Sunday, 24 June 2012

June 25, 2012 Clippings


Australia to help India control rabies
Experts from an Australian non-governmental organisation will collaborate with Indian health professionals on enhancing skills to carry out anti-rabies programmes.

NGO Vets Beyond Borders will provide training to Indian veterinary professionals under a programme launched June 18.

According to World Health Organisation (WHO), rabies kills over 21,000 people in southeast Asia, nearly 45 per cent of global deaths occur due to the disease.

In the partnership, Indian vets, vet assistants, dog catchers and programme managers will undergo a year-long training programme on carrying out effective anti-rabies programmes through mass vaccination and sterilisation of street dogs.

"The Indian government has recognised rabies as the No. 1 zoonotic disease (a disease spread from animals to humans) in the upcoming Five Year Plan," said Catherine Schuetze, executive director, Vets Beyond Borders India.

The programme started in 2009 in a collaboration between Vets Beyond Borders and the Animal Welfare Board of India.

"The University of Queensland is excited to be involved in this programme and wants to develop strong linkages and research collaborations with their veterinary counterparts in India," Schuetze said.

The training, funded by the Australian government, aims at training around 600 animal health professionals from all across India until April 2013.

The agency will partner with the Animal Welfare Board of India, eventually transferring capacity building skills and expertise to Indian public sector personnel.

Global United Nations' agency on health, WHO, defines rabies as a disease caused by a virus transmitted to humans from animals. It infects domestic and wild animals, and is spread to people through close contact with infected saliva via bites or scratches.

The NGO has been working with the Sikkim government since 2005 on a state-wide rabies prevention programme.

The northeastern state has not reported any human rabies death over the last four years.

25.06.2012

Baby's cancer removed while in mother's womb
An unborn baby girl in the US was detected with an extremely rare cancerous tumour in the mouth, but doctors successfully removed it in one of the world's first such surgeries in the womb.
Leyna Gonzalez was born healthy five months later, The Sun reported.
She is now nearly two years old, and the only sign of cancer is a tiny scar on her mouth.
Her mother Tammy's pregnancy scan at 17 weeks showed Leyna had an aggressive mouth tumour. It looked like the baby was blowing a bubble, the daily said.
Doctors said it was a rare tumour called an oral teratoma, and that there was little chance Leyna would survive.
Surgeons used a laser to cut the tumour from Leyna's lips after pushing a super-fine needle into Tammy's womb for the hour-long operation at the Jackson Memorial Hospital in Florida.
Details of the case has been published in US medical journal Obstetrics and Gynaecology.
Source: www.dnaindia.com

25.06.2012







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