Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hong Kong, Vigilance urged against meningococcal infection (December 20 2011)

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Hong Kong, Vigilance urged against meningococcal infection (December 20 2011)

    [Source: Centre for Health Protection, Hong Kong PRC SAR, full text: (LINK).]
    Vigilance urged against meningococcal infection


    ‎20 December ‎2011


    The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health is investigating a confirmed case of invasive meningococcal infection, a communicable disease transmitted by direct contact with droplets from carriers or infected persons, and has appealed to the public for vigilance.

    The case involves a 28-year-old man, with good past health, living alone in Sham Shui Po.

    The man travelled to Macau on December 17. He developed fever, headache and vomiting on December 19.

    He was admitted to Our Lady of Maryknoll Hospital on December 19. He was transferred to Caritas Medical Centre and admitted in the hospital's Intensive Care Unit on the same day.

    A lumbar puncture specimen taken from the patient grew Neisseria meningitidis. The man is now in serious condition.
    The CHP's investigation is continuing.

    This is the eighth confirmed case of meningococcal infection this year. Two cases each were reported in 2010 and 2009. No case was reported in 2008.

    A spokesman for the CHP said that meningococcal infection is caused by a bacterium known as meningococcus. It is transmitted by direct contact, including droplets from the nose and throat of infected people. The incubation period varies from two to 10 days, commonly three to four days.

    The clinical picture may vary. Severe illness may result when the bacterium invades the bloodstream (causing meningococcaemia) or the brain (causing meningitis).

    Meningococcaemia is characterised by the sudden onset of fever, intense headache, purpura, shock and even death in severe cases. Meningitis is characterised by the sudden onset of intense headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, photophobia and stiff neck. Early cases can be treated effectively with antibiotics.

    To prevent meningococcal infection, members of the public are advised to:
    • Wash hands frequently, and observe good personal and environmental hygiene practices;
    • Avoid crowded places;
    • Avoid close contact with patients who have fever or severe headache; and
    • Cover the nose and mouth while sneezing or coughing, and hold the spit with tissue and discard it into a bin with a lid, and wash hands immediately.
    Members of the public can visit the CHP's website, www.chp.gov.hk, for general information about the infection.
    -
    ------
Working...
X