Global & Disaster Medicine

Archive for March, 2018

On the east coast, the 4th Nor’easter in 3 weeks will bring another round of heavy snow, gusty winds, and coastal flooding.

Northeast sector loop

“…..New York City and Washington, D.C. could get around 3 inches of snow and Philadelphia could see 6 inches. But the Washington suburbs could get 6-12 inches, as could the New York and Philadelphia suburbs.

Boston, already battered by the previous nor’easters, will still be dealing with snow Thursday morning. The city could expect anywhere from 3-6 inches, with Massachusetts’ south shore and Rhode Island getting an estimated 6-12 inches……”


WHO & Listeria: Nearly 200 South Africans have died since January 2017 as a result of contaminated ready-to-eat meat products

WHO

20 March 2018 | Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo – The World Health Organization has reached out to 16 African nations to provide support for preparedness and response to a listeriosis outbreak that started in South Africa in 2017 but is now threatening other countries on the continent.

Nearly 200 South Africans have died since January 2017 as a result of contaminated ready-to-eat meat products that are widely consumed in South Africa and may also have been exported to two West African countries and 14 members of the South African Development Community (SADC).[1]

South African health authorities recently declared the source of the outbreak as a factory in Polokwane, South Africa. This prompted a national and international recall of the food products. However, in light of the potentially long incubation period of listeriosis and the challenges relating to large scale nationwide recall processes, further cases are likely to occur.

Namibia has reported one confirmed case of listeriosis, a man who was admitted to hospital in early March. An investigation is ongoing to determine whether the case is connected to the outbreak in South Africa.

WHO’s Health Emergencies programme, the Global Outbreak alert and Response Network (GOARN) and the International Food Safety Authorities Network (INFOSAN) are working with the 16 priority countries to improve their ability to prepare for, detect and respond to potential outbreaks.

Immediate steps will include increasing awareness on listeriosis, enhancing active surveillance and laboratory diagnosis, ensuring readiness of Rapid Response Teams, and strengthening coordination and contingency planning. Experts have been deployed to South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland to support these efforts.

“This outbreak is a wake up call for countries in the region to strengthen their national food safety and disease surveillance systems,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa.

The link between the contaminated products, the producing company and strains of Listeria isolated from the patients was made by the use of whole genome sequencing of isolated strains of the Listeria bacteria. WHO is supporting further genome sequencing to determine which cases are linked to this on-going outbreak.

In March, South Africa hosted a meeting of SADC health ministers to address regional preparedness and response to listeriosis. Ministers committed to regional collaboration, exchanging information and strengthening national food safety systems in line with international standards.

WHO does not currently recommend any trade related measures in relation to the current outbreak of listeriosis in South Africa, other than the recall of products identified as sources of infection.

Countries are encouraged to pay more attention to common foodborne pathogens such as Salmonella, Campylobacter, E.coli and Listeria, to notify WHO of listeriosis outbreaks in line with the International Health Regulations (2005), and to make use of WHO guidelines to strengthen surveillance of and response to the foodborne disease

***

[1] Angola, Botswana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ghana, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe

 


Nigeria: the government of the Ebonyi state urged people in rural areas, where rat consumption is common, to refrain from eating rat meat in an effort to curb Lassa transmission.

Vanguard

 


The Saudi Arabian Ministry of Health announced three new cases of MERS-CoV

20-3-2018-01.jpg


TB, a disease that until recently seemed to be under control in Venezuela, is making an aggressive comeback, overwhelming a broken health care system ill equipped for its return

NY Times

“…..From 2013-2015, about 5 percent of adult patients evaluated each year in the outpatient center and the tuberculosis clinic at Dr. José Ignacio Baldó Hospital in Caracas were found to have the disease, according to Dr. Zhenia M. Fuentes, the coordinator of the clinic. But by the last trimester of 2017, that rate had risen to about 9 percent, and then climbed even further in January, to about 14 percent…….”


3 people allegedly injured in a shooting at Great Mills High School in Southern Maryland on Tuesday morning

Baltimore Sun


Bomb bound for Austin explodes at FedEx facility near San Antonio


Several packages of deadly sarin gas are set off in the Tokyo subway system killing twelve people and injuring over 5,000.

History Channel

 


WHO: A diphtheria outbreak in Yemen has spread rapidly nationwide and infected more than 1,300 people and over 70 deaths

Al Arabiya

“…..The near three-year stalemated war has damaged Yemen’s infrastructure, crippled the health system and pushed it to the brink of famine…..”

 


A multistate Salmonella outbreak linked to kratom supplements has sickened 47 more people and expanded to 8 more states, raising the total to 87 cases from 35 states,

CDC

At A Glance

  • Case Count: 87
  • States: 35
  • Deaths: 0
  • Hospitalizations: 27
  • Recall: Yes

People infected with the outbreak strain of Salmonella, by state of residence, as of March 14, 2018


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