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21 November 2014

WHO reports Black Death outbreak in Madagascar



Click to enlarge.

Daniel Defoe was 6 years old when the plague struck England.

Because of the plague, Cambridge closed, and the student Isaac Newton returned to the family farm in Woolsthorpe, where an apple fell on his head while he was reading in the orchard. He wondered if the force that made the apple fall might be the same force that keeps the Moon orbiting the Earth.

The sweet pea (Pisum sativum
garden where the Augustinian monk Gregor Mendel grew his amazingly large, tasty peas is still growing and receiving visitors in Brno, Czech Republic. Mendel published his mathematical laws of heredity. His discovery was completely ignored, but rediscovered and credited 16 years after his death.

Now elected abbot, he told a visiting seed distributor that he grew his big peas using a few old gardener's tricks. He did not discuss these tricks further.


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Reuters
UK newswire founded 1851
Friday 21 November 2014

 

WHO: Plague in Madagascar
has killed  
40 of 119 cases
 


GENEVA -- An outbreak of the plague has killed 40 people out of 119 confirmed cases in Madagascar since late August and there is a risk of the disease spreading rapidly in the capital, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.

So far two cases and one death have been recorded in the capital Antananarivo but those figures could climb quickly due to "the city's high population density and the weakness of the healthcare system," the WHO warned.

"The situation is further complicated by the high level of resistance to deltamethrin (an insecticide used to control fleas) that has been observed in the country," it added.

Plague, a bacterial disease, is mainly spread from one rodent to another by fleas. Humans bitten by an infected flea usually develop a bubonic form of plague, which swells the lymph node and can be treated with antibiotics, the WHO said.

If the bacteria reach the lungs, the patient develops pneumonia (pneumonic plague), which is transmissible from person to person through infected droplets spread by coughing. It is "one of the most deadly infectious diseases" and can kill people within 24 hours. Two percent of the cases reported in Madagascar so far have been pneumonic, it added.

The first known case of the plague was a man from Soamahatamana village in the district of Tsiroanomandidy, identified on 31 August. He died on 3 September and authorities notified the WHO of the outbreak on 4 November, the agency said.

The WHO said it did not recommend any trade or travel restrictions based on the information available about the outbreak.

The last previously known outbreak of the plague was in Peru in August 2010, according to the WHO.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; editing by Janet Lawrence and Hugh Lawson)

 

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