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Wednesday 21 August 2013

Vaccine polio infant's condition improves : Mumbai

 Source : DNA , 21st August 2013


Arsh Singh, the infant who got the polio virus from its vaccine, was shifted to a ward on Tuesday after being on ventilator for more than a month. Now 10 months old, Arsh was referred to Wadia hospital and tested positive for the virus last month.

His father Tejbahadur said, “Arsh was shifted out of the ICU. He has improved a lot. He can breathe on his own now and doesn’t require IV fluid either.”

He added there is also a markable movement in Arsh’s lower body. “There is movement in his legs but upper body is still paralysed. Doctors say it will take a month or more for further improvement,” he said.

Doctors at Wadia hospital said physiotherapy is the key to his improvement, apart from medicines.

Arsh’s treatment cost is being taken care of by the state government. He is the second such case in the state and the fourth in the country in 17 months.

State health department officials said the infant was administered medicine by his parents for a couple of days before his condition worsened and he was brought to the hospital on July 11.

A polio surveillance team had visited Ilthanpada in Navi Mumbai where Arsh lives. The area has 95% polio vaccination coverage, according to civic records.

Director of the Directorate of Health Services, Dr Satish Pawar said, “We have intensified our polio vaccination programme in this area; that’s the only key to win against the virus.”

Health officials had collected stool samples of relatives and people living in and around Arsh’s house. “We are expecting the reports by next week. A polio drive will be undertaken in Navi Mumbai. If there are homes where children haven’t been administered drops, officials will be told to do so,” said Pawar.



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Child who got polio from vaccine moved out of ICU

Source : Hindustan Times , 21st August 2013



After a month of being on ventilator support, nine-month-old Arsh Singh who was detected with Vaccine-Derived Polio Virus (VDPV) type 2, was shifted out of the intensive care unit (ICU) of BJ Wadia Hospital in Parel.
“We are relieved. He is finally out of danger,” said Arsh’s uncle Akhilesh Singh. 


VDPVs  are a genetic mutation of the strain of the polio virus contained in the oral polio vaccine. HT was the first to report Arsh’s story in its July 29 edition.


Arsh, a Navi Mumbai resident had suffered from paralysis of all limbs. “He has shown signs of improvement and we expect him to recover in seven to 10 days. He still can’t walk, but there slight movement in his limbs,” said Dr Satish Pawar, director, directorate of Health Services. The state health department has decided to pay for his treatment. 



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