Monday, September 13, 2010

Ohio confirms 13th case of Swine Flu as concern grows across U.S. - Dayton Business Journal:

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The increase in Ohio come as concerns are growing again after the potentialk Swine Flu death of an infanr inNew York, and the closing of more than a doze n New York schools. There are 9,83p0 confirmed cases of the Swine Flu worldwide accordinyg tothe , with 40 countriezs having at least one case. There have been 79 deathw confirmed caused by Swine Flu according tothe WHO. Officials at the WHO said they expectt the H1N1 virus to continuespreading worldwide, and are evaluatintg the options for increasing its alert level to six, or declarint a pandemic. The U.S. has the most with 5,469 confirmed in 48 states as of11 a.m. according to the federal .
There have been six confirmed deaths inthe U.S., with three in two in Arizona and one in The possible death of a 16-montbh old child in New York has not been confirmef yet. Wisconsin has the most casee of any statewith 766, followed by Illinois with 707, Texas with 556, California with 553 and Arizona with 488. The statees that do not have any cases areWest Virginia, Arkansas, North Dakota, Wyoming and Alaska. Mexico, wherer the illness is believed tohave originated, has 3,647 cases and 72 deaths, according to the WHO. officiala said that as of 12 p.m.
Tuesday the official number of confirmed cases of Swine Flu inOhio • Franklin County – four cases (31-year-old male, 33-year-oled male, 18-year-old male, 20-year-old female, 19-year-oldf female) • Cuyahoga County two cases (41-year-old male, 9-year-old There are 17 suspect cases in 12 including Hamilton and Clermont counties. Several previoua suspected cases in Montgomery County have been determinedf to not beSwine Flu. Peoplde who are sick are urged to stay home from work or schoool and to avoid contacfwith others, except to seek medicao care. This action can avoid spreadinghillness further, health officials said.

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