ABOUT US     SITEMAP       HOME     VIETNAMESE EDITION  
 SEARCH 


 
HOME PAGE
 
   POLITICS
   BUSINESS
   SOCIETY
   YOUTH
   SPORTS
   ENTERTAINMENT
   TRAVEL
   HEALTH
   WORLD / REGION
   SPECIAL REPORT
   COMMENTARIES
   COMMUNITY
   EDITORIAL
----------------------------



 
 
 
 
Thanh Nien
 

Chief Editor : Mr. Nguyen Quang Thong
Managing Deputy Editor: Mr. Dang Thanh Tinh
248 Cong Quynh St . , Distr. 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Tel: 84 8 8 394 046
Fax: 84 8 8 322 025

Thanh Nien is the tribune of Vietnam’s Youth Association

Publication permit No. 14/GP-BC, granted by Press Department, Vietnam Ministry of Culture and Information.

Hot News: 
Last Updated:
E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend Print versionPrint version
Vietnam finds seven more H1N1 cases, warns of heavier infections
Employees of the town hall of Chenove, eastern France, wear masks during an exercise drill to prepare for the possibility of a pandemic of influenza A (H1 N1)
The threat of influenza A (H1N1) will increase this summer with more expatriate students returning to Vietnam and more foreign tourists arriving, a health official said as seven more cases were confirmed in the country.

Several countries that have been hit hard by the disease no longer control the migration of citizens or check the number of infections, Ho Chi Minh City Health Department Director Nguyen Van Chau told a conference in Hanoi Wednesday.

Two cases were reported Wednesday in Hanoi and five others in HCMC, raising the country’s total to 63, with eight more potential cases pending following confirmation blood tests in HCMC.

All the new cases have flown in from overseas.

One of the two confirmed Wednesday in Hanoi, who arrived at Noi Bai International Airport last Thursday, had traveled on a public bus before being detected but could not remember which one, said Hoang Duc Hanh, deputy director of the Hanoi Health Department.

Chau of the HCMC Health Department said more than 10,000 people have been arriving at Tan Son Nhat International Airport every day and around 8,000 of them come from infected countries.

On Tuesday alone, officials at the airport had to isolate 66 passengers with high body temperatures including 30 people on the same flight from Australia.

The officials anticipated that many among them would test positive for H1N1.

A survey by the HCMC Department of Health showed that most patients detected in Vietnam so far were passengers on three international flights from Hong Kong, South Korea and Australia.

The city is where the first case was discovered on May 31 and 53 have been confirmed and treated with 39 of them being HCMC residents.

Dr. Phan Van Nghiem from the municipal health department said the flu in the city has worsened with between 30-50 suspected cases being tested every day.

The local health officials expressed concern that the testing was expensive and caused overcrowding at some hospitals that were needed to isolate the patients.

Each test costs US$150 and a person needs two blood tests, usually one at HCMC’s Pasteur Institute and another at the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, for positive confirmation of the disease.

Chau suggested that lower-rated hospitals be instructed to undertake blood testing, adding that the city hospitals are prepared to admit and isolate 6,000 patients in case the flu spreads.

Nguyen Tran Hien, head of the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, told the conference that the Health Ministry’s treatment method with tamiflu has proved effective as most patients have recovered and tested negative for the virus after two days.

Nguyen Huy Nga, head of the Preventive Health and Environment Department under the ministry, said Vietnam has only reported influenza A infections of people coming from overseas and people who had physical contact with them.

“The flu has not become highly contagious,” Nga said.

Influenza A (H1N1) has infected 55,867 people in 108 countries and territories and killed 238 people, according to the latest figures of the World Health Organization.

Canada, Chile, Britain, China and Japan have seen a sharp rise in infections in recent days.

Source: TN, VNA

E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend Print versionPrint version To top
 OTHER TOP STORIES
Common leaf, uncommon properties
Southern hub invests $4.8 mln in blood bank
17 tons of frozen food with unclear origin found in Hanoi
Methanol, aldehyde found in deadly southern Vietnam rice wine
City to teach yoga with Indian instructors
 
 OTHER HEADLINES
Don’t let foreign bosses do whatever they like
Vietnamese mathematician to teach at US university
Teachers cannot make their mark without insightful comments
Climate change fails to thwart resort rush
Shuttle Endeavour blasts off for space station
Delta workers hospitalized after mass hysteria attack
Flowers on the water
Writing history
Binh Duong slides into first place
Earth Hour 2010 Vietnam seeks greater climate change awareness
More flights means more traffic before Tet
Biggest gold outfit imports 4 tons to keep prices in check
US to boost national defense cooperation with Vietnam

   
 
 
Politics | Business | Society | Youth | Sports | Entertainment | Travel | Health | 
World / Region | Special report | Commentaries | Community | Editorial | 
Homepage | Contact | Sitemap | About us | Vietnam Edition
Copyright © 2004 Privacy policy