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  • Switzerland - baby is first swine flu death

    18. November 2009 –

    Baby an Schweinegrippe gestorben - Erster Todesfall in der Schweiz

    Die Schweinegrippe hat in der Schweiz ein erstes Todesopfer gefordert. Im Kanton Baselland ist ein Säugling am H1N1-Virus verstorben, wie der Kantonale Krisenstab mitteilte.

    First swine flu death in Switzerland

    In the canton of Basel-Landschaft an infant died of swine flu.

    This said the Security Directorate of the Canton of Basel-Country Wednesday. At 11 clock will inform the cantonal crisis at a media conference about the case, it was called at the request of bazonline.ch / News network.

    This is the first case of fatal disease of swine flu in Switzerland.

    The Federal Health Office (BAG) had reported last week by a rapid spread of swine flu. The number of laboratory confirmed cases had risen in the previous week to 773 cases, which corresponded to a doubling compared to the previous week.

    The BAG spoke of an exponential growth phase. Twelve patients were treated last week in the ICU. Whether the now deceased infant was among them, is still unclear.

    ?Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights ? that must be our call to arms"
    Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

    ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

  • #2
    Re: Switzerland - baby is first swine flu death

    November 18, 2009 - 6:44 PM <!-- end date -->

    Switzerland registers first swine flu death

    A baby has died of swine flu, the first fatality from the virus in Switzerland, officials in canton Basel Country have announced.

    The five-month-old infant died at the weekend, but it was only after tests had been carried out that it was known that the baby had the H1N1 virus, authorities said.

    The baby boy had other health conditions, including a cleft lip and palate, a heart problem and a possible immune deficiency, which had made him weaker, health officials said .

    Thomas Zeltner, head of the Federal Health Office, expressed his condolences to the child's family, saying that the death of a child was always "terrible".

    Speaking to journalists on Wednesday, he warned that cases of the H1N1 influenza were currently increasing in Switzerland, and that the rise will continue in the next few weeks.

    A national voluntary immunisation programme has already started, with at-risk groups being targeted first. The rest of the population will follow from November 23.

    At-risk groups include the chronically ill, pregnant women, children with previous health problems, and medical staff.

    Ten cantons have already started to vaccinate non-priority groups, Zeltner said, and more than three million doses should be available by the end of next week.

    He said provision in Switzerland is very good in international comparison.

    Despite the first death, he refused to speak of a "crisis".

    The office will publish new figures on the spread of the epidemic on Thursday.

    swissinfo.ch and agencies


    http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/front.html?siteSect=105&ty=nd&ref=fb&sid=11508483
    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

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