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“超级流感”横扫乌克兰 死者肺如黒炭

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发表于 2009-11-16 10:53 PM | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式


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季莫申科前往医院看望正在接受治疗的患者


  乌克兰暴发新型流感,死亡189人、100万人感染

  尸检发现,患者的肺像炭一样黑,像被烧焦似的

  病毒肆虐,乌克兰明年1月的总统大选有可能取消

  据英国媒体16日报道,乌克兰目前正暴发一种被称为“超级流感”的新型流感,乌克兰多个邻国陷入恐慌。英国媒体称,致命的“超级流感”或将横扫欧洲。

鉴于病毒肆虐,乌克兰定于明年1月举行的总统大选可能取消,乌克兰邻国也纷纷开始对乌克兰人进行入境检查。


  病毒肆虐 一天感染近2万人

  据悉,乌克兰此次暴发的流感可能是因三种流感病毒发生变异,合成一种新型传染疾病———肺鼠疫。乌克兰人认为,这场流感比甲型H1N1流感还危险。迄今为止,乌克兰死亡人数已达到189人,超过100万居民已经感染,其中大多数人来自乌克兰西部的九个地区。

  据乌克兰《基辅邮报》报道,乌克兰15日因感染流感和呼吸道病毒而死亡的人数已攀升至299人,有134.7万人感染。据悉,当天24小时之内,就有 17401人感染病毒。这些数字每小时就要更新一次,更多的人正在被感染。自流感暴发至今,已有75862人住院接受治疗,其中40490人已经出院。

  一些医生把这次流感的症状比喻为第一次世界大战后暴发的西班牙流感。那次流感中,数百万人死亡。乌克兰西部地区的一位不具名的医生描述了这种病毒的骇人影响。他说:“我们为两名患者做了尸检,发现他们的肺像炭一样黑,就像被烧焦似的,非常吓人。”

总统心急 召世卫专家分析病毒

  目前,乌克兰总统尤先科已召集世界卫生组织9名专家到首都基辅以及利沃夫检测病毒。病毒样本已被送往英国伦敦进行分析。

  医院急诊室的主治医师麦隆表示,乌克兰首都基辅现在已有4名男性和一名女性因流感死亡。其中两名死者大约处于22岁~35岁,还有两个是在60岁以上。他把这种流感引发的病症诊断为病毒性肺炎。“我们已经把分析结果送到基辅。我们不认为这是甲型H1N1流感病毒,但我们也不知道这究竟是何种肺炎。”

  肺炎病毒样本目前被送往伦敦北磨坊山的医学研究委员会实验室。英国科学家正在检测此种流感病毒是否发生变异。该实验室一发言人表示:“对于最终结果何时出来,我们没有设定时间表。我们已经取得初步成果,但目前还无可奉告。我们没有足够的病毒样品,所以在我们能得出病毒本质的最终结果之前,我们还需再培育一些样本。”


  禁止集会 大选可能因此取消

  截至15日,乌克兰已关闭多所学校、托儿所和剧院,并禁止各种公众集会。

  尤先科总统表示:“人们受到死亡的威胁,很多医生都因感染此病毒而死。在21世纪还发生这样的事情,简直不可思议。”

  在一个电视采访中,尤先科补充道:“和其他国家类似的流感不同,乌克兰这种新型流感同时有三种严重的病毒感染———包括两种季节性流感和加利福尼亚流感。病毒学家推断说,三种流感变异后若组合到一起,很有可能合成一种更具攻击力的新型病毒。”

  乌克兰总理尤利娅·季莫申科目前正在医院看望正在接受治疗的患者。有消息称,乌克兰明年1月份的总统大选也可能因此取消。

  乌克兰邻国波兰号召欧洲迅速采取行动,害怕这种骇人的病毒会继续传播。波兰总理已致信欧盟主席,信中写道:“针对这种病毒的致命特点,我们应该以欧盟的相关准则采取快速反应。”

  目前,俄国、斯洛伐克、波兰、匈牙利和罗马尼亚已经开始对入境的乌克兰人进行健康检查。而斯洛伐克目前已经关闭了其五个边境入口中的两个。
发表于 2009-11-16 11:30 PM | 显示全部楼层
这恐怕是有人故意制造恐慌:

http://www.google.com/hostednews ... TiEzdnBD-wD9C0P5A80

Swine flu infects Ukraine's presidential elections

By SIMON SHUSTER (AP) – 10 hours ago

KIEV, Ukraine — In Ukraine, swine flu is causing electoral fever.

In a hard-fought presidential campaign, critics of Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko accuse her of stirring up panic to grab the spotlight from rivals by closing all schools and banning mass gatherings to combat what experts say is a relatively moderate outbreak of the disease.

The arrival of the virus has set off a cycle of one-upmanship and recrimination among leading politicians that has spread fear, sidelined minor presidential candidates, and, health officials say, caused wasteful hoarding by scared citizens of precious medical supplies.

"This is very dangerous," said Igor Shkrobanets, chief of the local health ministry in the western region of Chernivtsi, one of the nine regions where a partial quarantine has been imposed.

"One or another politician will gain from this situation, but the doctors and their patients certainly will not," he told The Associated Press in an interview at Ukraine's federal Health Ministry Monday.

The charismatic Tymoshenko announced the arrival of a swine flu epidemic on Oct. 30, when there was only a single confirmed case in Ukraine, and she immediately announced the government would impose some of the strictest measures against the virus in Europe.

The health ministry has registered around 1.4 million cases of flu and respiratory illness since the start of the outbreak; the World Health Organization suspects most are swine flu, an infection rate it says is in line with neighboring countries like Russia and Poland.

But in Ukraine, all schools and universities were closed for three weeks and all mass gatherings, including campaign rallies heading into the January 17 presidential contest, have been banned.

Since then, Tymoshenko has made daily television addresses to update the nation on the state of infection, while criticizing her political rivals for hindering her efforts to stop it.

Her standing in the polls in the meantime has improved dramatically, bringing her to within 3 percent of the frontrunner, Regions' Party chief Viktor Yanukovich.

In a populist response to Tymoshenko, Yanukovich has pledged to spend his own campaign fund on flu medicine and 20 million surgical masks that he will hand out for free to provincial hospitals.

Yanukovich, whose presidential bid five years ago was backed by Russia's then-President Vladimir Putin, had led her by nearly 15 percent in some polls at the end of October. His victory would in effect overturn the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine, which swept a pro-western government to power on the back of widespread protests.

"There is a saying in Ukraine: the active idiot is better than the lazy philosopher. And it now looks like people will vote for Tymoshenko simply because she is taking action on this flu issue, which has completely dominated public discussion," said political analyst Volodymyr Tsybulko. "No one much cares that Tymoshenko was the one who created the issue she is acting upon."

Tymoshenko spokeswoman declined to comment Monday on allegations her response to the outbreak has been politically motivated, but she has recently insisted that Ukraine is facing a real medical crisis.

Regardless of the politics, health officials say political wrangling over the epidemic is causing public fears that are not justified by its scale. And that has led frightened citizens to buy up and hoard medications badly needed elsewhere.

The World Health Organization, which sent a mission to Kiev on Nov. 2 at the urgent request of Tymoshenko's health minister, concluded on Friday that "the numbers of severe cases do not appear to be excessive when compared to the experience of other countries."

Vasily Lazorishnets, Ukraine's Deputy Health Minister, said there have been a total of 166 confirmed cases of swine flu in Ukraine, including 15 deaths, but he stressed that the total number of deaths from the flu of all types in 2009 has so far been lower than in previous years. Ukraine plans to stockpile 950,000 doses of the anti-viral drug Tamiflu, far more than it has had on hand in previous flu seasons. Meanwhile pharmacies have sold out of flu medicines and surgical masks across Ukraine.

WHO spokesman Christian Lindmeier, who is accompanying the organization's mission in Ukraine, said that the hoarding of flu medicines by individual Ukrainians could create shortages of those drugs later this winter in places where they are vitally needed.

"There is definitely not enough of these medicines for everybody in the world, and right now it is important to focus on the countries in the peak season, and to establish the priority groups," he said.

It is not yet clear, he added, whether Ukraine would need its supply of these drugs, because a second wave of infection could still strike later in the winter.

Shkrobanets, the regional health official, said panic-driven purchases of medical supplies has kept doctors inside Ukraine from treating patients with severe flu. Emergency room visits are up twofold across the country, he said, as fearful patients have been calling for an ambulance even to deal with a slight fever. "The system is overloaded," he said.

The pressure on some of Ukraine's presidential candidates has also been severe as they struggle to make some effort in the fight against swine flu that is captivating voters.

"The smaller candidates have been pushed out of the information sphere by this issue," said Tsybulko, referring to the 16 candidates other than Tymoshenko and Yanukovich in the running for the presidency. "It's now just Tymoshenko's show."

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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