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Forum: Lookout Post for Arab Peninsula

15 November 2006

MaMaat 00:20

This thread is for news reports and information regarding the Arab Peninsula. This region includes:

Any and all volunteer news searchers are welcome!

MaMaat 00:23

Saudi Arabia

Hospital Staff Overworked as Flu Spreads in Jeddah

“The much-needed rainfall last month not only provided relief to a city that hasn’t seen the likes of precipitation for two consecutive years, but also delivered a more serious threat — an extremely painful and possibly fatal strain of influenza.

Arab News visited hospital emergency rooms and polyclinics across Jeddah and witnessed the same scene of weeping and feverish children clinging to exhausted parents who are doing their best to keep their cool with overworked and weary hospital staff.

“We have been really busy this last few weeks. My duty is usually routine but tonight for example I have already given many injections and I’ve only been on the job for an hour,” a Filipino nurse at King Fahd Hospital told Arab News.

Dr. Sabri Al-Tantawi, pediatrician and neonatologist at Halah Essa Binladen Clinic agreed. “This year there was a considerable amount of cases compared to past seasons due to the fact that we have very few people getting vaccinations,” he said.

Al-Tantawi said this season he witnessed as many as three strains of flu, which are known as Malaysian, H1N1 and Neocaltonia. All of them show the same symptoms: fever, muscular pain and congestion…”

…”Dr. Noha Dashash, director of Primary Health Care in Jeddah, told Arab News that the number of flu cases has been on the rise around the city due to the massive number of Umrah pilgrims that had come to the region during the Ramadan and Eid Al-Fitr holidays. Some estimates say that Jeddah welcomed an additional 2 million visitors this year.

“An increase in flu reports is normal this time of the year worldwide. However, Jeddah is a special situation with a higher risk due to its geographical location and the number of visitors it receives annually,” said Dr. Dashash…”

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=88785&d=14&m=11&y=2006

No surge capacity.

19 November 2006

Pixie – at 00:40

Six Injections May Have Killed a Flu Patient in Jeddah Hospital Samir Al-Saadi, Arab News / http://tinyurl.com/yfbr8a

JEDDAH, 19 November 2006 — The day before she was to receive her master’s degree, 26-year-old honor student Johara Al-Harthi went to a private hospital on Nov. 5 to get treated for flu and a sore throat. She never received her diploma.

Hours after receiving six injections at the Saudi Hospital in Jeddah’s Al-Sharafiyeh district, Al-Harthi’s family returned her to the hospital. Her blood pressure plummeted. She was immediately admitted to the emergency ward. Within hours she was pronounced dead. After Al-Harthi’s story hit the local media early last week, Jeddah’s Department of Health Affairs filed an official complaint against doctors and the hospital on Wednesday. Their licenses to practice have been temporarily revoked and they have been barred from leaving the country.

A committee was formed to determine if medical malpractice was the cause of death. Yesterday committee members met with the family of the deceased and announced that the results of their inquiry would be released in two to three days.

Arab News obtained a copy of the invoice for the injections administered to Al-Harthi. The invoice states that the patient received two 500-milligram injections of the antibiotic Enoxirt (a commercial name for the drug Triaxone) and one injection of an anti-nausea drug Premosan (a commercial name for the drug Metoclopramide). The invoice also states she received an allergy test for one of the medications, but doesn’t stay which. The two other injections are only labeled as “Injection I.V.” and “Medicine”.

The sudden drop of her blood pressure was due to the large quantity of drugs pumped in her blood system, said Dr. Saleh Al-Zahrani, president of Educational Institute for Medical Photography in a written statement to one of the relatives. Without elaborating, Al-Zahrani also claims one of the drugs is illegal to administer and suspects the patient was rushed to burial in order to avoid an autopsy. Initially, the family of the deceased wasn’t planning on filing a medical malpractice complaint because they felt helpless and believed little could be done, according to the girl’s father Hamoud Al-Harthi.

“I see stories like this every day in our local newspapers,” said the father. “Two people have died in this hospital — one this year and another last year due to malpractice. And still the hospital is operating.” The father said the family was contacted by the Department of Health Affairs after they responded to the local Arabic media reports of the death.

“I was surprised by how much care was given to this case by the authorities,” said the father. “That encouraged me to file the complaint.” The committee currently investigating the case comprises specialists from King Fahd and King Abdul Aziz hospitals, said Dr. Mahmoud Abduljawad, assistant director of health affairs for medical and pharmaceutical licenses. “The committee was formed after we read the story in a local newspaper,” he said. “Our job is to protect the society from medical negligence and mistakes by investigating the case even if the family doesn’t approach us.”

23 November 2006

Closed and Continued – at 23:36

closed and continued here

Closed and continued – at 23:38

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