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Waseca / Peramivir didn't save medical exec

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  • Waseca / Peramivir didn't save medical exec

    Would be helpful to know what the drug was..

    Source: http://www.twincities.com/allheadlin...nclick_check=1

    Waseca / Experimental H1N1 drug didn't save medical exec
    By Jeff Hansel
    Rochester Post-Bulletin
    Updated: 10/27/2009 05:26:53 AM CDT


    Mike Milbrath was in the prime of life ? 54 years old ? and had spent months guiding Waseca Medical Center-Mayo Health System as it prepared for pandemic H1N1 influenza.

    Milbrath himself was diagnosed with H1N1, commonly referred to as swine flu, on Oct. 20. His medical condition worsened, so health providers obtained an experimental drug that had shown promise in other patients seriously ill with H1N1.

    He received the drug Friday, but he died Saturday evening.


    "This is a tragic loss, first for the Milbrath family, but also for the medical community," said Kevin Burns, chief communications officer for Immanuel St. Joseph's-Mayo Health System.

    The cause of Milbrath's death hasn't been determined, Burns said.

    In the meantime, Milbrath's death might raise awareness about the rare but serious potential for H1N1 complications.

    "Part of human nature, perhaps, is until it affects me directly it may not seem as real, or as relevant. All those doubts have been erased," Burns said. Now, he said, all the months of planning, late nights, extended hours and weekend meetings held to plan for H1N1 make sense.

    "Now I know why this is so important," he said.

  • #2
    Re: Waseca / Peramivir didn't save medical exec

    Source: http://www.twincities.com/allheadlines/ci_13650241

    Excerpt:
    Milbrath continued to receive dialysis and other treatments, but remained in critical condition.

    He was approved to receive an experimental drug, Peramivir, because it has been shown to successfully treat some severe H1N1 cases.

    "It is being flown in from the East coast and will be here in the morning. We are hopeful," read an Oct. 22 Web site entry.

    Milbrath received the drug the next day. At the time, his vital signs were stable.

    On Saturday morning he had more dialysis and underwent tracheostomy surgery to aid his breathing before complications from the illness took his life that night.

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