Doctor in Switzerland infects patients with swine flu

Geneva - Two pregnant women and 10 medical workers were infected with swine flu, after a doctor spread the virus to them, Swiss media reported Wednesday. The doctor had returned from a holiday with A(H1N1), the virus' technical name, and went straigh...
Posted : Wed, 12 Aug 2009 13:11:43 GMT
By : DPA
Category : Health
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Geneva - Two pregnant women and 10 medical workers were infected with swine flu, after a doctor spread the virus to them, Swiss media reported Wednesday. The doctor had returned from a holiday with A(H1N1), the virus' technical name, and went straight back to his job at a hospital in the Swiss city of Lausanne.

He apparently felt somewhat ill when he arrived at the maternity ward, where he worked, but thought nothing of it.

A patient can contract swine flu - and spread the disease to others - 24 hours or more before any symptoms start to appear.

Doctors were being told to stay home at the first sign of any flu-like illness, and not to pop an aspirin and head to work, as they might have normally done.

The incident in Lausanne took place in late July. The ill, including the pregnant women, were treated with anti-viral drugs and none are said to be in serious condition, according to hospital officials.

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Disrupting Airborne Transmission of Swine Flu
By: Mark T , Sat, 22 Aug 2009 07:22:31 GMT

New evidence from the EPA, Environmental Protection Agency, states that the influenza virus in droplet nuclei form can remain airborne indefinitely and travel in excess of 160 feet to infect other building occupants. The EPA are recommending germicidal UV light, filters and photocatalytic oxidation as proven solutions, used together can acheive a 99.9% reduction of airborne virus particulate.

This is new evidence, that even with hand washing and face masks, the virus can still be transmitted through the air, and due to the virus size, can still travel through face masks. So far, I have only found 1 company called OxyBreeze based in Oakville, ON, Canada that has UV air sterilizers that can kill/sterilize the airborne threat with a 99.9% success rate, using all 3 EPA recommended technologies.



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