The
2009 flu pandemic in Asia, part of an epidemic in 2009 of a new strain of influenza A virus subtype
H1N1 causing what has been commonly called swine flu, has (as of 6 October 2009)
afflicted at least 159,863 people in Asia with 932 confirmed deaths: there have been 368
deaths confirmed in India
, followed by
165 deaths in Thailand
, 77 deaths
in Malaysia
, 35 deaths
in Saudi
Arabia
and 30 deaths in Israel
.
Among the
Asian countries, Hong
Kong
has the most confirmed cases, followed by Thailand
, China
and South Korea

Cases of the A(H1N1) virus in
Asia:

Number of confirmed deaths of A(H1N1)
virus in Asia:

Number of confirmed cases of A(H1N1)
virus in Asia:

Community Outbreaks in Asia:
On 27
April, Azerbaijan
imposed a ban on import of animal husbandry products from the Americas. According to the Chief of the
State Veterinary Service under the Agriculture Ministry Ismayil
Hasanov, products brought to the country on that day received
certificates and it was confirmed that those products were safe.
AZAL took additional safety measures and a sanitary
quarantine unit of the Health Ministry started to operate in
Heydar Aliyev International
Airport
with all aircraft and passengers being
checked.
Azeri Minister of Health Ogtay Shiraliyev said the order prepared
by him considers implementation of necessary measures in the
epidemiological and various medical
centers. "Azerbaijan is ready for this issue", he said. According
to the Agriculture Minister Ismat Abbasov, the State Veterinary
Service is holding monitoring in the regions and pigs are kept in
closed places in farms. Abbasov also said: "I can say with full
responsibility that the situation on prevention against swine flu
virus is stable in Azerbaijan".. On 31 July, First Case of
Influenza A(H1N1) was confirmed.
On 2 May all
checkpoints on
borders with Russia passed to the medium security and disinfection
barriers for both cars and pedestrians were installed at the Samur,
Shirvanovka and Khan Oba checkpoints in
Qusar and
Khachmaz
Raions. The veterinary services at checkpoints intensified
their activities while hog farms in the northern regions passed to
the closed farming regime.
It was
announced on April 29, 2009 by Bangladesh
's Health Minister AFM Ruhal Haque that screening of
inbound international travelers for swine flu would start at the
country's main international airport. After an
inter-ministerial meeting on swine flu, Haque told reporters that
particularly those travelers who come from the affected countries
will be screened at the Zia International Airport
in capital Dhaka
. A
Bangladeshi national who recently returned from US has been
detected with swine flu on June 18, making him the first patient to
be tested positive of A(H1N1) viral infection in the country.
As of August 22, 98 cases of the A(H1N1) virus has been confirmed
in Bangladesh.
On 1 May
2009 Chairman of Global Human Flu Prevention and Response Work
Committee Deputy Minister for Health Dr Mya Oo inspected preventive
measures against the human flu at Yangon
International Airport
, Burma (also known as Myanmar). On 27 June,
Burmese state-run Radio Myanmar confirmed the first case of
influenza A/H1N1 - a girl aged 13 who just return from a trip from
Singapore.
Cambodia's health authorities remain alert but confident that the
country is prepared for a swine flu pandemic. In terms of ensuring
that infected pigs do not spread the disease to Cambodia, the
Cambodian Pig Raiser Association said it has told the government it
should ban live pig imports. But Khlauk Chuon, the deputy director
of Camcontrol at the Ministry of Commerce, said they would only ban
live pig imports from a country that has been hit with swine
flu.
"We are very worried about this new disease because it can transfer
from pig to human, from human to human and from human to pig,"
Khlauk Chuon added. 6 cases has been confirmed in Cambodia,
including one domestic case.

Outbreak evolution in mainland
China:
The first suspected case found on mainland China was reported on
May 10, 2009. As of
July 29 2009, the number
of confirmed A/H1N1 cases on the Chinese mainland topped 2,000,
with no deaths or serious cases reported, according to the Ministry
of Health (MOH). Of the total 2,003 confirmed cases, 1,853 had
recovered, said a statement on the
MOH website.
The
General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and
Quarantine (AQSIQ) of China issued an emergency notice on the
evening of April 26 that visitors returning from flu-affected areas
who experienced flu-like symptoms within two weeks would be
quarantined. The
Ministry of
Health has started prevention measures, and initiated
cooperation with the
WHO
and the relevant departments of the Mexican and U.S. governments to
help contain the outbreak. According to Wang Jing of the China
Inspection and Quarantine Science Research Institute, the measures
already in place in China against
bird flu
are sufficient for this new disease, also certain lessons were
learned from the
2003
SARS outbreak including that the state-controlled media doesn't
cover up such events.
May 2, the
Chinese
government has decided to suspend flights from Mexico to
Shanghai, the Foreign Ministry said.
Meanwhile, the
Civil Aviation
Administration of China also assigned a charter to transport
stranded Chinese visitors back home.
Among all carriers,
China Eastern Airlines was
the first choice as it is based in Shanghai, where the original and
the only Sino-Mexican flight disembarks, but later the job has
fallen onto the Guangzhou
based China
Southern Airlines, as China Eastern's aircrafts don't fit the
facility at Tijuana Airport
. The replacing China Southern flight would
leave Guangzhou
at 21:00 on May 3 as a normal flight until it
reaches the stop-over at Los Angeles, and then fly empty toward
Mexico City to pick up the 120 stranded tourists. The
charter flight estimates to be back in Shanghai 11:00 in the
morning on May 5, and all passengers onboard will then go through
health to see if further action is needed. 1,089 case confirmed in
China.
China's Ministry of Health has gathered experts to draft the
Influenza A(H1N1) vaccine and immunity strategy which would
include, 'when, how and against whom' the vaccine should be
used.The ministry's Contingency Office deputy director, Liang
Wannian, said the optimum objective of the flu vaccine was for the
protection of high-risk population, especially people with basic
illness and pregnant women. The first batch of China's A (H1N1) flu
vaccine is expected to be ready by July, and would undergo a
two-month clinical test before it is available in the market.
China's flu vaccine strategy is to stockpile enough vaccine for one
per cent of her population by October 1, as a preventive measure to
encounter any vast outbreak of the flu. Liang said China would take
more severe and effective preventive measures at its many gateways
and educate the people on the H1N1, also known as swine flu.
In early September 2009, China's
State Food and Drug
Administration granted approval to a homegrown
swine flu vaccine, which producer
Sinovac Biotech claims is effective after
only one dose.

Outbreak evolution in Hong Kong:

Culmulative confirmed cases per
day

Metropark Hotel Wanchai under swine
flu quarantine
The
Food and Health Bureau of
Hong
Kong
issued travel advice for Mexico
on April 26,
2009, which advised Hong Kong residents not to travel to Mexico
unless absolutely necessary. The first case reported was a
Mexican who flew in from
Shanghai.
The most
recent case (the tenth) was found in a 56-year-old American who had
flown in from San
Francisco
. The
Bureau also escalated the alert level from "alert" to "serious" on
the same day, which activated health protection measures in all
ports of entry of Hong Kong. As such,
temperature screening machines are used at all checkpoints to
identify passengers with fever and respiratory symptoms. Any
passenger who fails the temperature test and confirmed having a
fever will be quarantined and sent to public hospital for further
investigation. Hong Kong also became one of the first jurisdictions
to declare swine flu as a
notifiable
disease, and much of the procedures against the spread of the
swine flu were learned from the
2003 SARS outbreak, of
which Hong Kong was the epicenter of the outbreak.
The
Secretary for Food and
Health Dr. York Chow stated that
special attention will be paid to passengers who come from
countries where human infection of swine influenza cases have been
reported.
On May 1,
one case became the first confirmed case of swine flu in Hong Kong
and also the first in Asia after being tested positive by the
University of Hong Kong
and the Department of Health of Hong
Kong. The Mexican patient, who travelled with two
companions from Mexico to Hong Kong with a stopover in Shanghai
Pudong
Airport
, arrived in Hong Kong on April 30. Metropark
Hotel
Wanchai, where the patient stayed, was
cordoned off by the police and health officials from the
Centre for Health Protection.
All 350 guests and hotel staff have to remain inside the hotel for
seven days. After the first swine flu case was confirmed by
laboratory, Chief Executive
Sir Donald
Tsang raised Hong Kong's response level from "serious" to
"emergency".
On May 2, a total of 12 Metropark Hotel guests who were not willing
to stay in the hotel were moved to Lady MacLehose Holiday Village
in Sai Kung for quarantine.
On June 11, the
Educational
Bureau issued a letter ordering all kindergartens, primary and
special schools to suspend all class and examinations for a 14-day
period. As of June 21, 20 secondary schools have been ordered to
suspend classes and examinations for another 14 days after a
confirmed case of human swine flu was found in each school.In June
23,the Educational Bureau issued a letter to order all
kindergartens,primary schools and special schools to have their
summer holiday immeditely. As of 27 August 2009, there have been
10,468 confirmed cases of swine flu in the city.
On July 3, a case of
Tamiflu-resistant virus
was discovered in a woman suffering from the flu. The woman had not
previously taken Tamiflu, so concern has been expressed that she
may have contracted an already resistant virus from someone
else.
On June 18, the first case was confirmed. The victim was a Filipino
arriving Macau the day before. The first local case was confirmed
on June 23. On that day there were 8 confirmed cases.

Outbreak evolution in
Taiwan/ROC:
On May
20, 2009, the first case of the influenza has been confirmed in
Taiwan
.
The government had previously taken several steps to prevent the
possible outbreak of Swine Flu, including a command center set up,
travel alerts for infected nations, and more severe health check
been conducted at international ports. Taiwan said visitors who
came back from affected areas with fevers would be quarantined.
According to
The Department of
Health (DOH), Taiwan has a sufficient supply of surgical masks
and vaccine to deal with the flu. The DOH also stated that they
have 50 million to 60 million masks in stock and local
manufacturers have the capability of producing 200,000 doses of the
flu vaccine a month. In an effort to prevent the entry of the swine
influenza, the Centers for Disease Control has announced on April
28 that every flight from the Americas, specifically Canada and the
United States, that arrives in Taiwan from April 29 and onward will
be subject to a strict on-board screening procedure. There are
5,474 confirmed cases of H1N1 in Taiwan so far.
Cyprus
identified its first case of H1N1 on May 30
in a 39-year-old woman from Moldova
, living in Cyprus, who returned from the United
States on May 28. As of July 11, 250 cases have been
confirmed in Cyprus.

H1N1 in India
The
Government of India has decided
to screen all people entering India
via the main
airport hubs of Mumbai
, New Delhi
, Goa
, Jaipur
, Kochi
, Kolkata
, Chennai
, Bangalore
and Hyderabad
. It said the primary focus will be on
passengers entering from the United States of America
, United
Kingdom
, Canada
, Mexico
, France
, and
New
Zealand
. A team of 32 medical professionals have
been posted at these airports. The Ministry of Health is also
trying to track down people who have entered India from Mexico in
the last 10 days. It has been reported that one person recently
traveled from Texas to Hyderabad with flu symptoms and was
quarantined, but authorities refused to divulge his identity.
Government health officials & WHO subsequently stated that
there is no Swine flu in India and the said patient recovered from
a common cold. Three other suspected cases of swine flu have been
noticed. Two of them were flying from Chicago and the other one,
who is UK citizen, aged 35, arrived from London. All of whom have
been kept under observation in a hospital.As of 21 August 2009,
2401 cases have been confirmed in India with 63 deaths. As of 4
October 2009, 10375 cases have been confirmed in India with 329
deaths.
The maximum deaths are found from Pune
.
As of 13
August, 13 people have been succumbed to the deadly virus in
Pune
. Pune
has been
declared onto a state of semi-emergency of
pandemic.The Government has declared of the closure
of Schools and Colleges in Mumbai
for at least
a week.All the shopping malls and theaters have been closed
down up to Monday.

Outbreak evolution in Indonesia:
After a
coordination meeting about the flu on April 27, 2009, the Indonesian
government halted the importation of pigs and
initiated the examination of 9 million pigs in Indonesia.
Thermal scanners which can detect
human body temperature have been installed at Indonesian ports of
entry. Temperatures above 38 degrees Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit)
cause the devices to beep, indicating fever.
The devices have been
installed in Soekarno-Hatta International
Airport
and Halim Perdana Kusuma Airport in Jakarta
, Juanda Airport in Surabaya
, Hang Nadim Airport in Batam
, Hasanudin
Airport in Makassar
, Ngurah Rai Airport in Denpasar
, Sepinggan Airport in Balikpapan
, and Tanjung Priok Seaport, gates one and two in
Jakarta and taking action right now. Indonesia confirms
first case of H1N1. 416 cases and one death has been confirmed in
Indonesia. Cases have increased to over 1,005 people and 4 deaths,
but three of these deaths were reported
negative.
Any person with temperatures above 38 degrees Celsius will be taken
to a specialized hospital and would undertake intensive test to
determine if the patient is positive of swine flu.
As of the 18 August 2009, 4 deaths due to the virus have been
reported in the country. This is not the case, as only one fatality
was reported positive to the virus. The other three were signaled
negative.
In confronting the flu epidemic disease in the country, Iran has
established a committee which consists of two vice presidents and
four ministers.

Outbreak evolution in Israel and the
West Bank:
375 cases
have been confirmed in Israel
. In
response to the outbreak, the Israeli Deputy
Minister of Health,
Yaakov Litzman, has said that because
swine are unclean, the outbreak needs to be renamed, and
so in Israel, out of respect for the religious sensibilities of
Jews and Muslims, it should be called "Mexican Flu". This was done
so as to not confuse the population into thinking that they could
not acquire the virus if they did not eat pork. The Israeli
government retracted this proposal following Mexican
complaints.
The flu came close to many Israeli politicians.
Prime minister
Benjamin Netanyahu was checked
for fear of flu, and the flu reached the presidential
residence and the Knesset
.

H1N1 in Japan
The
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries
of Japan instructed animal quarantine offices
across Japan
to examine
any live pigs being brought into Japan to make sure they are not
infected with the influenza. Japanese Agriculture Minister
Shigeru Ishiba appeared on television
to reassure customers that it is safe to eat pork. The Japanese
farm ministry said that it would not ask for restrictions on pork
imports because the virus was unlikely to turn up in pork, and
would be killed by cooking.
On 30
April 2009, the first suspected case was detected at Narita
Airport
. However, the case turned out to be a
conventional strain of influenza A subtype H3N2 (Hong Kong A
strain). On 1 May 2009, the second suspected case was detected in
Yokohama. This case also turned out to be a conventional strain of
influenza A subtype H1N1 (Russian A strain). Meanwhile Japan has
not stopped any flights or means of travelling between Japan and
Mexico.
On 8 May, the first three cases were confirmed.
The infected patients
had spent time in Oakville
, Canada
and
returned to Japan via Detroit
. On 10 May, another case was confirmed from
a student who came from a school trip to Canada, making it the
fourth case of Japan.
On 16 May, the first domestic infection was confirmed in
Kobe. The male high school student did not have a
history of travel abroad and thought it was a seasonal flu, and
PCR test was not done in
timely manner. Two other students are suspected, and 17 other
students are claiming influenza-like symptoms. The route of the
infection was not traceable.
On 18 May, 130 cases had been confirmed, including employees of a
railway kiosk and a bank. Several railway kiosks in Kobe were
closed, and 70 other bank workers who had worked with the infected
person were told to stand by at home.
All schools in the
Osaka
and Hyogo Prefectures
were suspended. There have been 944 case
confirmed in Japan as of 24 June 2009.
On July 2, the first case of
oseltamivir-resistant virus in Asia was
announced in Japan, in a woman who had been taking Tamiflu
prophylacticly.
The first cases of A(H1N1) virus were discovered in 3 students from
the capital Astana according to Natalia Buenko, an advisor to the
Ministry of Health of Kazakhstan.
According to the Ministry of Health of
Kazakhstan, six people have been diagnosed with the influenza A
(Н1N1) virus in Astana
, as of
July 24, 2009.
About 18
people on U.S. military bases in Kuwait
have
tested positive for swine flu, a U.S. Central Command spokeswoman said on May
24, 2009. They are the first cases reported in Kuwait. It remains
unclear whether the virus has spread to the civilian population.
The names and units of the infected people were not immediately
available. Maj.
Kristi Beckman, speaking from Central
Command headquarters in Tampa
, said
everyone who tested positive for the virus was quarantined in
military health facilities approved by officials from the Kuwaiti
Ministry of Health. The WorldKuwait is used as a staging
area for soldiers heading to or from the war in Iraq. The World
Health Organization reported that they had not included Kuwait on
its list of countries where the virus is present.
On June 16, the Kuwait Times newspaper reported confirmed the
country's first cases of swine flu in four Kuwaitis who returned
from the United States.
Outbreak evolution in Laos
The
Lao government agreed to buy 10
thermal imaging machines and install them at the country's major
immigration border checkpoints.
The machines would help officials identify
anyone entering the country with a high temperature and create
confidence among Lao people, foreigners living in Laos
and people
traveling to Laos. Health officials would be on hand at
international border checkpoints to ensure anyone found to be
infected could be treated immediately. Each machine could cost
about US$25,000. The decision to buy them was made after the
government found visitors to Laos included people coming from the
United States, Spain and other affected countries.
The Prime Minister
Bouasone
Bouphavanh said masks should be made available and health
officials would be assigned to work at border checkpoints. The
machines would help officials identify anyone entering the country
with a high temperature and create confidence among Lao people,
foreigners living in Laos and people travelling to Laos. Health
officials would be on hand at international border checkpoints to
ensure anyone found to be infected could be treated immediately. On
June 18, the first case in Laos was confirmed.
A Lebanese man suffering from a serious illness died from the H1N1
swine flu strain on Thursday July 30, 2009, which makes the first
death in Lebanon, Health Minister Mohammad Khalifeh told Reuters.
The 30-year-old victim had been receiving treatment for leukemia
when he contracted the virus, possibly from relatives who had just
traveled from Australia to Lebanon, the minister said.Lebanon has
recorded more than 100 cases of H1N1.
The first three cases of swine flu were discovered in Lebanon on
July 1, 2009 according to the Health Minister
Mohammad Jawad Khalifeh."One
Lebanese man who was in Spain and two Canadians who arrived in
Lebanon a week ago are suffering from swine flu," Khalifeh told
AFP. "We put them in quarantine and the blood samples we have taken
every day have proven to be positive. "The Lebanese man and the two
visiting Canadians were given the proper medical treatment in time
and they are well now."He told a press conference said the man was
part of a group of 22 Lebanese who had been attending a training
seminar in Spain at an institute where the disease was later
detected. He said health authorities may use thermal scanners at
the airport to detect passengers with fever. "The situation is
under control," he said.
The Lebanese Health Minister Mohammad Jawad Khalifeh asked citizens
to stop the social habit of greeting with kissing, as it is a
Lebanese habit to greet each other with three kisses on the cheek.
He also requested that affected schoolchildren be kept at home and
that travel to countries in which cases have been confirmed be
avoided. Beirut also banned the import of pork.
On May 30 , Lebanon confirms three cases of swine flu.
Outbreak evolution in Malaysia
Malaysia
detected the first case of influenza A(H1N1) on May 15, 2009 in a
21-year-old student who returned from the United States
. Malaysia first case of Influenza A (H1N1)
which was locally transmitted was confirmed on June 17, 2009 and
identified as 17-year-old girl who was admitted to the
Kuala Lumpur Hospital. As of
August 11, 2009 there has been 2,253 confirmed cases in Malaysia.
The Health Ministry has announced that from August 12, 2009 they
had discontinued the counting of the total number of H1N1 cases in
line with guidelines issued by the
World Health Organisation. As of
August 20, 2009 the total number of A(H1N1) related deaths in
Malaysia stands at 68.
A ministerial committee has been established to supervise swine flu
preventive measures to avoid an outbreak.
All visitors arriving
at the Malé
International Airport on Hulhule Island and
the country’s three commercial seaports are being
screened.
First death from H1N1 flu virus was confirmed on 19 November.
Mongolian authorities quarantined 103 plane passengers on last May
7 who may have been exposed to swine flu.
The passengers were aboard a flight in which two passengers who had
performed in a Mongolian band in Mexico developed a fever. When the
plane stopped for a scheduled landing in Moscow, the ill passengers
were hospitalized.
Landing
later in Ulaanbaatar
, the Mongolian Health Ministry announced it had
quarantined all passengers as well as the crew of six. The
people will remain under medical surveillance for seven days,
according to officials of the General Authority for Emergency
Management.
The Mongolian Health Ministry has sought to prevent the spread of
swine flu in Mongolia by urging people to avoid public
places.
As of October 22, 126 cases were confirmed in Mongolia. Just after
seven days, the number increased to 394 with five deaths.
The WHO notes that
no incidents of swine flu have yet been
officially reported in North Korea. However, most defectors with
backgrounds in health care agree that, considering the isolation of
North Korean society and its highly inadequate health care system,
incidents of swine flu are likely to be either suppressed or merely
misdiagnosed.
Following the confirmation of the first case of the diesease in
Mongolia, heightened concerns arised. the very high cases in China
would make the spread of the disease to North Korea only a matter
of time. If swine flu would come to North Korea, there is a
possibility of rapid spreading of the disease through through the
jangmadang (market), which has become the primary means of survival
for the people.
According to a source, it is unlikely that North Korea will make
incidents of swine flu cases official before the number of deaths
reaches a very a hign number.
The plans of the WHO to distribute swine flu vaccines, contributed
by developed countries, to a selected 100 developing countries in
November; North Korea is included in the priority list.
On 17
June, 2009, Oman
's health
ministry reported its first three cases of swine flu.
The cases
were diagnosed in three students who had been studying in the
United
States
.As of 13 August, 2009, 337 cases have been
confirmed by the National Pandemic Influenza Committee in Oman.
There have also been unconfirmed reports of a death although this
has been denied by the Health Ministry.
on August 21, 2009, the Ministry of Health reported the first 2
death cases one in Muscat and the other in Salalah plus the
increase in the number of cases to 513.
Pakistan has taken precautionary measures at the international
airports to check passengers coming from swine flu affected
countries. Doctors are checking the incoming passengers and allow
entry only to those with no flu symptoms. The major hospitals in
all the big cities are on high alert. There are 2 comfirmed case as
of October 17.
Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III ordered the Bureau of
Quarantine to use thermal imaging equipment at airports to screen
passengers coming from the US for flu symptoms. The Philippines may
quarantine travelers arriving from Mexico with fevers. Also, the
Secretary of the
Department of
Agriculture issued an order banning the importation of hogs
from the U.S. and Mexico, and the retraction of the restriction of
swine influenza vaccine use. The medical alert phase is already
Code White, the lowest.
On May
18, 2009, a Filipina girl who arrived from Houston
, Texas
, USA
was the
first confirmed case of H1N1 virus in the Philippines.
Health Secretary Duque advised that the girl is in stable condition
and is in quarantine.
On June
3, 2009, a foreign exchange student in De La Salle
University
-Manila was confirmed with H1N1 virus and the school
was closed for ten days starting June 4.
As of June 5, 2009, the Total of confirmed cases of A(H1N1) virus
rose from 29 cases last June 4 to 33 confirmed cases as of June 5.
Philippine Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said the new cases
are two siblings and another student of De La Salle
University.
Because of the said incident, on June 6, 2009, the Commission in
Higher Education [CHED] moved the opening of classes in all
colleges and universities in Metro Manila from June 8, 2009 to June
15, 2009.
First
fatality was reported, a 49-year-old female from Metro Manila
on June 22, the first fatality in Asia of this
disease. The death was not caused by the virus directly. The
person has lung and heath problems that worsen it. The person died
of a heart attack.
The highest confirmed in one day was in June 24, 2009 with 131
cases, the next day, the confirmed cases added is 123. Because of
that, the Department of Health ordered the people that should get
swab tests are the only people with very complicated cases (eg.
with
lung disorders,
hearth disorders,
babies
etc.). The government said that the very fast spreading of the
disease is caused by the population density of the country.
On June
16, 2009 Qatar announced its first two cases of A(H1N1) flu, which
were two children arriving in the country from the United States
and Austria
. According to a senior Health Ministry
official Qatar is working to boost its Tamiflu stocks, which will
be enough to treat 300,000 cases, as part of precautions against
the virus.
The Health Ministry has announced the detection of a case of swine
flu which infected a Filipino nurse working at
King Faisal
Specialist Hospital and Research Center. Dr Abdullah
al-Rabee'a, the Health Minister, said that the detection of the
case has come within the framework of the efforts being exerted by
the Health Ministry to follow up developments in this respect.In a
statement to the Saudi Press Agency, he said that the nurse, who
had spent her holidays in Philippines, returned to Riyadh on May
29, 2009, aboard one of the flights of the
Gulf
Air. "Symptoms of the disease appeared in the case of the nurse
on June 1, 2009, and she was admitted to the KFSHRC for conducting
the required medical examinations pertaining to Swine Flu, he said,
noting that the results of the medical examinations were disclosed
on Tuesday evening, confirming the case as 'Positive'".
In the light of the measures of the World Health Organization
(WHO), the medical examinations were conducted for the second time
on Tuesday evening, he said, adding that the examinations proved
the infection of the nurse for A/H1N1 on Wednesday morning. Dr
Al-Rabee'a said the Health Ministry in cooperation with King Faisal
Specialist Hospital and Research Center has applied the national
plan for the prevention of swine flu in a manner that matches with
the recommendations of WHO. Accordingly, the patient was isolated
and provided with the required medical treatment. Arrangements are
underway to examine those who were in contact with the patient to
get sure that they are not infected. As of 17 August, 2009 the
number of A(H1N1) cases in Saudi Arabia have increased to above 700
and 14 people have died.
By the 17 of August, There had been about 2000 cases of the flu
resulting in 14 deaths.
The first case of Influenza A (H1N1-2009) was confirmed on
May 27, 2009 in Singapore. As of July 9, 2009 the
Singapore Ministry of Health no longer tracks the total number of
A(H1N1) infections. The action was taken after the
World Health Organisation told
several countries that they were no longer required to submit
regular reports on confirmed cases and deaths. As of July 7 there
were 1,217 confirmed cases. As of October 17 there were 18
confirmed deaths from A(H1N1) in Singapore.
The first case of Influenza A (H1N1-2009) was confirmed on
June 16, 2009 in Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka said on
Tuesday that a 12-year-old girl returning home from Singapore was
diagnosed with A(H1N1) influenza, the island's first swine flu
case. The student was moved to the Infectious Diseases Hospital on
the outskirts of the capital, a health ministry official
said.
As of June 25 there were 10 confirmed cases. According to Dr.
Geetani Wickremasinghe of Medical Research Institute in Colombo
another two people suffering from swine flu have been detected on
Wednesday June 24. Both patients who were from Australia, including
a ten-year-old boy have reached the country on last Sunday. With
these two patients added to the total number of Swine Flu patients
detected in Sri Lanka has risen to 10. Four of the patients have
been discharged, but six patients are still receiving treatments at
the Infectious Disease Hospital in Angoda.
South Korea warned against travel to Mexico City and three Mexican
states. The government has also stepped up quarantine and safety
checks on travelers arriving from the United States and Mexico, and
pork imports from those countries. An emergency quarantine system
is also in place, with simple tests conducted on people arriving
with flu symptoms at airports. On April 28, South Korea reported
its first probable case of swine flu after positive preliminary
tests on a nun who had recently returned from a trip to
Mexico.Several sources have informed that one case has been
confirmed by lab in South Korea, on April 30. On May 2, the first
suspected woman turned out to be infected with the influenza A
subtype H1N1. South Korea became the third infected nation in Asia,
after Israel and Hong Kong. There have been approx. 2100 cases in
S.Korea as of August 16, 2009. On August 15, the first Korean death
by the new influenza was confirmed publicly and a second death was
announced on August 16.Around 15000 cases and 14 deaths have been
reported as of October 12, 2009.
On July 4, 2009 Syria has reported its first confirmed case of the
swine influenza A(H1N1) virus. It was detected in a Syrian woman
who flew to the country from Australia earlier that week.
Outbreak evolution in Thailand
On Tuesday, May 13, 2009 Thailand confirmed two cases of swine flu.
Both of the individuals confirmed as having swine flu had recently
traveled to Mexico. The Thai Public Health Ministry announced on
July 16 that it has ended daily updates on the type A(H1N1)
influenza pandemic, saying it wants to avoid public confusion and
would give weekly updates. There are 4,469 confirmed cases in
Thailand and 44 confirmed deaths as of July 22, 2009.

Outbreak evolution Turkey
The first case of A(H1N1) in Turkey was reported on May 16, 2009.
A U.S.
citizen, flying from the United States
via Amsterdam
was found to be suffering from the swine flu after
arriving Istanbul
's Atatürk International Airport
. Turkey is the 36th country in the world to
report an incident of swine flu. The Turkish Government has taken
measures at the international airports, using thermal imaging
cameras to check passengers coming from international destinations.
As of 11 August, there were 312 confirmed cases in Turkey. As of 24
October, there is 1 confirmed death in Turkey. It is reported by
Ministry of Health that one person died in Ankara. In addition,
there are 958 confirmed cases in Turkey.
Outbreak evolution in the United Arab Emirates
An Indian old man who was already suffering from severe respiratory
and lung infections and A(H1N1) - swine flu- has died to become the
first person in the United Arab Emirates to succumb to the disease,
announced the Health Ministry on August 20, 2009.The 63-year old
victim had gone too late to a hospital where he was diagnosed with
the infections along with the A(H1N1) symptoms and was treated but
passed away because of the progression of the disease, it
said.
The Ministry of Health has confirmed the death of a 28 year old
Syrian from
Sharjah on September 1, 2009 due
to the H1N1 infection, along with another pregnant woman, bringing
the toll of H1N1 influenza deaths in the country to four.
Uzbekistan has taken measures to prevent the entry and spread of
the swine flu on the country’s territory, chief state sanitary
doctor Bahtiyor Niyazmatov told UzA.
According to the official, the measures the country has taken to
prevent dangerous infections has proved its efficiency in the past.
Thus, the threat of the bird flu and other infectious diseases was
prevented. Today Uzbekistan has direct air and land links with many
countries and imports thousands of products from other
states.
The Health Ministry of Uzbekistan has worked out a special plan to
prevent the new respiratory infection. High-quality specialists are
participating in the monitoring of the situation and special
trainings are being held for medical workers in all regions.
The virus
laboratories across Tashkent
, and the country's regions have diagnostic means to
timely identify the swine flu. In case of swine flu symptoms
the patient will be isolated in the specially reserved rooms of
infection clinics.
Sanitary control points are functioning in the border crossing
places, including airports and railway stations. They have been
provided with additional special equipment and disinfection means,
he added.
Besides, the Health Ministry has issued posters and brochures
explaining precaution measures and organized meetings with
specialists at residence areas, educational establishments,
enterprises and organizations, the chief state sanitary doctor of
Uzbekistan said.
As of October 6, No case was confirmed in Uzbekistan
Outbreak evolution in Vietnam
Vietnam
's Ministry of Health released an emergency dispatch
and urged agencies to take precautionary measures against swine
flu. In addition, the Preventive Health and Environment
Bureau requested all health facilities to carefully monitor any
suspected H1N1 case and Bureau head Nguyen Huy Nga also warned that
the pandemic could enter Vietnam through imported swine or border
gates. Thermal imaging devices were dispatched to airports and
border gates to screen passengers. In response to
WHO's warnings, Vietnam on
April 30, 2009 raised its swine flu alert level to 4 which
indicated a "threat of community level outbreaks" while local
authorities have been executing precautionary measures.
On May 1,
2009 an Vietnam
's Ministry of Industry and Trade official said that
Ministry was considering a ban on pork
import "under certain situations" to prevent swine flu from
entering Vietnam.
As of May 31, 2009. The Government of Vietnam announced its First
new case of A(H1N1) virus in the Country.
A 23 years old
Vietnamese student who recently returned from the Houston
, Texas
, USA
has tested
positive for swine flu.
On June 16, 2009 the Yemen Ministry of Public Health and Population
confirmed the first swine flu case in the country.
The case was
discovered with a 16-year old student coming back from United States
to the coastal city of Aden
.
As of July 4, 2009 there have been reported 7 cases of A(H1N1) flu
in Yemen.
Timeline
| 2009 |
A(H1N1) Outbreak and Pandemic
Milestones in Asia |
| 28 April |
First case confirmed in Israel. |
| 1 May |
First case confirmed in Hong Kong, China. |
| 2 May |
First case confirmed in South Korea. |
| 8 May |
First case confirmed in Japan. |
| 10 May |
First case confirmed in China. |
| 12 May |
First case confirmed in Thailand. |
| 15 May |
First case confirmed in Malaysia. |
| 16 May |
First case confirmed in India. |
| 16 May |
First case confirmed in Turkey. |
| 17 May |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Japan. |
| 19 May |
First case confirmed in Taiwan. |
| 21 May |
First case confirmed in the Philippines. |
| 22 May |
First case confirmed in Russia. |
| 24 May |
First case confirmed in Kuwait. |
| First case confirmed in the United Arab Emirates. |
| 25 May |
First case confirmed in Bahrain. |
| 27 May |
First case confirmed in Singapore. |
| 30 May |
First case confirmed in Cyprus. |
| First case confirmed in Lebanon. |
| 31 May |
First case confirmed in Vietnam. |
| 3 June |
First case confirmed in Saudi Arabia. |
| 11 June |
First case confirmed in the Palestinian Territories. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Hong Kong. |
| 14 June |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Philippines. |
| 16 June |
First confirmed case in Jordan. |
| First confirmed case in Qatar. |
| First confirmed case in Sri Lanka. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Thailand. |
| First confirmed case in Yemen. |
| 17 June |
First case confirmed in Oman. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Malaysia. |
| 18 June |
First case confirmed in Macau, China. |
| First case confirmed in Laos. |
| 19 June |
First case confirmed in Bangladesh. |
| 22 June |
First death
confirmed in the Philippines. |
| First case confirmed in Iran. |
| 23 June |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Macao. |
| 24 June |
First case confirmed in Indonesia. |
| First case confirmed in Cambodia. |
| First case confirmed in Iraq. |
| 26 June |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in China. |
| 27 June |
First death
confirmed in Thailand. |
| First case confirmed in Myanmar. |
| 29 June |
First case confirmed in Nepal. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Singapore. |
| 1 July |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in South Korea. |
| 2 July |
First death
confirmed in Brunei. |
| First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in Japan. |
| 3 July |
First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in Hong Kong,China. |
| 4 July |
First case confirmed in Syria. |
| 8 July |
First case confirmed in Afghanistan. |
| 10 July |
First death
confirmed in Hong Kong. |
| 13 July |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Saudi Arabia. |
| 16 July |
First death
confirmed in Singapore. |
| 19 July |
First case confirmed in Georgia. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Israel. |
| 21 July |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Indonesia. |
| 22 July |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in India. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Vietnam. |
| First death
confirmed in Laos. |
| 23 July |
First death
confirmed in Malaysia. |
| First case confirmed in Bhutan. |
| First case confirmed in Kazakhstan. |
| 24 July |
First case confirmed in Maldives. |
| 25 July |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Brunei. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Taiwan. |
| 26 July |
Community
outbreaks confirmed in Cyprus. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in Turkey. |
| First death
confirmed in Indonesia. |
| 27 July |
First death
confirmed in Israel. |
| First death
confirmed in Saudi Arabia. |
| Community
outbreaks confirmed in United Arab Emirates. |
| 30 July |
First case confirmed in Azerbaijan. |
| First death
confirmed in Taiwan. |
| First death
confirmed in Lebanon. |
| 31 July |
First death
confirmed in Qatar. |
| 2 August |
First death
confirmed in India. |
| 3 August |
First case confirmed in Pakistan. |
| 4 August |
First death
confirmed in Vietnam. |
| 5 August |
First death
confirmed in Iran. |
| 7 August |
First death
confirmed in Palestine. |
| 8 August |
First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in Thailand. |
| 9 August |
First death
confirmed in Iraq. |
| 12 August |
First case confirmed in East Timor. |
| 14 August |
First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in Singapore. |
| First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in China. |
| 15 August |
First death
confirmed in South Korea. |
| First death
confirmed in Japan. |
| 18 August |
First death
confirmed in Yemen. |
| 20 August |
First death
confirmed in Kuwait. |
| First death
confirmed in United Arab Emirates. |
| 21 August |
First death
confirmed in Oman. |
| 24 August |
First case confirmed in Kyrgyzstan. |
| 26 August |
First death
confirmed in Syria. |
| 29 August |
First death
confirmed in Bangladesh. |
| 31 August |
First death
confirmed in Bahrain. |
| 2 September |
First death
confirmed in Macau. |
| 10 September |
First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in Israel. |
| 21 September |
Mass vaccinations
in China, which is the first one in the world, begins. |
| 28 September |
First death
confirmed in Cambodia. |
| 30 September |
First completed clinical
trials by a company for 2009/H1N1 vaccine in the
world. |
| 4 October |
First case confirmed in Tajikistan. |
| 6 October |
First death
confirmed in China. |
| 12 October |
First case of Oseltamivir
(Tamiflu) resistance found in Vietnam. |
| First death
confirmed in Jordan. |
| 13 October |
First case confirmed in Mongolia. |
| 19 October |
Mass vaccinations
in Japan begins. |
| 23 October |
First death
confirmed in Mongolia. |
| 24 October |
First death
confirmed in Turkey. |
| 27 October |
First death
confirmed in Russia. |
| Mass vaccinations
in South Korea begins. |
| 29 October |
First death
confirmed in Afghanistan. |
| 3 November |
Mass vaccinations
in Singapore begins. |
| 7 November |
First death
confirmed in Pakistan. |
| First death
confirmed in Sri Lanka. |
| 8 November |
First case confirmed in Armenia. |
| 12 November |
First death
confirmed in Azerbaijan. |
| 13 November |
First death
confirmed in Cyprus. |
| 16 November |
First case confirmed in North Korea. |
Top 5 countries
References