by Michael Woodhead
In July 2014 a case of pneumonic plague was widely reported in the media.
The victim was a 38-year old shepherd who caught the infection from a marmot (the usual carriers of the infection) after it was caught by his dog. At the time it was widely reported that the town of Yumen (near Jiayuguan) where he was treated, had been put into lockdown. None of the 30,000 residents were allowed to leave town and more than 150 close contacts were kept under observation in quarantine. It looks like Chinese authorities did the right thing - but only after a fatal delay in the initial diagnosis. A new report published by the local infection control team gives more details of the case.
Dr Ge Pengfei and colleagues say that the man contracted the Yersinia pestis infection from an infected marmot after it was caught by his dog on 11 July. He skinned the marmot for its pelt and fed the meat to his dogs. Two days later the shepherd started to develop respiratory symptoms and went into a nearby village to seek treatment. However, when he first went to the local clinic on 15 July he was mis-diagnosed as having a simple respiratory tract infection and given just a prescription for an antibiotic (clindamycin) and some anti-inflammatories. When his condition worsened later that day he was seen by doctors at the hospital in Yuman, who diagnosed pneumonia on x-ray and they gave him an ineffective antibiotic, cefoperazone, and more anti-inflammatory treatment.
It was only later that night when the man's condition deteriorated further and he started coughing up blood that throat swabs were taken, which showed the presence of the characteristic Yersinia bacilli when tested. Doctors then gave the man the recommended treatment of IV streptomycin, but this was too late and probably did more harm than good in the rapidly advancing conditions of the infection. Streptomycin must be used with great care in advanced plague because it cases the Y. pestis bacteria to burst (lysis) and release large amounts of the endotoxin that causes septic shock. This is what happened in the case of the Gansu shepherd, whose quickly deteriorated in the early hours of 16 July and he died at 5am.
The infection control team said they also detected Yersinia infection in the man's sister in law and in two patients who had been in close contact with him at the hospital. These people were among the 150 close contacts subject to quarantine and to preventive treatment with streptomycin. This containment strategy worked, as none of the close contacts developed full blown pneumonic plague.
The infection control team said them man may have survived if his infection has been detected earlier. However, the village clinic and hospital had only limited medical facilities, and the plague was only picked up when cultures were examined under a microscope.
They said that local clinics in areas such as Gansu where plague is present (on average there is one case per year in the region) should be alert for the early signs of the infection - and be prepared to take a careful history to see if there has been any contact with potential sources such as marmots and infected dogs. Despite the death of the patient, they said the incident had shown that quarantine and antibiotic prophylaxis procedures for contacts were effective.
"Doctors need to improve awareness and ask about contact history for the possibility of plague infection to avoid misdiagnosis," they recommended.
International Journal of Infectious Diseases.
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Showing posts with label Gansu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gansu. Show all posts
Wednesday, 7 January 2015
Tuesday, 7 January 2014
Gansu starts generalist training program to provide more family doctors
by Michael Woodhead
Authorities in Gansu province are to implement a new generalist medical training program across the province to provide family doctors to all communities. In an announcement made by the province's health department based in Lanzhou, new measures will be implemented to create a training pathway that will equip doctors with skills in areas of medicine such as internal medicine, surgery, obstetrics, dermatology, psychiatry, eye diease and infectious diseases and rehabilitation medicine.
The department said medical practitioners currently undergo training in a 5+3 year model of academic and clinical followed by vocational training that provides a specialist pathway. The only generalist practitioners are those who work in rural areas with only three years of clinical training. The aim of the new program is to provide generalist practitioners who have advanced skills in many areas of medicine to provide a family medicine service, the government said
Authorities in Gansu province are to implement a new generalist medical training program across the province to provide family doctors to all communities. In an announcement made by the province's health department based in Lanzhou, new measures will be implemented to create a training pathway that will equip doctors with skills in areas of medicine such as internal medicine, surgery, obstetrics, dermatology, psychiatry, eye diease and infectious diseases and rehabilitation medicine.
The department said medical practitioners currently undergo training in a 5+3 year model of academic and clinical followed by vocational training that provides a specialist pathway. The only generalist practitioners are those who work in rural areas with only three years of clinical training. The aim of the new program is to provide generalist practitioners who have advanced skills in many areas of medicine to provide a family medicine service, the government said
Monday, 2 December 2013
Air pollution increases respiratory diseases in Lanzhou
A study from Gansu has shown a strong link between air pollutants and respiratory hospital admissions, especially in older women.
The study carried out by the College of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Lanzhou University, looked at level of air pollution and respiratory hospitalisations from 2001 to 2005, It found that three measures of air pollutants (PM10, SO2, NO2) had a lag effect of up to five days. The strongest effects of pollution on respiratory hospital admissions were seen in females and those aged over 65 yrs.
Full study: Environmental Pollution
Full study: Environmental Pollution
Friday, 7 December 2012
Gansu girl goes from barefoot doctor to 'angel on horseback'
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| Dan Zhengcao provides free medical treatment to people in rural Gansu |
In 1973, when she was just 16, Dan dropped out of school, but was fortunate enough to do so just as a 'barefoot doctor' scheme was being set up in her home county. She was given basic medical and midwifery training, and took it upon herself to study physiology, nursing and clinical science on the side. Returning home to rural Gansu, Dan was appalled at the level of medical care available to the local peasants, many of whom still depended on fortune tellers and traditional Chinese medicine practitioners.
Dan began travelling around Gansu, providing medical treatment to anyone that needed it, for free if they could not afford it (she also accepts non-traditional forms of payment, such as sheep or pigs). In order to access the most remote areas of the province, Dan travelled by horseback, using one of the oldest forms of transport to deliver state-of-the-art modern medicine. She only stopped travelling twice a year, during which time she attended training in rural hospitals to improve her medical knowledge and skill.
Now Dan is being recognised for her charity and hard work, she has been nominated as part of Xinhua's 'Most Moving Stories of 2012'.
Source: Shanghaiist
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