
1 min read

China is investigating an outbreak of atypical pneumonia that is suspected of being linked to SARS, the flu-like virus that killed hundreds of people a decade ago, state media reported Tuesday.

A team of experts from the National Health Commission were dispatched Tuesday to Wuhan, in central China’s Hubei province, and are “currently conducting relevant inspection and verification work,” state broadcaster CCTV reported.

An emergency notification issued Monday by the Wuhan municipal health committee said hospitals in the city have treated a “successive series of patients with unexplained pneumonia,” without offering details.

Chinese news site The Paper reported 27 cases of viral pneumonia in Wuhan in December, citing unnamed health officials from the city.

“Of the 27 cases, seven were critical, the rest were under control, and two patients are expected to be discharged from hospital in near future,” The Paper said.

It is unclear whether all these patients are suspected of having contracted Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, a highly contagious respiratory disease.

The emergency notification has urged hospitals to offer treatment and report cases in a “timely manner”.

The World Health Organization (WHO) criticised China for under reporting the number of SARS cases following the outbreak in 2003.

SARS killed 349 people in mainland China and another 299 in Hong Kong in 2003.

The virus, which infected more than 8,000 people around the world, is expected to have originated in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong, according to WHO.

China sacked its then health minister Zhang Wenkang for the poor handling of the crisis in 2003, several months after the first case was reported.

WHO announced that China was free of the deadly SARS virus in May 2004.

– AFP
 
China bubonic plague: Inner Mongolia takes precautions after case
06 July 2020
China
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A bubonic plague smear, prepared from a lymph removed from an adenopathic lymph node
Image caption A bubonic plague smear, prepared from a lymph removed from an adenopathic lymph node of a plague patient
Authorities in China have stepped up precautions after a city in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region confirmed one case of bubonic plague.

According to state reports, the Bayannur patient - a herdsman - is in quarantine and in a stable condition.

Officials said they were also investigating a second suspected case, according to China's Global Times.

The bubonic plague was once the world's most feared disease, but can now be easily treated.

The first case was reported as suspected bubonic plague on Saturday at a hospital in Urad Middle Banner, in Bayannur city. It is not yet clear how or why the patient might have become infected.

The second suspected case involves a 15-year-old, who had apparently been in contact with a marmot hunted by a dog, a tweet from Global Times said .

A level 3 alert, which forbids the hunting and eating of animals that could carry plague and calls on the public to report suspected cases, has been put in place until the end of the year.

What is bubonic plague?
Bubonic plague, caused by bacterial infection, was responsible for one of the deadliest epidemics in human history - the Black Death - which killed about 50 million people across Africa, Asia and Europe in the 14th Century.

There have been a handful of large outbreaks since. It killed about a fifth of London's population during the Great Plague of 1665, while more than 12 million died in outbreaks during the 19th Century in China and India.

But nowadays it can be treated by antibiotics. Left untreated, the disease - which is typically transmitted from animals to humans by fleas - has a 30-60% fatality rate.

Symptoms of the plague include high fever, chills, nausea, weakness and swollen lymph nodes in the neck, armpit or groin.

Could there be another epidemic?
Bubonic cases are rare, but there are still a few flare-ups of the disease from time to time.

In May last year, two people in the country of Mongolia died from the plague, which they contracted after eating the raw meat of a marmot - the same type of rodent the second suspected case came into contact with.

However, it's unlikely any cases will lead to an epidemic.

"Unlike in the 14th Century, we now have an understanding of how this disease is transmitted," Dr Shanti Kappagoda, an infectious diseases doctor at Stanford Health Care, told news site Heathline.

"We know how to prevent it. We are also able to treat patients who are infected with effective antibiotics."
 
And they are arriving daily into SIngapore with their COVID, their new pig virus and now.....bubonic plague. Well done PAP!!

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