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Mysterious illness kills six in Asia [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Bradsher, Keith
Hundreds of people in Vietnam, Hong Kong and China have been stricken by a mysterious respiratory illness that has killed at least six people and left all the others with severe breathing difficulties from which they have yet to fully recover, worried officials of the World Health Organization said on Friday. The Geneva-based organization, a unit of the United Nations, has sent a team of experts from the United States, Japan, England, France and Australia to the affected areas. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta also is sending epidemiologists to Vietnam, where at least 42 cases have occurred, and Hong Kong, where there have been 43 cases, including an American businessman who died Thursday
PROQUEST:306199211
ISSN: 1082-8850
CID: 82986

Hundreds hit by 'pneumonia': [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Bradsher, Keith
Hundreds of people in Vietnam, Hong Kong and China have been stricken by a mysterious respiratory illness that has killed at least six people and left all the others with severe breathing difficulties from which they have yet to fully recover, worried officials of the World Health Organization said yesterday
PROQUEST:314914091
ISSN: 0384-1294
CID: 82988

Mysterious Respiratory Illness Afflicts Hundreds Globally [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Bradsher, Keith
In Canada, Toronto's municipal health agency announced on Friday that a woman there, Kwan Sui-chu, had died on March 5 soon after returning from Hong Kong. Five other family members who had not been to Hong Kong recently have since become ill; four are still in the hospital while the fifth, Mrs. Kwan's son, Chi Kwai Tse, died on March 13, said Mary Margaret Crapper, a spokeswoman for Toronto Public Health. Ms. Crapper said that her agency was aware of two other cases in Canada, both in Vancouver and involving people who had also traveled recently to Hong Kong. Toronto Public Health issued an appeal on Friday night to Canadians to seek medical help if they had been in contact with Mrs. Kwan's family and were experiencing symptoms like the sudden onset of a high fever, muscle aches or other flu-like symptoms. Hanoi has had at least 42 cases and Hong Kong 43. Guangdong province, which adjoins Hong Kong in China, reported 305 cases by mid-February, including 5 deaths. Officials in Singapore said yesterday that there had been nine cases there -- three recent arrivals from Hong Kong and six people who cared for them, two of whom were hospital workers
PROQUEST:306094541
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 82987

Mysterious pneumonia kills 6, leaves hundreds ill in Asia [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Bradsher, Keith
Dr. Yeoh Eng-kiong, Hong Kong's secretary of health, welfare and food, said 43 hospital staff members had been admitted to hospitals with symptoms of the sickness, and 29 had been found to show signs of what is believed to be the atypical pneumonia. An American businessman who lived in Shanghai died of the illness at a Hong Kong hospital Thursday
PROQUEST:306105711
ISSN: 1085-6706
CID: 82985

Unknown pneumonia strain kills 6 in Asia [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Bradsher, Keith
Hundreds of people in Vietnam, Hong Kong and China have been stricken by a mysterious respiratory illness that has killed at least six people and left the others with severe breathing difficulties from which they have yet to fully recover, the World Health Organization said yesterday. Hong Kong's secretary of health, welfare and food, Dr. Yeoh Eng- kiong, said 43 hospital staff members had been admitted to hospitals with symptoms of the sickness, and 29 had been found to show signs of what is believed to be the atypical pneumonia. An American businessman who lived in Shanghai died of the illness at a Hong Kong hospital Thursday. The businessman had passed through Hong Kong to Hanoi, where he fell ill, entered a hospital and was then evacuated to Hong Kong when his condition deteriorated and the disease began spreading through the hospital staff. Officials in Vietnam said that 30 doctors and other employees had fallen ill at the hospital where the man was treated
PROQUEST:307373231
ISSN: 1063-102x
CID: 82989

With another tragedy, just how rare are transplant errors? [Newspaper Article]

Grady, Denise; Altman, Lawrence K
The baby in the Dallas case was Jeanella Aranda, who had surgery on July 16 for a noncancerous liver tumor called a hamartoma. According to legal documents filed by the family's malpractice lawyer, Steven Laird of Fort Worth, Texas, damage to blood vessels during the surgery cut off the blood supply to the liver, and doctors, unable to repair the damage, had to remove Jeanella's liver. Without a transplant, she would die in 24 to 48 hours. Her parents, Cesar and Alicia Aranda, were told that one of them might be able to donate a partial liver to save their daughter. Their blood was drawn to see which parent matched Jeanella's Type O. The laboratory initially reported that Alicia Aranda matched, but then called back to say it had made a mistake and Cesar Aranda matched. In fact, the first result was correct Alicia Aranda matched but doctors accepted the second, incorrect report. In the days and weeks after the transplant, Jeanella deteriorated, developing a blood disorder, fever, kidney problems, lung hemorrhages and severe jaundice. The blood type mismatch was not detected until Aug. 5, 19 days after the surgery, when Alicia Aranda, aware that her husband had Type A blood, noticed that Jeanelle's transfusions were Type O, and asked whether the transplant had been a mismatch. Doctors determined that she was correct. The baby died the next day
PROQUEST:340583401
ISSN: 0294-8052
CID: 82990

Suit Says Transplant Error Was Cause in Baby's Death [Newspaper Article]

Grady, Denise; Altman, Lawrence K
The baby in the Dallas case was Jeanella Aranda, who had surgery on July 16 for a noncancerous liver tumor called a hamartoma. According to legal documents filed by the family's malpractice lawyer, Steven Laird of Fort Worth, damage to blood vessels during the surgery cut off the blood supply to the liver, and doctors, unable to repair the damage, had to remove Jeanella's liver. Without a transplant, she would die within 24 to 48 hours. Her parents, Cesar and Alicia Aranda, were told that one of them might be able to donate a partial liver to save their daughter. Their blood was drawn to see which parent matched Jeanella's Type O. The laboratory initially reported that Mrs. Aranda matched, but then called back to say it had made a mistake and Mr. Aranda matched. In fact, the first result was correct -- Mrs. Aranda matched -- but doctors accepted the second, incorrect report. In the days and weeks after the transplant, Jeanella deteriorated, developing a blood disorder, fever, kidney problems, lung hemorrhages and severe jaundice. The blood type mismatch was not detected until Aug. 5, 19 days after the surgery, when Mrs. Aranda, aware that her husband had Type A blood, noticed that Jeanelle's transfusions were Type O, and asked whether the transplant had been a mismatch. Doctors determined that she was correct. The baby died the next day
PROQUEST:304721211
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 82991

ANOTHER TRANSPLANT DEATH IS BLAMED ON BLOOD MISMATCH [Newspaper Article]

Grady, Denise; Altman, Lawrence K
The baby in the Dallas case was Jeanella Aranda, who had surgery on July 16 for a noncancerous liver tumor called a hamartoma. According to legal documents filed by the family's malpractice lawyer, Steven Laird of Fort Worth, damage to blood vessels during the surgery cut off the blood supply to the liver, and doctors, unable to repair the damage, had to remove Jeanella's liver. Without a transplant, she would die in 24 to 48 hours. Her parents, [Cesar Aranda] and Alicia Aranda, were told that one of them might be able to donate a partial liver to save their daughter. Their blood was drawn to see which parent matched Jeanella's Type O. The laboratory initially reported that Mrs. Aranda matched, but then called back to say it had made a mistake and Mr. Aranda matched. In fact, the first result was correct -- Mrs. Aranda matched -- but doctors accepted the second, incorrect report. In the days and weeks after the transplant, Jeanella deteriorated, developing a blood disorder, fever, kidney problems, lung hemorrhages and severe jaundice. The blood type mismatch was not detected until Aug. 5, 19 days after the surgery, when Mrs. Aranda, aware that her husband had Type A blood, noticed that Jeanelle's transfusions were Type O, and asked whether the transplant had been a mismatch. Doctors determined that she was correct. The baby died the next day
PROQUEST:304743481
ISSN: 1068-624x
CID: 82992

New studies find no connection between abortion, breast cancer [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Until a revision on Nov. 25, the cancer institute's fact sheet said studies showed 'no association between abortion and breast cancer.' At that point, the sixth and current fact sheet appeared on the agency's Web site and said the evidence for a link between induced abortions and breast cancer was inconclusive. The new report on the Web site says that neither induced abortion nor spontaneous abortion is 'associated with an increase in breast cancer risk.' Still, the official fact sheet has not been changed. At the workshop the institute held last month, Dr. Leslie Bernstein, a leading cancer epidemiologist at the University of Southern California, reported findings from the four studies showing no link between induced abortions and breast cancer
PROQUEST:303578211
ISSN: 1063-102x
CID: 82994

Panel Finds No Connection Between Cancer and Abortion [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Until a revision on Nov. 25, the cancer institute's fact sheet said studies showed ''no association between abortion and breast cancer.'' At that point, the sixth and current fact sheet appeared on the agency's Web site and said the evidence for a link between induced abortions and breast cancer was inconclusive. At the workshop the institute held last month, Dr. Leslie Bernstein, a leading cancer epidemiologist at the University of Southern California, reported findings from the four studies showing no link between induced abortions and breast cancer. Dr. Bernstein said she reported findings from a study of teachers in California and another study involving women at five medical centers that also showed no link. Dr. Bernstein, who is senior associate dean for faculty affairs at the University of Souther California, said she was a researcher in these two unpublished studies
PROQUEST:302438901
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 82993