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Penang is conducting checks on goat milk suppliers and has culled 98 of the animals after a seven-year-old boy became the first person to be infected with brucellosis. Brucellosis is caused by the Brucella bacteria and is a disease mainly found in cattle, swine, goats and sheep. The boy fell sick after drinking raw goat’s milk. He was admitted to a private hospital after coming down with fever on April 24, said state exco member Phee Boon Poh. He was transferred to the Penang Hospital several days later after failing to respond to the antibiotics given. Also called Bang’s disease, or undulant fever, brucellosis is a highly contagious disease caused by ingestion of unsterilised milk or meat from infected animals, or close contact with their secretions. It causes flu-like symptoms, muscle pain and swollen glands, and can result in complications like bone and joint lesions, encephalitis, meningitis and chronic fatigue syndrome. Phee said that following the incident, the state Veterinary Services Department began conducting checks on milk suppliers. “We hope suppliers from Kulim, Kuala Ketil and Lunas will heed the department’s advice to prevent the spread of the disease,” he said. Phee said the department had so far tested 3,243 serum samples of goats from 11 farms in the state. “Ninety-eight of the goats were culled after the test results came in positive,” he said. He said the owners of the culled goats were paid compensation of RM5.60 per kilo. Phee advised the public to boil milk before drinking. He also urged those selling mutton, including for the coming fasting month, to ensure the meat was free from the disease. “An awareness campaign will be held on July 27 by the various government departments and the municipal councils,” he said. ![]() SMK Sultanah Bahiyah Thirty students of SMK Sultanah Bahiyah Kedah, Malaysia have been hospitalised for food poisoning. The source of the food poisoning is believed to be the dinner of rice with fish and prawn sambal, that the girls ate at the school’s hostel at 7pm on Tuesday. The girls, from Forms One to Five, however only started to fall ill when they woke up at about 7am on Wednesday and were sent to the Sultanah Bahiyah Hospital. It is learnt that more than 40 students were sent to the hospital but only 30 were admitted to the ward at the Kota Setar Health Clinic for observation. There are 200 students staying at the hostel. A Form Two student, known only as Shafarina, 14, said a teacher alerted the school principal when she and several of her friends began vomiting on Wednesday morning. “I ate fish, which was served with chilli mixed with lime juice and onions and also prawn sambal for dinner the day before. The food did not taste so bad,” she said when met at the ward yesterday. Shafarina had abdominal cramps when she woke up on Wednesday morning and called out to her friends for help. “Several other girls were also sick and a Form Five student went to alert a teacher,” she said. Kedah Education Department director Shahidan Abdul Rahman said it was working with the state Health Department to investigate the incident. |
Sunday, 5 September 2010 |
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