Health Cabinet Secretary Dr Cleopa Mailu. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
April 12th 2016
Summary
- The health ministry said the illness has been reported in children under five who have fever and cough that does not respond to medication.
- Health CS Cleopa Mailu said the reported cases are responding poorly to antibiotics.
- Influenza mainly affects the nose, throat, bronchi and, occasionally lungs.
The
Ministry of Health says that in less than a month since the first
reported case (March 24), the infection has been reported in children
under five who have fever and a cough that “does not respond to
medication” followed by convulsion, coma and death.
“The cases are also responding poorly to antibiotics,” said a statement marked urgent by Health Cabinet Secretary Cleopa Mailu.
He asked parents not to be complacent when they notice high temperature in their children.
“When
they get a fever, people watch and delay seeking medical attention and
then the child becomes dehydrated, slips into a coma, and this is a bit
too late.”
Dr Mailu said Influenza is not a rare disease, but it should not be confused with the common cold.
He
said that while both are viral infections, the Influenza outbreak is
caused by virus type A and B which cause pneumonia like infections.
The
disease, with 296 reported cases, is spread when droplets from the
mouth of an infected person are released during coughing, sneezing or
talking to an uninfected person.
It
is characterised by sudden onset of high fever, aching muscles, headache
and severe sickness, non-productive cough, and sore throat. In the very
young, it can lead to pneumonia and death. It affects mainly the nose,
throat, bronchi and, occasionally, lungs.
Dr
Mailu added: “Blood samples and nasopharyngeal (secretions from the
uppermost part of the throat, behind the nose) samples have been taken
and sent to the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) National Influenza
Sentinel laboratory in Nairobi for further testing to determine the
cause.”
He said the ministry had also alerted all county health workers to detect new cases promptly.
KEMRI TESTS
Preliminary
results from the Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) released on
Monday indicated that the children who went to hospital displaying
flu-like symptoms could have been infected with influenza, a viral
infection that attacks a person’s respiratory system (nose, throat and
lungs).
The two county hospitals last
week sent a second set of samples to the research centre for testing
after the first test turned out negative for suspected pneumonia.
“Initial
tests from the main influenza laboratory showed the samples tested
positive for influenza,” said Dr Rosemary Sang, the acting director of
the Centre for Virus Research at Kemri.
But Dr Sang added the research institute was waiting for results from two other laboratories before giving a conclusive report.
“We
usually like to compare the results before issuing a conclusive report.
Therefore we have to wait for the confirmation results,” she said.
The research centre however did not say when the conclusive reports will be issued.
Initial
deaths of 23 children below the age of one died within four weeks of
onset of the illness to what had been suspected to be viral pneumonia.
Nakuru
County Health executive Kabii Mungai said the children went to hospital
with symptoms of high fever, cough and difficulty in breathing.
While
some had symptoms of diarrhoea and vomiting, which laboratory results
conducted by the hospital indicated was likely to be viral pneumonia.
But
the first samples sent to Kemri ruled out pneumonia, throwing the
medical personnel and parents into anxiety as they could not tell what
they were treating.
“Kemri had
confirmed that this is not pneumonia as we suspected and we have
embarked on more tests,” said Dr Mungai, something which prompted for a
second test on fresh samples from post-mortem performed on the dead
children.
Tuesday, Dr Mungai said two
isolation wards had been set up at Nakuru’s Provincial General Hospital
and medics put on high alert to detect symptoms and handle cases of the
outbreak of the disease that is unfortunately spreading fast.
He was however reluctant to disclose the number of deaths, even as source disclosed the figure could be more than was reported.
“The most affected areas are in Nakuru County, although we have received a few cases from the neighbouring Baringo,” he said.
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