Tag: fever

  • Op Kaveri: 117 of 1,191 Indians rescued quarantined as they haven’t been vaccinated against yellow fever

    Op Kaveri: 117 of 1,191 Indians rescued quarantined as they haven’t been vaccinated against yellow fever

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    New Delhi: Under Operation Kaveri, 117 of 1,191 Indians rescued from strife-torn Sudan are currently being quarantined free of charge as they were not vaccinated against yellow fever, the Union health ministry said on Saturday.

    The Ministry of Health is working in close collaboration with the Ministry of External Affairs under Operation Kaveri.

    The Government of India is evacuating about 3,000 passengers of Indian origin from Sudan. Necessary quarantine facilities are being arranged at transit junctures in mission mode for the incoming passengers, the ministry said.

    MS Education Academy

    “A total of 1,191 passengers have arrived so far, of which 117 passengers are currently quarantined because they were not vaccinated against yellow fever. All passengers will be released after seven days if they remain asymptomatic,” it said.

    These passengers are provided rent-free accommodation with free food facility in the quarantine centres managed by airport health officers (APHOs) and the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare at various hospitals across states as well as central government hospitals like Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi.

    Arrangements have also been made at RHTC, Najafgarh (100 beds); NITR, Mehrauli (40 beds) and Lady Hardinge Medical College (60 beds), it said.

    “The first batch of passengers arrived in Delhi with 360 passengers, none of whom required quarantine followed by the second flight which arrived in Mumbai with 240 passengers on April 26, of which 14 were quarantined,” the ministry said

    Two people were released after validation of their vaccination certificates, it said.

    The remaining 12 will complete their quarantine period till Saturday evening (as they were in transit for four days at Jeddah).

    The third flight arrived in Bengaluru on Friday with 360 passengers, of which 47 passengers were initially quarantined. Three of them were released on Saturday after the verification of vaccination, the ministry stated.

    The verification of five more passengers is in process.

    The fourth flight arrived in Delhi Friday evening with 231 passengers of which 61 were quarantined (one was later released). Thirty-five passengers are at Delhi APHO and 26 passengers at Safdarjung Hospital, the ministry said.

    “The fifth flight is expected to arrive in Delhi Saturday night with 367 passengers and an additional flight with 320 passengers is expected to arrive Sunday morning at 10:30 am in Bengaluru.

    “The number of those quarantined will be dynamic as it is dependent on the verification status of passengers’ passport number(s),” the ministry added.

    Operation Kaveri was launched on April 24 to evacuate the Indian citizens stranded in Sudan.

    A team of officials, including from the Ministry of External Affairs, the Indian Air Force, and the Indian embassy in Sudan, have been appointed to ensure that the proper process of evacuation gets followed.

    During the evacuation, Indians will be transferred from Sudan to the capital city of Khartoum where they will be flown back to India.

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    #Kaveri #Indians #rescued #quarantined #havent #vaccinated #yellow #fever

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Persistent cough, fever’: Influenza A on rise in India

    ‘Persistent cough, fever’: Influenza A on rise in India

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    New Delhi: A persistent cough, sometimes accompanied by fever, running through India for the past two-three months is due to Influenza A subtype H3N2, ICMR experts said.

    The H3N2, which has been in wide circulation for the past two-three months, causes more hospitalisations than other subtypes, said Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) scientists who keep a close watch on ailments caused by respiratory viruses through the Virus Research and Diagnostic Laboratories network.

    They have also suggested a list of Dos and Don’ts for people to follow to protect themselves from contracting the virus.

    The Indian Medical Association (IMA), on the other hand, has advised against indiscriminate use of antibiotics amid rising cases of cough, cold and nausea across the country.

    Seasonal fever will last five to seven days, it said.

    The fever goes away at the end of three days but the cough can persist for up to three weeks, the IMA’s Standing Committee for Anti-Microbial Resistance said.

    Viral cases have also surged due to air pollution, it said, adding that it mostly occurs in people aged below 15 and above 50 and causes upper respiratory infections along with fever.

    The association also asked doctors to prescribe only symptomatic treatment and not antibiotics.

    “Right now, people start taking antibiotics like Azithromycin and Amoxiclav etc, that too without caring for done and frequency and stop it once start feeling better. This needs to be stopped as it leads to antibiotic resistance. Whenever there will be a real use of antibiotics, they will not work due to the resistance,” the IMA said in a statement.

    The most misused antibiotics are Amoxicillin, Norfloxacin, Oprofloxacin, Ofloxacin and Levofloxacin. These are being used for the treatment of diarrhoea and UTI, it said.

    “We have already seen widespread use of Azithromycin and Ivermectin during Covid and this too has led to resistance. It is necessary to diagnose whether the infection is bacterial or not before prescribing antibiotics,” it said.

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    #Persistent #cough #fever #Influenza #rise #India

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘Who is behind them?’: UFO fever grips Capitol Hill

    ‘Who is behind them?’: UFO fever grips Capitol Hill

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    us china balloon 37870

    The most troublesome aspect is: What’s going on? Where are they coming from? Who is behind them?,” Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) asked on Monday. “We get weather balloons, we understand weather balloons. But if it’s not weather balloons, what are they? Who is sending them? That bothers me.”

    While the 118th Congress is off to a slow start, Capitol Hill is swirling with intrigue about the military’s downing of four objects that hovered over U.S. and Canadian airspace in recent days. In the absence of complete information, Senate Republicans on Monday criticized the Biden administration for what they called a lack of transparency about where the objects are coming from and what they are. Even some Democrats indicated that the Biden administration could be doing more to alleviate concerns.

    Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Mark Warner (D-Va.) said Monday night that he’s “not satisfied yet” with the administration’s response but will wait until the Tuesday briefing before making a final judgment. Meanwhile, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), a member of the Intelligence Committee, said that it’s possible for Biden officials to be more transparent without compromising national security.

    The full Senate’s slated briefing Tuesday on the unidentified objects comes days after another classified briefing about the Chinese spy balloon. And that’s on top of another previously classified briefing scheduled for Wednesday that will touch broadly on China.

    None of the three objects shot down over the weekend have been recovered. Murkowski said brutally cold conditions in Alaska were hindering the search, while Peters said the lake is deep enough to make finding anything extremely complex. The Biden administration already ruled out aliens on Monday, but that didn’t slow down the pace of lawmakers’ questions.

    Summing up what’s on almost everyone’s minds, Peters remarked: “Why do we have these objects now? Is it because we just haven’t been looking for them? Or something else?”

    Senate Republicans, who previously castigated the Biden administration for waiting too long to respond to the Chinese spy balloon, are going into Tuesday’s briefing with low expectations. But they argued that any information, at this point, would be helpful to prevent imaginations from running wild.

    “It’s just crazy what’s happened the last few days,” observed Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.). “I don’t know if they don’t know what’s going on. And maybe either way, whether they do or don’t, at least tell us what they do know — and try and reassure people of the things that they’ve ruled out.”

    Over the past four days, the U.S. military shot down three unidentified objects: the first on Friday near Deadhorse, Alaska, the second over Yukon, Canada on Saturday and the latest on Sunday over Lake Huron, Mich. That came just days after the military brought down a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina.

    “I don’t think anybody really understands,” said Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.). “We all knew what the first one was … [The Biden administration] took so much heat after the first one, they weren’t going to make the same mistake,” he added, and let the objects fly untouched.

    While it’s not clear whether the unidentified objects are all from China, the latest developments will almost certainly spur calls for the U.S. to get tougher on Beijing. Following Thursday’s briefing on the spy balloon, GOP and Democratic lawmakers emerged requesting additional information.

    The speakers for Tuesday’s briefing include Melissa G. Dalton, an assistant secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Hemispheric Affairs, Lt. Gen. Douglas A. Sims II, director of operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Gen. Glen D. VanHerck, commander of the North American Aerospace Defense Command, according to a list obtained by POLITICO.

    Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), who held a defense spending subpanel hearing Thursday on the Chinese spy balloon, described the latest unidentified objects as “concerning.” But he added that his level of concern will depend “on where they came from.” His subcommittee is expected to hold follow up hearings as the Senate kicks off its annual spending process.

    John Kirby, National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications, told reporters Monday that enhanced radar capabilities “may at least partly explain the increase in the objects that have been detected.”

    In the absence of more information, though, Republicans are having a field day with the incidents.

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said on the floor Monday that the administration has still “not been able to divulge any meaningful information about what was shot down” and asked: “are they benign science projects or something more nefarious that we have been missing all this time?” Meanwhile, Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said the administration is “creating a bigger problem for themselves by the lack of transparency.”

    Yet despite bipartisan concern about China’s role in the incursions, some senators suggested Monday that the response to Biden’s handling of the unidentified objects may fall along party lines.

    “I came to the conclusion the administration handled the first one properly,” said Sen. Angus King (I-Maine.), a member of the Intelligence Committee. “There are some people that if Biden walked out, woke up in the morning and walked across the Potomac River, they’d say, ‘Biden can’t swim.’”

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    #UFO #fever #grips #Capitol #Hill
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )