Posted: 04 June 2009 2241 hrs
Passengers wear face masks as a precaution against the deadly H1N1 flu as they arrive at Sydney International Airport
SYDNEY - Australia's Influenza A (H1N1) tally rocketed by more than a third on Thursday to nearly 900 as officials scrambled to contain the rapidly spreading virus.
The latest official figures revealed 876 confirmed cases of A(H1N1) flu in the world's fourth most affected country -- up from 633 a day earlier and single figures just a fortnight ago.
Other Australian states ordered children returning from flu hotspot Victoria to be quarantined, earning the wrath of Melbourne officials.
"Swine flu (H1N1 flu) is an international and national phenomenon and that's the fact of the matter," Victoria premier John Brumby said.
"Frankly I thought the statements made by particularly the New South Wales government were just silly and extreme."
The island state of Tasmania on Wednesday joined Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia in ordering that children arriving from Victoria be quarantined for up to seven days to reduce the threat of H1N1 flu.
"The exclusion will apply for seven days from departure from Victoria," said Tasmania's Director of Public Health Chrissie Pickin.
"It applies to all children returning from Victoria and other affected areas, whether or not they have a flu-like illness," she said.
Victoria, which has 752 cases or about 86 per cent of the national total, raised its alert level on Wednesday and has shuttered 14 schools.
State Health Minister Daniel Andrews insisted his government's moves to limit the spread of the disease were working, despite the large number of infections.
"There is no doubt, and the experts have told us, that without the things already put in place, many, many more people -- much faster -- would have had H1N1," he said.
H1N1 flu has now spread to 66 countries with 19,273 people known to have been infected since the disease was first uncovered in April, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.
- AFP/ir
From ChannelNewsAsia.com; see the source article here.
Passengers wear face masks as a precaution against the deadly H1N1 flu as they arrive at Sydney International Airport
SYDNEY - Australia's Influenza A (H1N1) tally rocketed by more than a third on Thursday to nearly 900 as officials scrambled to contain the rapidly spreading virus.
The latest official figures revealed 876 confirmed cases of A(H1N1) flu in the world's fourth most affected country -- up from 633 a day earlier and single figures just a fortnight ago.
Other Australian states ordered children returning from flu hotspot Victoria to be quarantined, earning the wrath of Melbourne officials.
"Swine flu (H1N1 flu) is an international and national phenomenon and that's the fact of the matter," Victoria premier John Brumby said.
"Frankly I thought the statements made by particularly the New South Wales government were just silly and extreme."
The island state of Tasmania on Wednesday joined Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia in ordering that children arriving from Victoria be quarantined for up to seven days to reduce the threat of H1N1 flu.
"The exclusion will apply for seven days from departure from Victoria," said Tasmania's Director of Public Health Chrissie Pickin.
"It applies to all children returning from Victoria and other affected areas, whether or not they have a flu-like illness," she said.
Victoria, which has 752 cases or about 86 per cent of the national total, raised its alert level on Wednesday and has shuttered 14 schools.
State Health Minister Daniel Andrews insisted his government's moves to limit the spread of the disease were working, despite the large number of infections.
"There is no doubt, and the experts have told us, that without the things already put in place, many, many more people -- much faster -- would have had H1N1," he said.
H1N1 flu has now spread to 66 countries with 19,273 people known to have been infected since the disease was first uncovered in April, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.
- AFP/ir
From ChannelNewsAsia.com; see the source article here.
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