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Strategies & Market Trends : Strictly: Drilling II -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jim black who wrote (2314)10/2/2001 11:06:46 PM
From: Frank Pembleton  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36161
 
Jim, I actually have "a" fond memory of the Soviet threat. As a little kid we used to play war games and some of the older kids used to tell me all kinds of horror stories about how brutal these thugs were.

A week or two later...

The Liberal government calls an election and before you know it there are all these red election signs being nailed into place, all over town!

Here I am, only 10 years old, too young to fight, and the bastards have already invaded...

Yes, thing were much simpler back them. :)

Regards
Frank P.



To: jim black who wrote (2314)10/4/2001 9:28:51 AM
From: isopatch  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 36161
 
OT/"Ebola-style killer virus sweeps Afghan border

By Tim Butcher in Quetta
(Filed: 04/10/2001)

THE largest outbreak in history of a highly
contagious disease that causes patients to bleed to
death from every orifice was confirmed yesterday on
Pakistan's frontier with Afghanistan.

At least 75 people have caught the disease so far
and eight have died. An isolation ward screened off
by barbed wire has been set up in the Pakistani city
of Quetta, and an international appeal has been
launched for help.

Evidence suggests the outbreak of Crimean-Congo
Haemorrhagic Fever emanates from within
Afghanistan, raising fears of an epidemic if millions of
refugees flee across the frontier into Pakistan.

CCHF has similar effects to the ebola virus. Both
viruses damage arteries, veins and other blood
vessels and lead to the eventual collapse of major
organs.

As one doctor put it, a patient suffering from
haemorrhagic fever "literally melts in front of your
eyes".

At the Fatima Jinnah Chest and General Hospital in
Quetta, capital of the Pakistani province of
Baluchistan, an isolation ward with eight treatment
beds and two observation bays has been set up.

Nine-year-old Ismail Sadiq lay on one of the beds
yesterday, his body wracked with fever and a wad
of cotton wool stuffed into each nostril to stem the
bleeding.

Outside members of his family sat anxiously in the
shade of a tree. An elderly gentleman worked a
string of worry beads through his fingers, but
doctors had forbidden all visits.

The only people Ismail now sees are doctors and
nurses wearing the complete "barrier nursing" outfit
of sterilised hairnet, mask, gloves, gown and
overshoes.

Another patient, a 65-year-old man, lay inert on his
bed, with streams of dried blood on his chin, nose
and tongue. His shirt was also stained heavily with
blood.

Dr Akhlaq Hussain, the hospital's medical
superintendent, said: "The first cases came in June.
There were a number of deaths, but at first we did
not know what was the cause."

A number of blood samples were sent to Pakistan's
national virology testing centre in Islamabad. They
were then sent to South Africa's National Institute of
Virology in Johannesburg for confirmation.

Dr Hussain said: "When the results came back we
knew we were dealing with Crimean-Congo
Haemorrhagic Fever." He has compiled a list of all 75
cases, which involved refugees recently arrived from
Afghanistan or people living close to the border.

The first known case of the disease was among
Russian soldiers serving in the Crimea in 1944 and
then among villagers living near the Congolese city
of Kisangani in 1956. Not until 1969 were scientists
able to isolate the single virus common to both.

Although there have been a number of cases since,
the outbreaks have never been as large as the
current one.

The doctor said: "We had our first case in Pakistan
in the 1970s. It would seem there is a reservoir of
the virus in Afghanistan and we are now worried
about the possible effects of an influx of many new
refugees.

"The virus is carried by domestic animals, and if they
come in large numbers with large numbers of
animals we can expect many more cases."

The authorities in Pakistan have appealed to the
World Health Organisation for additional supplies to
help deal with the outbreak, including storage
facilities for clean blood plasma and white blood cells
which can be used to replace those lost by patients.

The virus is widely distributed in the blood of sheep,
cattle and other mammals across eastern Europe,
Asia and Africa. It can be passed to man by a
species of tick, Hyalomma marginatum, common in
the same areas.

If caught in time, CCHF can be treated by replacing
enough of the lost body fluids to allow the patient's
own immune system to take over and kill the virus.

The facilities at Fatima Jinnah are basic, but the staff
are dedicated and brave, treating patients even
though there is a high risk of infection from spittle or
blood."

portal.telegraph.co.uk