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  • #16
    Re: Chikungunya in Singapore

    Chikungunya fighters in Singapore breathe easy after 6 weeks

    Lee Hui Chieh, Straits Times 22 Feb 08;

    SINGAPORE'S first outbreak of the mosquito-borne disease chikungunya is over, health officials have declared.

    Yesterday was the 24th day since the last person to catch the virus fell sick - a milestone that means the disease has likely been beaten.

    Overall, 13 who lived or worked in Little India got the virus, which causes fever and joint pain but is rarely fatal.

    The all-clear caps six frenzied weeks for health and environment officers, who targeted the centre of the outbreak, destroyed mosquito breeding grounds, took blood samples and handed out fines.

    A spokesman for the National Environment Agency (NEA) said: 'We believe that through our close coordination, we were able to avert a potentially larger outbreak.'

    The 24th day had been marked as the finish line because that is twice the disease's incubation period. Any new cases of the virus would have surfaced within that time.

    While the battle against chikungunya has been won, the authorities cautioned yesterday that the disease could return.

    The Health Ministry and the NEA said Singapore remains at risk as it is a popular stop with travellers from places where the disease has a foothold.

    In fact, it was probably an infected traveller who sparked the outbreak, although health officers have not been able to identify this 'patient zero'.

    Still, the end was met with relief from the health and environment officers who have been battling the outbreak.

    One of them was Dr Tan Li Kiang, 34, a research scientist with the NEA's Environmental Health Institute (EHI). She said: 'We have been feeling 'jetlag'. I've been praying that there won't be any more new cases.'

    The outbreak was uncovered when a 27-year-old Bangladeshi man turned up at a clinic at Upper Weld Road, off Clive Street, complaining of a high fever and body aches. A doctor sent the man's blood sample for testing and the result was positive for chikungunya.

    Over the next three weeks, the Health Ministry sent 15 public health officers out to Clive Street to find others who might be infected. That was double the number of officers sent out on a regular day.

    Doctors who usually did policy work helped collect blood samples from people who lived or worked in the area.

    Officers, though, had trouble keeping tabs on people in Little India, which hosts many foreign workers and tourists.

    Public health officer Han Hwi Kwang, 36, said: 'One day you took blood from people, but when you went back to the same place the next day, you realised, there's a whole new group.'

    In the three weeks till Feb 4, they sent samples from 2,626 people to the EHI for testing.

    There, seven research officers tested 400 to 500 blood samples daily. Seven others helped with labelling and paperwork.

    They burned the midnight oil so the results could be out before the next morning in a bid to get those infected to hospital as soon as possible.

    Dr Tan, who oversaw the testing, often worked from 9am to 2am daily in the first two weeks of the outbreak. The mother of a 20-month-old boy said: 'I didn't get to see my son awake for four days in a row.'

    NEA sent 55 officers and 40 pest control operators to wipe out mosquitoes and breeding grounds in Little India.

    In the last six weeks, they checked more than 5,500 properties, destroyed 78 breeding sites, and meted out fines of $100 to $200 to 43 people for allowing mosquitoes to breed.

    The agency also issued 532 orders for the removal of roof gutters that had fallen into disrepair in Little India, of which 322 have been taken down.

    Nine people have been fined $2,000 each for refusing to comply, while the rest have asked for more time to do so.

    The EHI's head, Dr Ng Lee Ching said: 'I'm happy that everyone was prompt in their response to the outbreak.'

    An official from the International Society for Infectious Diseases praised Singapore's effort as 'an outstanding example of detecting and then responding to the appearance of a disease new to an area'.

    Lee Hui Chieh, Straits Times 22 Feb 08; SINGAPORE'S first outbreak of the mosquito-borne disease chikungunya is over, health officials have...

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

      Singapore reports 17th chikungunya case
      www.chinaview.cn 2008-05-08 21:59:54 Print

      SINGAPORE, May 8 (Xinhua) -- Singapore's Health Ministry confirmed the 17th case of the mosquito-borne chikungunya disease here on Thursday.

      The ministry revealed that the latest victim was E. C. Sng, among the four new cases that caught the disease overseas recently.

      Sng believed he caught the virus while playing golf at Jakarta's Jagorawi Golf and Country Club a month ago. His infectious period is now over.

      Since the first local-transmitted case was detected on Jan. 14,so far 13 people have been infected locally while another four caught the virus overseas, the ministry said.

      Its spokesman said: "The virus can be carried into Singapore and the presence of the Aedes mosquito means the threat will remain."

      Like the dengue virus, the chikungunya virus is spread by the Aedes mosquito. Currently, there is no vaccine to prevent chikungunya fever, which is characterized by fever, joint pains, chills and nausea.

      The ministry said the best way to prevent chikungunya fever is to take precautionary measures to prevent mosquito breeding around the house and to protect oneself against mosquito bites.

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

        Source: http://www.todayonline.com/articles/258582.asp

        Singapore News // Tuesday, June 10, 2008
        Teachers? Estate chikungunya-free

        THE coast is clear ? at least for some residents of Teachers? Estate, the latest area where chikungunya surfaced.
        .
        Blood tests conducted by the National Environment Agency (NEA) showed that 311 people working and living in the private housing estate located off Upper Thomson Road were free of the virus.
        .
        The checks come after the Ministry of Health (MOH) was notified last week that two people living in the estate ? an 86-year-old retiree and a domestic helper from the same household ? had contracted the fever.
        .
        It was the first time that locally contracted cases of chikungunya had been reported to the MOH outside the Little India area early this year.
        .
        The MOH said 23 cases of chikungunya fever had been reported this year, with 15 of them contracted locally.

        .
        To combat the disease, the NEA conducted intensive inspection and fogging operations over the weekend. It checked more than 170 homes and 18 cases of mosquito breeding were detected. It will continue to monitor the situation. ? SHERALYN TAY

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

          Source: http://www.todayonline.com/articles/259309.asp
          Friday, June 13, 2008

          Chikungunya case at Farrer Road

          THE chikungunya virus has cropped up in a new location.
          .
          A case of the mosquito-borne disease has been reported at Farrer Road, coming about a week after two people in Teachers? Estate off Upper Thomson Road were found to carry the virus, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said in an update yesterday. The Teachers? Estate cases were the first time that locally-contracted cases of chikungunya had been reported outside the Little India area this year.
          .
          In the latest case, a 37-year-old expatriate housewife developed a fever and related symptoms on June 6 and sought treatment two days later. She was later warded and remains in hospital. Investigations showed that it was likely a case of local transmission, as she and her family had not travelled out of the country recently.
          .
          The MOH conducted blood screening among members of her household and close friends; none tested positive for the virus. It added that there was hence no need for mass screening for now, given no evidence of further transmission.
          .
          The National Environment Agency is carrying out inspection and fogging operations in the areas that the Farrer Road housewife has visited recently, while the MOH will continue to monitor the situation.
          .
          A total of 24 cases of chikungunya fever have been reported so far this year. Including the Farrer Road infection, 16 of these were local cases, of which 13 were from the Little India cluster early this year.

          Comment


          • #20
            Singapore: Chikungunya case detected in Holland area

            Chikungunya case detected in Holland area

            SIX weeks after the last case of locally transmitted chikungunya fever was detected, a 60-year-old housewife living in Jalan Jelita has become the 48th person here to come down with the infectious disease. .

            She is believed to be a case of local transmission as she and her family have not travelled recently. .

            While such cases are still in the minority ? 17 this year ? imported cases are on the rise. In the past six weeks, 23 imported cases of chikungunya were found, compared to the eight detected in the first half of the year.
            The Health Ministry said there have been ?chikungunya outbreaks in our region such as India, Indonesia and Malaysia?, advising Singaporeans to consult a doctor if they experience fever and joint pains after travel. .

            The housewife developed symptoms last Thursday and sought treatment the next day. Investigations show neither the housewife?s contacts nor nearby foreign construction workers have the virus. Over 83 premises have been inspected for mosquito breeding and three instances detected. Alicia Wong

            SIX weeks after the last case of locally transmitted chikungunya fever was detected, a 60-year-old housewife living in Jalan Jelita has become the 48th person here to come down with the infectious disease. .
            She is believed to be a case of local transmission as she and her family have not travelled recently.


            While such cases are still in the minority ? 17 this year ? imported cases are on the rise. In the past six weeks, 23 imported cases of chikungunya were found, compared to the eight detected in the first half of the year. .

            The Health Ministry said there have been ?chikungunya outbreaks in our region such as India, Indonesia and Malaysia?, advising Singaporeans to consult a doctor if they experience fever and joint pains after travel. .

            The housewife developed symptoms last Thursday and sought treatment the next day. Investigations show neither the housewife?s contacts nor the next day. Investigations show neither the housewife?s contacts nor nearby foreign construction workers have the virus. Over 83 premises have been inspected for mosquito breeding and three instances detected. Alicia Wong

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Singapore: Chikungunya case detected in Holland area

              <table class="lan18" align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="97%"><tbody><tr><td class="hei22" height="25" valign="bottom"> 3 more cases of chikungunya fever found in Singapore
              </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#ffffff" height="4">
              </td> </tr> </tbody></table> <table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="50%"> <tbody><tr> <td height="8">
              </td> </tr> </tbody></table> <table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="97%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="48%">
              </td> <td class="hui12" align="center" width="26%">
              </td> <td class="hui12" align="center" width="12%">
              </td> </tr> </tbody></table> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="80%"> <tbody><tr> <td height="20">
              </td> </tr> </tbody></table> SINGAPORE, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- Singapore's Ministry of Health (MOH) said Saturday it has found three new cases of chikungunya fever, bringing the total number of such cases to 48 so far this year.
              The three cases, involving two foreign workers and a local delivery driver, are likely to be local ones as the three people have not traveled out of the country recently, said the ministry.
              The two foreign workers are now in hospital for treatment, but the Singaporean driver has returned to work after timely medical treatment.
              Currently, the ministry is carrying out active case detection at and around the site in Kranji Way and blood samples are being sent to the country's environmental health institute for testing.
              Chikungunya fever, like dengue fever, is a mosquito-borne disease and the best way to prevent chikungunya fever is to take precautionary measures to prevent mosquito breeding.
              The first case of Chikungunya fever, which is characterized by sudden onset of fever, chills, headache, nausea, vomiting, joint pain with or without swelling, and low back pain, was reported in Singapore in January this year.



              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                Chikungunya 'not taken root here yet'

                Viruses from local infections from three different strains so incidents aren't linked
                By Lee Hui Chieh

                THE number of people infected by chikungunya here continues to climb but, for now, the virus causing the mosquito-borne disease has probably not gained a foothold in Singapore.

                The National Environment Agency (NEA) said its tests showed that the viruses that caused the first three incidents of local infection - in Little India, Teachers' Estate off Upper Thomson Road, and Farrer Road - belonged to different strains.

                This means that the three incidents were not linked, said Dr Ng Lee Ching, head of the NEA's Environmental Health Institute, which conducted the tests.

                Each time, the infection had probably been sparked by someone getting infected overseas bringing one particular strain of the virus here, she added.

                And each time, the infection was stamped out so that strain did not spread further.

                The institute's scientists established that the first three incidents had occurred separately by mapping the genetic code, or DNA, of the viruses in patients' blood samples. They found that the viruses were related to the one that caused huge outbreaks in islands in the Indian Ocean in 2006, where deaths were reported. But each was of a distinctly different strain.

                It was unlikely that the second and third strains had mutated from the first in such a short time, Dr Ng said.

                Public health officers have gone all out to track patients and destroy mosquito breeding sites. This is to ensure that chikungunya does not become as common here as dengue.

                Having both similar diseases entrenched here will complicate diagnosis, treatment and containment.

                Singapore is at risk as it hosts many travellers, the virus-transmitting Aedes mosquito flourishes here, and people here have no immunity against chikungunya.

                It was spread for the first time in Singapore, when 13 people living or working in Little India contracted it in January.

                In June, a retiree and her maid living in Teachers' Estate, and an expatriate housewife living in Farrer Road were infected.

                Joining the list of local cases last month: A housewife living in Jalan Jelita off Holland Road, two foreign workers working and living in a site at Kranji Way, and a local delivery driver who went there.

                Another 31 people here caught the disease while abroad this year; before that, 13 others had been infected overseas over 2006 to 2007.

                The rise in the number of chikungunya cases here, both local and imported, mirrors a global trend, Dr Ng said.

                Recently, outbreaks have been reported more often in Malaysia, Indonesia and India, and in previously chikungunya-free areas such as Italy.

                The reasons for the upswing in infections are not known. But scientists believe that a contributory factor is the emergence of a certain strain of the chikungunya virus, which has mutated such that it can be carried by another sub-species of the Aedes mosquito - the Aedes albopictus.

                Previously, the virus' main vehicle of infection was the Aedes aegypti, which is also behind most dengue cases.

                The institute's scientists have yet to study virus samples

                from this month's local cases but will be doing so.

                Appealing to the public to help eliminate mosquitoes and their breeding sites, Dr Ng said: 'Chikungunya is not endemic here yet, so we still have a chance to keep it out. It is easier to do that than to try to get rid of it when it is established.'

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                  Fifth Chikungunya fever reported in less than a week

                  By Hasnita A Majid & May Wong, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 05 August 2008 2307 hrs

                  SINGAPORE:

                  Another case of Chikungunya fever was reported in Singapore on Tuesday.

                  Channel NewsAsia understands a man caught the virus while he was in Malaysia recently.

                  This brings the total number of Chikungunya cases to five in less than a week.

                  The first case reported on July 31 involved a 60-year-old woman, while another three cases involving two foreign workers and a local delivery driver was reported on August 2.

                  In the latest case, the middle-aged man complained of fever and chills on July 31, a few days after he came back from Tangkak, Segamat, where he had gone to visit his family.

                  He was admitted to Mount Alvernia Hospital where he was diagnosed with the Chikungunya virus.

                  The man told Channel NewsAsia that besides himself, five other family members - all Malaysians - have also caught the virus.

                  His family received treatment in Malaysia.

                  An acute viral disease, Chikungunya is transmitted by bites from infected Aedes mosquitoes.
                  - CNA/yb
                  -
                  We’re sorry. The page you are looking for appears to have moved or does not exist. Check the URL or try using our search function at the top right. Alternatively, you might want to check out these top stories:

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                  • #24
                    Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                    Aug 6, 2008
                    17 more workers in Kranji Way struck with chikungunya
                    By Lee Hui Chieh
                    ANOTHER 17 workers have been infected by the mosquito-borne chikungunya virus, making this the biggest outbreak in Singapore so far.
                    The latest cluster at Kranji Way brings the number of people infected in the area to 20.

                    The 17 were picked up during a screening of 282 workers in the area after two foreign workers and a Singaporean delivery driver fell ill last month.

                    Previously, the largest chikungunya outbreak here was also Singapore's first outbreak, when 13 people living or working in Little India came down with the dengue-like disease in January this year.

                    Separately, a technician who lives in Miltonia Close off Yishun Avenue 1 and works at Marsiling Industrial Estate, was also found to have contracted chikungunya.

                    He fell sick on July 18, and was hospitalised for five days.

                    None of the 10 people living with him were infected.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                      Five new chikungunya fever cases found in Singapore
                      SINGAPORE, Aug. 13 (Xinhua) -- Five more people have come down with the mosquito-borne chikungunya fever in Singapore, said the Health Ministry (MOH) on Wednesday.
                      They include two foreign workers at Kranji Way, bringing the total number of cases linked to the northern industrial area to 30,said the ministry.
                      The two, a 48-year-old Indian and a 34-year-old Chinese National, have no recent history of travel overseas prior to their onset of illness, said the authorities.
                      The Ministry said it has also been notified of three other cases not related to the Kranji cluster.
                      So far this year, there has been 103 cases of chikungunya fever in Singapore.
                      Like dengue fever, chikungunya fever is a mosquito-borne disease, characterized by sudden onset of fever, chills, headache, nausea, vomiting, joint pain with or without swelling, and low back pain. The best way to prevent chikungunya fever is to take precautionary measures to prevent mosquito breeding.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                        Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking...ry_269066.html

                        9 more chikungunya cases
                        Latest cluster at Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre; two workers and a kin test positive

                        By Gracia Chiang

                        Nine more local cases and a new cluster for chikungunya fever has surfaced.

                        The latest cluster is at Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre, where a 32-year-old female worker tested positive for the mosquito-borne disease last Tuesday.

                        Her 61-year-old father later tested positive. He is still in hospital while she has recovered.

                        Last Thursday, a further blood screening of 184 workers at the centre detected a third person, a 44-year-old worker who came down with the disease there.

                        The National Environment Agency (NEA) immediately sent some 20 officers and 10 pest control operators to the centre, where four breeding sites were found.

                        These were destroyed, followed by fogging in the area.

                        Of the 10 staffing stalls at the centre whom The Sunday Times spoke to, none was aware that chikungunya had hit the place. They did, however, notice that there was an increased effort to clean the area.

                        One cashier at a supplier there, Madam Serene Lee, 41, said she was 'scared' but business would still go on. 'I have no backup plans but I'll have to be more careful, and take note if any of my workers or colleagues are not feeling well.'

                        Two additional cases have also been reported at Kranji Way, Singapore's largest chikungunya cluster to date.

                        The latest victims - a 52-year-old Singaporean and a 41-year-old Chinese national - bring the total affected there to 32. Both work there.

                        Up to 70 NEA officers and 20 pest-control operators have gone into action there and enforcement measures have been taken against the 52 factory premises found with mosquito breeding.

                        The NEA has since extended its operations to include other parts of the Kranji and Sungei Kadut areas.

                        Giving an update on the Sungei Kadut cluster, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said there has been a third chikungunya case there. She is a 61-year-old clerk who works in Sungei Kadut Street 1.

                        Across the island, three more chikungunya cases - all local males - have also been reported: in Segar Road, Jalan Berjaya and Queen Street. Two are aged 48 and the third is 65 years old.

                        The nine new cases bring the total number of local cases to 63 and the affected areas in Singapore to 15.

                        This year alone, there have been 117 cases of chikungunya fever, of which 54 were imported cases with a history of travel.


                        Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of an event yesterday, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan, referring to cases in the region, said: 'I don't think it's the mosquitoes crossing borders but patients do cross borders.' There was a huge volume of people coming and going.

                        'Workers come here to work and Singaporeans go there to visit, and this is the durian season, so many go for durian trips as well.'

                        He added that the Kranji cluster had significant numbers of foreign workers who crossed the borders every day.

                        In Johor, chikungunya was a bit of a problem, so new cases were appearing practically every day.


                        He advised Singaporeans to take preventive measures and see a doctor as soon as symptoms emerged so that cases can be isolated.

                        He added: 'What you hope for is that it will not become like dengue. Once it becomes like dengue, when it becomes endemic in Singapore, it will be very hard to get rid of it until scientists come up with a vaccine.

                        'So we are doing our very best to make sure that chikungunya does not decide to stay here permanently.'

                        graciac@sph.com.sg

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                          Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/Singapor...ry_269507.html

                          Going to Malaysia? Beware of mozzies
                          Chikungunya patients here were hit by a strain of the virus circulating in Malaysia

                          By Lee Hui Chieh

                          IF YOU are heading across the Causeway, stay well covered up and have insect repellent handy, as the record number of chikungunya cases in Malaysia is having a spillover effect here.

                          At least 82 of this year's 117 chikungunya patients were hit by a strain of the virus that has been circulating in Malaysia.

                          Of these 82, 43 caught the mosquito- borne disease that causes fever and joint pains in Johor while three others fell ill after visiting Malacca.

                          The remaining 36 contracted the disease in Singapore after being bitten by Aedes mosquitoes here, which had probably become infected after feeding on patients who returned from Malaysia, or one of the 36 after they fell ill.

                          Malaysia has reported a record high of 136 chikungunya patients this year, up from last year's tally of fewer than 100.


                          Tests by the National Environment Agency's (NEA) Environmental Health Institute showed that the strain of the virus in the 46 travellers' blood was identical to that found in the 36 infected here.

                          They include 32 workers from the largest cluster in Kranji Way, and four others living in Teachers' Estate off Upper Thomson Road, Jalan Jelita off Holland Road, and Miltonia Close off Yishun Avenue 1.

                          The institute's scientists mapped the genetic code, or DNA, of the viruses in patients' blood samples, and compared them against one another and against those from overseas. They found that the virus that caused the Little India outbreak resembled viruses found in India, while the one behind the Farrer Road cluster was similar to viruses in Sri Lanka.

                          This means that the two incidents were not linked, said the institute's head, Dr Ng Lee Ching. Each time, someone had probably picked up the virus overseas and passed it on to mosquitoes here that went on to infect other people.

                          But the viruses from patients at Teachers' Estate, Jalan Jelita, Kranji Way and Miltonia Close, were the same as that from patients infected in Malaysia.

                          So it is no longer possible to tell if each of these incidents was sparked off by a different infected traveller, or if the virus has gone into the community and is spreading from area to area, Dr Ng said.

                          But in any case, efforts to stop the disease from spreading further should not be relaxed, she said.

                          'So far, our clusters have mostly been small. It's better to have patients popping up one by one, than have many Kranji Way clusters. So every single case is still worth the effort of fighting,' she added.

                          The scientists have yet to test viruses from the latest incidents in areas such as Woodlands, Sungei Kadut and the Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre, but will do so.

                          The Woodlands episode may have resulted from the virus being spread from an imported case to a local one.

                          Dr Charity Low, who runs a clinic in Woodlands Street 83, diagnosed her first chikungunya patient on July 22.

                          The 59-year-old teacher, who lives on that street, developed a fever, joint pains, rashes and throat ulcers, three days after returning from Johor. He had visited two friends there who had fever and joint pains.

                          Dr Low had his blood tested for both dengue and chikungunya, which cause similar symptoms, and was surprised when the results were positive for chikungunya.

                          Less than two weeks later, she received a second surprise. A 27-year-old housewife living in Woodlands Street 81 showed up with fever, joint pains and rashes. Tests showed that she too had chikungunya.

                          Dr Low said: 'She had no travel history, so most probably she caught it from my first patient or others in the area.'

                          Woodlands has had three other imported cases from Malaysia since July.

                          This year, 63 people here have been infected locally, and a further 54 overseas. Apart from those who caught the virus in Malaysia, four were infected in Indonesia, two in India and two in Sri Lanka.

                          The Health Ministry and NEA advise travellers to wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants, apply insect repellent and use mosquito coils while in chikungunya outbreak areas such as the Malaysian states of Johor, Malacca, Negri Sembilan and Perak; Indonesia and India.

                          Chikungunya patients should also protect themselves from being bitten again when they are ill, to prevent the disease from spreading further.

                          huichieh@sph.com.sg

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                            Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking...ry_269812.html

                            4 more have chikungunya
                            By Sujin Thomas

                            A 62-YEAR-OLD housewife from Choa Chu Kang is among four new people confirmed to have caught chikungunya, officials said on Tuesday.

                            The new cases stretched from Kranji to Pasir Panjang, bringing the total number reported this year to 128, according to the Ministry of Health and National Environment Agency (NEA).

                            The most recent cases were in three areas - Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre, Kranji Way and Sungei Kadut - that have been battling outbreaks of the dengue-like disease in recent weeks.


                            The woman in the latest case developed symptoms last Saturday and was hospitalised the same day. She tested positive on Monday for the virus, which causes fever, nausea and muscle aches. In rare cases it can be fatal.

                            This comes about a week after her 32-year-old daughter and 61-year-old husband also tested positive for the virus.

                            Her daughter, who developed symptoms on Aug 8, has since recovered. Her husband remains in hospital.

                            The three had not travelled overseas recently and had stuck around their home and their workplace, the Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre.

                            Officers from the NEA have fanned out across the Pasir Panjang fruit and vegetable distribution centre and the surrounding area. So far, they have found and destroyed five mosquito-breeding sites.

                            In the Kranji Way cluster, a 34-year-old Indian national who works and lives at Kranji Crescent tested positive for the disease.

                            Up to 70 NEA officers have been deployed in the area around Kranji Way, covering Kranji Loop, Kranji Road, Kranji Link and Sungei Kadut.

                            In the Sungei Kadut cluster, a 36-year-old Chinese national who works and lives at Sungei Kadut Street 1 and a 48-year-old Singaporean who works at Sungei Kadut Street 6 tested positive.

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                              Singapore's MoH is reporting another ChikV cluster here:
                              Ministry of Health (MOH) is an innovative, people-centred organisation, committed to medical excellence, the promotion of good health, the reduction of illness and access to good and affordable healthcare for all Singaporeans, appropriate to their needs.


                              News
                              Press Releases

                              Update On Chikungunya Fever Situation(1)

                              25 Aug 2008


                              A new cluster detected at Lim Chu Kang

                              MOH has identified a new cluster of chikungunya fever at Lim Chu Kang. The index cases were a 25-year-old Bangladeshi and a 41-year-old local working in the vicinity of the Lim Chu Kang Agro Technology Park located at Lim Chu Kang Lane 2. 30 workers were screened as part of active case detection in the area on 22 Aug 08 and three more workers (a 23-year-old Malaysian, a 21-year-old Chinese national and a 31-year- old Myanmar national) were found to be positive for chikungunya virus. The total number of cases linked to Lim Chu Kang stands at five. Investigations are continuing.

                              Officers from the National Environment Agency (NEA) have conducted intensive mosquito control operations at Lim Chu Kang Lane 2. As many as 20 officers have been deployed to conduct search and destroy operations in the area. So far, 4 farms have been inspected and mosquito breedings have been detected in all the 4 premises. The NEA will proceed with enforcement action against the owners/occupiers of the premises. ULV fogging operations have also been conducted within the workers? quarters.

                              Update on existing clusters

                              Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre: One more case has been identified in a 52-year-old businessman who works in Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre(PPWC). He developed symptoms on 18 Aug 08 and sought outpatient treatment that same day. He has no recent history of travel overseas prior to the onset of his illness. This brings the total number of cases to five.

                              NEA has extended its intensive mosquito control operations at the Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre to the adjacent car mart as well at PSA Vista. As many as 20 NEA officers have been deployed in the area to keep mosquito breeding in check. So far 8 mosquito breedings were found and destroyed. Enforcement action has been taken against premises owners found breeding mosquitoes. Fogging was also carried out within the wholesale centre as a precautionary measure.


                              Kranji Way: Two more cases of chikungunya fever were linked to the Kranji Way cluster. The first case is a 37-year-old Malaysian who works and stays at a temporary worksite along Kranji Way. He developed symptoms on 15 Aug 08 and sought outpatient treatment by a GP on the same day. He was subsequently admitted to TTSH on 21 Aug 08. The second case is a 30-year-old Bangladeshi construction worker who works and stays at Kranji Loop. He developed symptoms on 17 Aug 08, sought outpatient treatment on 19 Aug 08 and was admitted to TTSH on 21 Aug 08. Both of them have no recent history of travel overseas prior to their onset of illness. This brings the total number of cases to 35.

                              Mosquito breedings have been found and destroyed in 47 factory premises so far. Up to 70 NEA officers have been deployed in the area to keep mosquito breeding in check. As an added preventive measure, NEA has also extended its operations to areas beyond Kranji Way, to include Kranji Loop, Kranji Rd and Kranji Link. Enforcement action has been taken. NEA has also served orders on owners/occupiers to ensure that they take the necessary measures to keep their premises free of mosquito breedings. Under the law, non-compliance with such orders can result in a maximum fine of $50,000.

                              Sungei Kadut: Three more cases of chikungunya fever linked to the Sungei Kadut cluster have been notified to MOH. The first case is a 30-year-old Chinese national who works and stays at Sungei Kadut St 1. The second case is a 34-year-old Bangladeshi who works and stays also at Sungei Kadut St 1. The third case is a 24-year-old Nigerian who works at Sungei Kadut St 3. This brings the total number of cases to eight.

                              Up to 25 NEA officers have been deployed to keep mosquito breeding in check. Operations have also been extended to the homes of cases and the surrounding neighbourhood, other than the workplace. Thus far, mosquito breedings found in 27 factory premises have been destroyed. Enforcement action has been taken and orders served.

                              Additional local cases

                              Two additional single and sporadic cases have been notified to MOH. The first is a 61-year-old housewife who stays at Yishun St 72. She developed symptoms on 9 Aug 08 and was admitted to hospital on 10 Aug 08. The second new case is a 47-year-old automation engineer working at Tuas Link 1. He developed symptoms on 20 Aug 08 and was admitted to hospital on 21 Aug 08. Both had no recent travel history outside Singapore.

                              NEA has been carrying out vector control operations in and around the cases? residential premises, including their work places and places that they normally frequent. All premise owners are urged to check their premises daily to remove any stagnant water that may breed mosquitoes.

                              Overall situation

                              To date, a total of 150 cases of chikungunya fever have been notified to MOH in 2008. Of these, 70 were imported cases with history of travel to Johor (56 cases) and other states of Malaysia (six cases), Indonesia (four cases), Sri Lanka (two cases), and India (two cases). The rest were locally acquired infections which probably occurred at 18 separate locations. The local cases comprised 35 from Kranji Way, 13 from the Little India, eight from Sungei Kadut, five from Pasir Panjang Wholesale Centre, five from Lim Chu Kang, two from Teachers Housing Estate cluster, one from Farrer Road, one from Herford Road, one from Jalan Berjaya, one from Hougang St 22, one from Jalan Jelita, one from Miltonia Close, one from Queen Street, one from Segar Rd, one from Woodland St 81, one from Yishun Ave 6, one from Yishun St 72 and one from Tuas Link.

                              Ministry?s Advice to the Public

                              The Ministry advises persons who develop symptoms of chikungunya which include fever, joint pain and rashes to consult their doctors immediately.

                              Chikungunya fever, like dengue fever, is a mosquito-borne disease and the best way to prevent chikungunya fever is to take precautionary measures to prevent the breeding of mosquitoes. Persons infected with chikungunya fever should be isolated from further mosquitoes bites so as to reduce the risk of further transmission of the virus.

                              Chikungunya outbreaks continue to be reported in our region, including Johor. Therefore, the risk of imported cases leading to local transmission remains high.

                              Persons travelling to places with chikungunya fever are thus advised to take precautionary measures to protect themselves from mosquitoes and seek prompt medical treatment upon their return if they become unwell and develop fever.


                              Ministry of Health
                              National Environment Agency
                              25 August 2008

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                              • #30
                                Re: Singapore: Local transmitted chikungunya fever detected

                                Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...7Do&refer=home

                                Singapore's Virus Scourge Exposes Vulnerability to Asian Bugs
                                By Jason Gale

                                Aug. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Singapore reported more than 100 new cases of chikungunya fever this month, 10 times last year's total, as outbreaks elsewhere in Asia spread to the city-state through travelers and migrant workers.

                                The disease, which can trigger debilitating joint pain lasting months, probably caused sporadic infections at 18 separate sites this year, the Ministry of Health said in an Aug. 25 statement. The cases highlight the equatorial island's struggle to control virus-carrying mosquitoes and the threat of exotic diseases posed by international travel.

                                ``In this day of rapid cross-border travel, Singapore, just like other countries, is at risk from the importation of viruses,'' said Ng Lee Ching, head of the nation's Environmental Health Institute. ``With the recent surge in importations, our risk of local transmission has increased significantly.''

                                Chikungunya is a reminder of globalization's role in the international spread of SARS, the deadly respiratory virus that probably infected more than 8,000 people worldwide in 2002 and 2003, including 238 in Singapore. The disease, first reported in southern China, cost Asian businesses an estimated $60 billion.

                                Until this year, Singapore found cases of chikungunya only in travelers who had caught the bug overseas. Since January, 70 ``imported'' and 80 locally acquired infections have been officially reported, almost two-thirds of which were in non- Singaporeans, according to ministry data.


                                Chikungunya, which means to become contorted in the Makonde language of southeastern Tanzania, was first recorded in Africa in 1953, and has infected people in 35 countries. There's no vaccine or specific treatment for the fever, rash and joint- swelling, which are usually nonfatal.

                                Ng says genetic analysis shows the viruses in Singapore are similar to strains from India, Sri Lanka and Malaysia.

                                A Passage From India

                                Fifteen Indian states and territories had a total of 1.39 million confirmed or suspected chikungunya cases in 2006, according to health authorities in New Delhi. Kerala and Karnataka have had cases as recently as this month.

                                Malaysia, linked to Singapore by a causeway, has had more than 1,500 infections since late July, according to the country's health ministry. Of Singapore's imported cases, 56 patients had been in the adjacent Malaysian state of Johor Bahru before their illness, Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan told Parliament on Aug. 27.

                                An outbreak in Italy last year, the first in Europe, provided an example of how chikungunya can take hold when an infected person enters an area and is bitten by a mosquito capable of transmitting the virus, and the insect then feeds on the blood of people who aren't immune to the pathogen.


                                The World Health Organization says 2.5 billion people globally live in areas where epidemics of chikungunya, and the potentially lethal diseases dengue and yellow fever, can occur.

                                Tiger Mosquito

                                A chikungunya epidemic hasn't erupted in Singapore, even though most of its 4.6 million inhabitants are susceptible to it.

                                That may be because one of the main transmitters of the disease here -- the Asian tiger mosquito, or Aedes albopictus -- is less inclined to hover inside homes, and also feeds on other mammals that don't catch the virus, said Duane Gubler, director of the emerging infectious diseases program at the Duke-National University of Singapore Graduate Medical School.

                                ``The fact that you have got such widespread transmission but it's still sporadic is a good indication that it's not going to blow up into a big epidemic,'' Gubler said in an interview.

                                Public Health Cost

                                Chikungunya's persistence in Singapore may reveal a hidden public-health cost of lower-paid, unskilled laborers -- many of whom come from Malaysia and Indonesia, where the disease is endemic -- to work in the city's booming construction and shipping industries.

                                Singapore had about 757,000 unskilled and semiskilled foreign workers as of Dec. 31, according to the Ministry of Manpower. Laborers working in construction or manufacturing were paid a median gross monthly wage of S$800 ($564) last year, according to ministry
                                data.

                                Chikungunya's persistence in Singapore may reveal a hidden public-health cost of lower-paid, unskilled laborers -- many of whom come from Malaysia and Indonesia, where the disease is endemic -- to work in the city's booming construction and shipping industries.

                                Many laborers are put up in ``unhygienic, very cramped'' dormitories by their employers at a monthly cost of S$150-S$200 per bed, said Jolovan Wham, executive director of the Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics, a charity that supports foreign workers.

                                By comparison, the average daily room rate at a Singapore hotel was S$238 in July.

                                ``You can imagine what kinds of conditions they would be living in if it's going to be so cheap,'' Wham said. ``Many companies are willing to cut corners.''

                                More Beds

                                Land for 11 dormitory sites was released during the past 18 months to provide about 65,000 more ``housing spaces,'' Acting Minister for Manpower Gan Kim Yong said this month. Efforts to improve housing must be supported by dormitory operators and employers by ``maintaining and enhancing standards of current housing facilities,'' Gan said.

                                At a three-story, corrugated-iron dormitory in northwestern Singapore, laundry, buckets and cooking paraphernalia clutter 54 bunk-bed-lined rooms, each ventilated by a single window lacking insect screens.

                                ``Anytime you're importing a large number of laborers from a highly endemic area, and these laborers are housed in a communal area that is unscreened, you're at a high risk of creating a focal outbreak that can spread,'' said Scott A. Ritchie, a medical entomologist with the Tropical Public Health Unit Network in Cairns, Australia.


                                The National Environment Agency says foreign workers are an important target for its education and outreach programs. In response to the chikungunya cases, the agency produced more pamphlets in English, Mandarin, Malay and Tamil detailing ways foreign workers can protect themselves and prevent mosquito breeding, and is preparing versions in Bengali, Burmese, Tagalog and Thai. It also holds mandatory safety courses and seminars.

                                To contact the reporter on this story: Jason Gale in Singapore at j.gale@bloomberg.net.
                                Last Updated: August 28, 2008 20:56 EDT

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