The number of chickenpox cases in the south has been on the rise, with many newborn babies getting infected, doctors said.

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Chickenpox cases on the rise in south

March 09, 2018 - 09:00

The number of chickenpox cases in the south has been on the rise, with many newborn babies getting infected, doctors said.

A chickenpox patient being treated at the HCM City Paediatrics Hospital No 1. — VNA/VNS Photo Đinh Hằng
Viet Nam News

HCM CITY — The number of chickenpox cases in the south has been on the rise, with many newborn babies getting infected, doctors said.

The chickenpox season begins in February and lasts until June, peaking in May and June, Trương Hữu Khanh, head of the HCM City Paediatrics Hospital No 1’s infection and neurology department, said.

Since February, the hospital has been admitting an average of seven to nine children every week, Khanh said.

Many children under three months of age, including a nine-day-old patient, contracted the disease from their mothers, he said.

Tô Minh Trang of Long An Province said that she had contracted chickenpox four days before delivering her baby.

Nine days later her newborn baby developed symptoms of chickenpox with blisters on the face, hand and feet.

Newborn babies are highly vulnerable, and the mortality rate in newborns is very high at 25-30 per cent, Khanh said.

He advised that women of child-bearing age and children should get the chickenpox vaccine.

Nguyễn Trần Nam, head of the infection ward, said the number of outpatients with chickenpox too has soared in the past few days.

The illness is usually mild but it can be dangerous for some people such as pregnant women, newborn babies and people with weakened immune systems. — VNS

 

 

 

 

 

 

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