Buenos Aires-the flu has caused at least eight deaths and close to 90 affected during the past month in various cities in Argentina, according to health authorities confirmed today.Luis Crovetto, director of primary care to the health of the province of Buenos Aires, explained that 'are seven the dead' and 'fifty confirmed cases' affected by the H1N1 virus in the region, as he quoted Efe.Por elsewhere, Yamila Zub?n, press spokeswoman and dissemination of the Ministry of health of the province of Cordoba, said that 'a person died as a result of the flu this week', and added that in total have been confirmed 'forty cases, of which two are in delicate condition'.Crovetto pointed out that the number of cases are ' just a few more ' than those recorded in the same period of last year and said that 'there is no presence of any outbreak pandemic like the one that occurred in 2009'.The victims belonged to the so-called 'risk group' and not had vaccinated is, according to the sources consulted.The 'risk group' made up by children between six months and two years, pregnant women, older than 65 years and people with chronic diseases, pulmonary, renal, or cardiac with some type of immune risk.
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15 deaths and 90 affected by influenza AH1N1 in Argentina
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Re: At least eight dead and 90 affected by influenza AH1N1 in Argentina
Other four killed by influenza A:12 in the country
Four people died in the last hours in Cordoba and the province of Buenos Aires due to influenza A and are already 12 fatal victims throughout the country. According to Cordoba health sources, new victims are a man of 57 years was interned in Rio Cuarto, a woman who was cared for in a health care center of Bell Ville and a man who remained in a hospital in the capital of Cordoba. Juan Carlos Gallardo, a witnesses who remained hospitalized in intensive care in the San Antonio de Padua, Cordoba hospital, died yesterday at 2150, DyN news agency. In addition, a woman who had been cared for in a health center in Bell Ville for a week lost his life on Friday. He was in intensive care in the Hospital Jos? Ceballos with mechanical assistance of an artificial respirator, reported La Voz del Interior. Finally, a 53-year-old man also died over the weekend because of the disease. He was 35, was part of groups at risk (was diebetico) and was not vaccinated. It had been attended to in Italian Hospital in the city of C?rdoba.
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Re: At least 12 deaths and 90 affected by influenza AH1N1 in Argentina
thirteen the number of deaths per influenza A in Argentina
Buenos Aires---- influenza A has claimed two more lives and deaths in Argentina by this contagious disease, which has also affected more than 90 people, today confirmed to Efe are already 13 sanitary sources.The Argentine Ministry of Health reported today that two people were killed in the Argentine capital as a result of the influenza A (H1N1) virus.For his part, the spokesman of the Ministry of health of Cordoba (Center), Yamila Zub?n, confirmed that four are already deaths in the province by influenza A and specified that there are '40 confirmed cases' from different locations.
The province most punished by the new outbreak of influenza A in Argentina is Buenos Aires, where seven people have died as a result of the virus and about 50 people have been infected, said EfE sources of the Ministry of Salud.Las victims belonged to the so-called 'risk group' and not had been vaccinated, according to the sources consulted.The 'risk group' make up by children from six months to two years, pregnant women, over the age of 65 and people with chronic diseases, pulmonary, renal, or cardiac with some type of immune risk.
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Re: 13 deaths and 90 affected by influenza AH1N1 in Argentina
It amounts to 15 the number of dead by the H1N1 virus in Argentina
The flu has claimed two fatalities in the Argentine Province of Santa Fe, with what amounts to 15 the number of dead in this South American country, medical sources confirmed.The first two who had died from the H1N1 virus in this province is located to the Northwest of Buenos Aires, according to the spokesman of the Ministry of health of Santa Fe, Juan Manuel Mateo.En so far this year, influenza A has caused further seven deaths in the province of Buenos Aires, the largest in the country, four in C?rdoba (West) and two in the Argentinian capital.The two people killed in Santa Fe were part of the so-called 'risk groups' and had not vaccinated, said Mateo.Entre risk groups include infants between six months and two years, pregnant women, older than 65 years and people with chronic diseases, pulmonary, renal, or cardiac with some type of immune risk.
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