Showing posts with label news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label news. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

The Legal Battle : Claims that Autism caused by Childhood Vaccines

In excruciating detail, an Arizona mother on Monday described severe autism and devastating health problems that plague her 12-year-old daughter and asked a court to find common childhood vaccines were the cause.

The test case is being closely watched by nearly 5,000 families of autistic children who have lodged similar claims for compensation from a federal fund.



The case of Michelle Cedillo, of Yuma, Ariz., is the first alleging a vaccine-autism link to be heard in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. It and eight other test cases are important because they will guide the handling of the other pending claims. Most contend that a mercury-rich preservative called thimerosal is to blame for the impaired social interaction typical of the disorder.



Should they prevail, the families will be eligible for compensation from a federal vaccine injury fund established by Congress to ensure an adequate supply of vaccines by shielding manufacturers from lawsuits. No autism claim has been paid from the fund thus far.



Large scientific studies have found no association between autism and vaccines containing thimerosal.



Government attorney Vincent Matanoski dismissed much of what the plaintiffs are expected to present during the three-week hearing as conjecture or speculation.



"You'll find their hypotheses untested or, when tested, have been found false," Matanoski said.



Theresa Cedillo said her daughter suffered five days of fever, her temperature often spiking to 105 degrees, after receiving a measles, mumps and rubella vaccination at age 15 months. Michelle was a happy, robust, responsive and loving child - in short, normal - but hasn't been the same since, her mother told the court.



Wearing noise-canceling headphones, Michelle was brought into the courtroom in a wheelchair at the start of the proceedings. She stayed only a short time, moaning audibly several times. Besides autism, Michelle suffers from inflammatory bowel disease, glaucoma and epilepsy. In addition, her bones, weakened by years of malnourishment, are prone to breaks, Theresa Cedillo said. Everything she eats is pumped in through a feeding tube, except for crackers and water.



"Clearly the story of Michelle's life is a tragic one," Special Master George Hastings Jr. said in thanking the family for allowing theirs to be the first test case. Hastings pledged he and two other special masters would listen carefully to all evidence.



Theresa Cedillo and husband Michael allege thimerosal-containing vaccines weakened their daughter's immune system and prevented her body from clearing the measles virus after she was immunized. That theory is one of three alleged by the thousands of plaintiffs. The others claim either thimerosal or the measles vaccine alone caused their children's autism.



"We hope to find out what happened and hopefully get the help she needs," said Theresa Cedillo, who takes care of her daughter full time at home.



The burden of proof is easier than in a traditional court. Plaintiffs only have to prove that a link between autism and the shots is more likely than not, based on a preponderance of evidence. But many parents say their children's symptoms did not show up until after their children received the vaccines, required by many states for admission to school.



"These are families who followed the rules. These are families who brought children in for vaccines. These are families who immunized their children," Cedillo attorney Thomas Powers said. Later, outside court, he cast aside any suggestion his clients were anti-vaccine.



Autism is characterized by impaired social interaction. Those affected often have trouble communicating, and they exhibit unusual or severely limited activities and interests.



In 1999, the U.S. government asked vaccine manufacturers to eliminate or reduce the use of thimerosal in childhood vaccines to limit infant exposure to mercury. Today, the preservative is no longer found in routine childhood vaccines but is used in some flu shots.



The nine test cases will be heard consecutively over the next year. A ruling in the Cedillo case could take months or longer, attorneys said.





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Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Breakthrough in Detection of Metabolic Disorders

Universiti Sains Malaysia’s Do- ping Control Centre (DCC) has made a break-through by being the first in the country to commercially introduce a screening test to detect 25 metabolic disorders in a newborn baby.

USM vice-chancellor Prof Datuk Dzulkifli Abdul Razak said yesterday the screening, known as Newborn Screening (NBS), was a test that helped doctors diagnose some of the metabolic disorders a newborn baby might have.

“This acts as a precautionary and pre-ventive step. The test can be performed on a baby as early as the first 48 hours to 72 hours after birth.

“This early detection followed by prompt treatment, can help avert mental retar- dation, severe disability and even death,” he said at a press conference to announce the introduction of the screening test.

Prof Dzulkifli added that DCC was ready to introduce the service with immediate effect to the public.

Early detection:Prof Aishah posing next to a poster on the NBS test developed by the centre.
DCC director Prof Aishah A. Latiff said the centre began research on NBS in 2000 and succeeded in creating the test in 2003.

She said the NBS and related services were currently available at the Institute of Medical Research (IMR), which was conducting a two-year pilot programme at 10 government hospitals. The project is expected to end this August.

Prof Aishah said the DCC had invested a total of RM4.5mil on three highly sophistica-ted tandem mass spectrometers to carry out the analysis.

“The DCC has adequate instrumentation and personnel to handle between 300 and 400 samples per day and therefore, is in the position to accept samples nationwide,” she added.

Prof Aishah said the test required a few drops of blood, obtained from a gentle prick on the baby’s heel, which were then dropped onto a filter paper and sent to the laboratory for testing.

“The results will then be despatched back to the doctor attending to the patients three days later,” she said.

DCC Metabolic Services head Dr Adi Tan Abdullah said babies must be referred by a medical doctor for the NBS and each basic test would cost RM85.

DCC has begun analysis on samples from its teaching hospital – Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia (HUSM) – in Kubang Krian, Kelantan, he said.



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Sunday, April 01, 2007

Bill Cosby and Toni Braxton Headline Concert for Autism Speaks


toni braxton


Bill Cosby and Toni Braxton Headline Concert for Autism Speaks April 9 at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Home of Jazz at Lincoln Center

Tom Brokaw Emcees a Night of Comedy and Music to Raise Funds for Autism Awareness and Scientific Research


Legendary entertainer Bill Cosby and six-time Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter Toni Braxton will headline a star-filled night of comedy and music at the Concert for Autism Speaks on April 9 at Frederick P. Rose Hall, home of Jazz at Lincoln Center, Broadway at 60th Street, in New York City. NBC News' Tom Brokaw will serve as the master of ceremonies for the fundraiser for Autism Speaks, a non-profit organization dedicated to increasing awareness of autism and raising money to fund autism research .

“Autism is a disorder that is robbing families of the chance to fulfill their dreams and experience the everyday joys most of us take for granted,” said Cosby. "For example, many children with autism are very limited in their ability to develop warm relationships with others, including their parents. We all need to do our part so that, with our help, these families will finally get the answers they so desperately seek.”

“When autism became a part of my family's reality, I was determined to join Autism Speaks

in its battle against this devastating disorder that is impacting thousands of families," said Braxton, who is currently headlining in a long-term engagement at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas. The mother of two children, one of whom has autism, went on to say, “So much progress is being made on all fronts – from the laboratory to Capitol Hill -- but all of us must continue to fight until we have found the cause and a cure for autism.”

“We are incredibly grateful to Bill and Toni for lending their remarkable talents to us for what promises to be a memorable evening,” said Suzanne Wright, co-founder of Autism Speaks. “With the recent passage of the Combating Autism Act, the future is far brighter for every individual and family affected by autism. However, the need to raise funds for awareness, treatment and research is as urgent as ever.”

Ticket information for the Concert for Autism Speaks will be made available in the coming weeks at www.autismspeaks.org.


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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Training Manual to Tackle Sexual Issues faced by Children with Disabilities

A training manual to tackle sexual and reproductive health issues for children and teenagers with disabilities is in its final stages of development by the Health Ministry.



Its minister Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek said that the manual would focus on the personal care and safety of the child with special needs to prevent them from getting abused.

"We have to face reality that sexual harassment will continue to happen," he told reporters on Tuesday after the media launch of the 24th Kiwanis Treasure Hunt.

"The manual is to help doctors and people to identify and treat. There are guidelines and procedures to follow especially when the person is unable to communicate effectively."

The treasure hunt is organised by the Kiwanis Club of Kuala Lumpur which hopes to raise RM125,000 to help the Kiwanis Down Syndrome Foundation National Centre here, Joy Training Workshop in Malacca, Kiwanis Orphanage in Batu Pahat and other Kiwanis Club of Kuala Lumpur community service projects.

Earlier in his speech, Dr Chua said that Down Syndrome was the most prevalent chromosomal disorder which occurred about one of every 650 births.

This meant, he said that 770 children in Malaysia were born with the disorder yearly and that about 46,200 children and adults have Down Syndrome assuming that the lifespan of a person with the condition is 60 years.

"This figure could even be larger, as no study has been done on the actual situation," he said.

He said that early detection and intervention were important to getting "better outcome" for babies with Down Syndrome adding that more than 90% of deliveries were in hospitals and all babies were examined by doctors before discharge.

Children who have Down Syndrome features will be followed up by the paediatrician and go through check ups for confirmation.

Dr Chua said that child developmental screening is also done at all health clinics, community clinics and mobile clinics throughout Malaysia and any suspected case of delayed development is closely monitored and started on early intervention programme.

There are also 140 health centres, which provide rehabilitation services for children with special needs including Down Syndrome.



Source
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Saturday, December 16, 2006

Health screening for all newborns

KUALA LUMPUR: The Health Ministry hopes to screen all newborn babies for Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM) or inherited metabolic diseases.

Deputy Health Minister Datuk Dr Abd Latiff Ahmad said with a small investment so many lives could be spared from agony, deaths and hefty treatments in the future.

He said the ministry would ask for more budget allocation from the Government to provide the screening after the on-going two-year pilot project on screening of babies for IEM is completed in 2008. “It only cost RM3 for a child to be screened for the inherited metabolic disease and the small investment could save a lot of lives from agony, deaths and hefty treatments in future,” Dr Latiff told reporters during the Metabolic Camp II yesterday.

The pilot project, that started in September, is currently being carried out at government hospitals in Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, Selayang, Alor Star, Penang, Kota Bahru, Kuching and Melaka, said geneticist Dr Choy Yew Sing, who is the chief investigator of the pilot project known as Newborn Screening for IEM. ,. Dr Latiff said it would cost the Government RM1.5mil to screen all 500,000 babies born each year in Malaysia.

“It is a small investment compared with the cost saved in future because with early detection, the right diet and treatment, many can lead normal lives,” he said.

IEM comprises a large class of genetic diseases involving disorders of metabolism such as mitochondrial disease, organic academia, urea cycle defects, glycogen storage disease, lysosomal storage disease and fatty acid oxidation defects.

It is due to defects in genes producing enzymes, which are essential in many biochemical reactions or metabolism in our body. If untreated, they may cause mental retardation, physical handicap and even death. If both parents carry the same defective gene responsible for one particular IEM, they run 25% risk of giving birth to a child with the particular inborn error of metabolic disease, said Dr Choy.

During a question and answer session, he said the lack of Q10 drug for mitochondria patients was due to difficulty in getting approval for the drug. “We lack report on the effectiveness of the drug. We are trying to obtain health technology assessment from other countries and also compile our own report,” he said.

He said the drug had been effective on one-third of his patients, however, for another one-third, there were still some problems while it was not effective at all for the rest. Mitochondria patients lack coenzyme Q that helps the cells produce energy and patients may experience symptoms such as vision or hair loss, heart attack, diabetes or cancer, he said.

The drug works as an anti-oxidant and helps the cells produce energy. Dr Choy said most of his IEM patients were Mitochondria patients. The disease was more common in the Asia region than other regions, he said.

By LOH FOON FONG
Source : STAR
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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Seizure Disorder No Longer Bedevilling

Epilepsy patients no longer need to fear being regarded as vessels of evil spirits. Cures are easily available, writes RANJEETHA PAKIAM.

WHEN Saiful Helmi Ismail, 31, was diagnosed with epilepsy, his parents were relieved.

Ever since his first epileptic seizure in his teens, family members and friends were convinced that he was possessed by spirits and urged his parents to refer him to a bomoh.

But Ismail Junid, 54, and his wife, Rusna Ibrahim, 54, knew that there had to be some medical explanation for their son’s condition.

With proper medication and epilepsy surgery, Saiful now leads a normal life and has a steady job.

His life now is a far cry from the days when he had to depend on his parents for everything and he had to endure the look of fear on his friends’ faces when he suffered a seizure.

Although the conditions of epilepsy patients are more widely understood and accepted by the public today, a social stigma concerning the illness still exists.

Hospital Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia professor and senior consultant neurologist Prof Dr Raymond Azman Ali said epilepsy patients were still viewed in a negative light, especially in rural areas.

"There is still a lot of stigma and prejudice against patients as people believe they have been cursed or are possessed. If a patient is having a seizure on the roadside, nobody wants to even go near to help him.

"Even employers at work are prejudiced against epilepsy patients. Of course, they can’t have jobs which require them to work with firearms or in high places, but they can do so many other things," he said.

Dr Raymond said epilepsy patients who were on the latest drugs could perform normally as the medication had reduced side-effects but maintained efficacy.

"Previously, epilepsy patients on medication to control their seizures had to deal with a host of unwanted side-effects such as obesity, drowsiness, unsteadiness and tremors.

"One of the drugs caused women to look manly — they developed moustaches, their faces became coarser and their gums became thicker and more prominent," he said.

In the 1990s, research for neurological diseases was at its pinnacle with a lot of funding pumped into epilepsy. As a result, new and improved drugs were developed. The drugs available locally are Levetiracetan, Topiramate and Oxcarbazapine.

Topiramate is a favourite among women, claims Dr Raymond, as the patient loses between five and 10 per cent of total body weight after taking it.

Patients who have suffered from uncontrolled seizures for more than two years and have not responded to at least two appropriate anti-epileptic drugs have the option of undergoing epilepsy surgery.

In Malaysia, HUKM is where the majority of patients are referred to for epilepsy surgery, which entails removing the part of the brain where the epilepsy focus is.

The first person was operated on in 1996 and since then, HUKM has handled about 70 surgeries.

According to Dr Raymond, 80 per cent of the patients who underwent epilepsy surgery reported they were "cured of epilepsy".

"Only one suffered from a minor stroke, but so far, no one has died from the surgery.

"When they ask if there is a chance of dying, we say yes, but the mortality rate is less than one per cent in the world, while the morbidity rate is two to three per cent — patients may suffer from loss of a quarter of their visual fields in each eye.

"Memory in most patients is improved after surgery."

However, Dr Raymond said the criteria for undergoing epilepsy surgery are stringent in Malaysia.

"The pre-surgical tests will take months as we want to make sure the surgery is safe and effective.

"We assess the patients to establish the type of epileptic syndrome they are suffering from and to ensure they are compliant, meaning they take their medications regularly."

Patients have to undergo physical evaluations, IQ (intelligence quotient) tests, brain scans and EEGs (Electroencephalography).

Dr Raymond said patients with an IQ of lower than 70 are not operated on as experience showed that those with low IQs do not fare well after surgery.

Those with severe psychiatric illness were also not considered for surgery as doctors have found that while the seizures ceased, the psychosis often worsened after surgery, he said.

If patients have passed all the evaluations, they will finally be asked to list down their goals in life after surgery.

"Those who really want their lives to be seizure-free will list such things as a desire to get married, to be able to drive and to have a job.

"Usually, we operate on those with specific goals in life," said Dr Raymond.




Saiful glad to be leading normal life

SAIFUL Helmi Ismail almost lost his life because of an epileptic seizure.

While returning home from work in the LRT one day, Saiful began having fits. He was shaking and foaming at the mouth.

At the next station, he was herded out by the disembarking crowds. Still unaware of his surroundings, Saiful fell down just outside the sliding doors of the LRT.

As the train moved, Saiful was hit, but was lucky as only his right leg was in harm’s way.

He broke a shin bone, but Saiful never felt it at the time. He was still suffering from the after-effects of the epileptic seizure and it was only when he regained consciousness at the hospital with his leg in a cast did he realise what had happened.

The accident occurred in 1996. Saiful, now 31, said he began having epileptic seizures after he sustained a head injury during a friendly football match.

"I fainted after receiving a strong kick to my head. But it was only after two years that I began to feel the effects of the kick.

"I began having seizures. My body would start to feel cold and I used to experience a feeling of weightlessness. Then my body would go stiff and if I was holding a pen or pencil or anything else in my hand, I would grip it so hard, it would break.

"I would also start shaking and foaming at the mouth."

Saiful suffered for years, his seizures occurring at least three or four times a week, each seizure lasting for about six minutes.

He used to receive medication for the seizures and went for monthly check-ups at the hospital but was told that nothing else could be done to help him.

The turning point in his life came when he was referred to Hospital Kuala Lumpur. The specialist there told him there was hope for him to lead a normal life though epilepsy surgery.

After various tests, Saiful underwent his first operation in February, 1998 in Hospital Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, the centre for epilepsy surgery.

Due to severe bleeding, the operation was discontinued after only part of the lesion was removed.

His seizures were reduced after that to only twice a week but the doctors recommended another operation as they said he had a 75 to 80 per cent success rate.

Seven months later, Saiful’s second operation went off without a hitch and he has not had a single seizure since.

It has been eight years since the epilepsy surgery and Saiful now leads a normal life. He secured a job as a finance executive in a bank and has been happily married for a year now.




Patients find emotional support to be crucial


MEDICATION alone is not enough to ensure a better quality of life among epilepsy patients.

As with all other debilitating diseases, epilepsy patients cope much better when provided with strong emotional support.

A study conducted in 2004 by a team of researchers from Universiti Malaysia Sabah showed a positive correlation between the overall quality of life of the patient and emotional support.

The study, which sampled 113 patients from 10 hospitals in Sabah, centred on the relationship between the quality of life of epilepsy patients and the types of coping mechanisms used by them to deal with the illness.

Pharmacist Dr Lua Pei Lin, who led the team, said people with epilepsy suffered from psycho-social difficulties, such as forging inter-personal relationships, gaining employment, and facing discriminations.

"Because of these psycho-social disorders, their quality of life is reduced, which means the way they lead their life is affected in a negative way.

"Epilepsy patients don’t feel comfortable in a group of people they’ve just met. They are hesitant when it comes to travelling long distances or even to just go shopping because they are afraid they might have seizures," she said.

Lua, who now lectures at Universiti Teknologi Mara, said patients coped with the disease most frequently through religion, with over 60 per cent saying that religion contributed to their well-being.

She said patients also looked for instrumental support by asking others for advice with regards to treatment and medication. Emotional support from family members and friends who understood the difficulties in dealing with the disease was crucial in coping.

"Patients also turn to ’active coping’, which means they try to do something positive about their illness.

"For example, some patients read up more about epilepsy while others try to find the best medication," she said.

The study showed that less frequent ways of coping with epilepsy were through alcohol or drug abuse, behavioural disengagement (being in denial about having epilepsy) and self-blame.

The study also showed that marital and employment status influenced the quality of life.

The study showed that 60 per cent of the patients were married while 48 per cent were jobless.

Those who were married claimed to have a better quality of life, but it was the opposite for those who had jobs, who fared worse than the unemployed patients.

This was unexpected, as she said global studies had found epilepsy patients to be happier when employed.

But there is an explanation for this.

Lua said it was possible that patients who had jobs were constantly worried that their colleagues would find out about their illness and feared being discriminated against.

This, she said, rang true in a few Asian countries where epilepsy was still viewed in a negative light.

"A social stigma still exists when it comes to epilepsy. People are fearful when they see patient suffering from seizures.

"People have a misconceptions about epilepsy, wrongly equating the disease to psychosis. They think an epileptic seizure is a form of a psychotic episode."

Educating the public on the disease would put a stop to discrimination against epilepsy patients, and Lua said she hoped the study would serve that purpose.

The study concluded that future epilepsy care management should include health-related quality of life assessment as well as advice on useful strategies to deal with the illness.




Frequently asked questions


Q: What is epilepsy?

A: Epilepsy is a neurological condition that affects the nervous system. Epilepsy is also known as a seizure disorder. It is usually diagnosed after a person has had at least two seizures that were not caused by some known medical condition like alcohol withdrawal or extremely low blood sugar level.

The seizures in epilepsy may be related to a brain injury or a family tendency, but most of the time the cause is unknown. "Epilepsy" does not indicate anything about the cause of the person’s seizures, what type they are, or how severe they are.

Q: Who gets it?

A: Epilepsy can develop in any person at any age. About 0.5 per cent to two per cent of people will develop epilepsy during their lifetime. People with certain conditions may be at greater risk. More men than women have epilepsy.

Q: How does it begin?

A: The reasons why epilepsy begins are different for people of different ages. But what’s true for every age is that the cause is unknown for about half of everyone with epilepsy. Children may be born with a defect in the structure of their brain, or they may suffer a head injury or infection that causes their epilepsy. Severe head injury is the most common known cause among young adults.

In middle age, strokes, tumours, and injuries are more frequent. In people over 65, stroke is the most common known cause, followed by degenerative conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Q: What are some of the symptoms of an epilepsy seizure?

A: In movies, epilepsy patients are almost always depicted as having major seizures with eyes rolling backward, foaming at the mouth and sometimes ending in unconsciousness. However, an epileptic seizure can also be as mild as slight twitches. The severity of a seizure is very individualised.

The most commonly seen in movies is the grand mal seizure, now known as ‘tonic-clonic’ seizures. Grand mal seizures cause a lot of problems to the patient as they collapse, their eyes roll up, they bite their tongue, urinate, they jerk for hours and then they sleep.

Simple-partial seizures mean they don’t lose consciousness with some patients displaying minor twitches. There is usually no need for medication in these cases.

Temporal lobe seizures are the most common for operations. Patients who experience this type of seizure usually start with a blank stare followed by a chewing movement and lip smacking.

The commonest type of seizure in children is the absence seizures which is defined by blank stares. When this happens in the classroom, teachers think the student is daydreaming.

Sources: www.epilepsy.com and neurologist Prof Dr Raymond Azman Ali.


Source : NST
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Sunday, October 08, 2006

News : Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM)

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

Screening them at birth
By LOH FOON FONG

The mystery has haunted many grieving parents: why do their normal, healthy babies suddenly become handicapped or mentally retarded? But such are the insidious effects of infants with Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM), inherited metabolic diseases that comprise a large class of genetic diseases.

“A baby may be well until suddenly at three years old, he or she dies of a heart attack,” said Dr Choy Yew Sing, geneticist-cum-metabolic-specialist at the Kuala Lumpur Hospital (KLH).
Cases detected in Malaysia are just the tip of the iceberg. Many have gone unnoticed because the symptoms are common: heart attack, stroke, poor feeding, fits, comatose, behavioural problems, hearing or visual problems, bleeding in the head, vomiting blood or autism, he said.

Dr Choy Yew Sing: ‘Deficiency in enzymes due to defective genes can affect any organ in the body.“Deficiency in enzymes due to defective genes can affect any organ in the body,” explained Dr Choy, who diagnoses at least four new cases weekly. “If untreated, they may cause mental retardation, physical handicap and even death.
“Many of the diseases resulting from IEM are treatable, if only they are detected early,” he said.
Hence, newborn screening, early diagnosis and appropriate management would save the child and prevent mental retardation and physical handicaps, he said.
He said, generally, treatment would be futile when a child reached age seven.
An affected individual inherits the defective gene from both parents who are carriers but are themselves normal.

Examples of the more common IEM are: G6PD deficiency, maple syrup urine disease, urea cycle defects, methylmalonic academia, mucopolysaccharidosis and mitochondrial disease.
The symptoms range from mild to severe. The condition usually affects babies although some symptoms are manifested only in adulthood, said Dr Choy.
He said if the symptoms indicate usual health problems, proper standard treatment would rectify them.

But with IEM, the problem will recur and worsen, even after treatment.
He said the problem cuts across all ethnic groups; marriage between relatives increases the risk.
He said the lack of expertise and IEM testing facilities has resulted in the lack of detection. There are only three geneticists in Malaysia who are trained to detect IEM, and only the Institute for Medical Research and Kuala Lumpur Hospital have the facilities and expertise to conduct the tests, said Choy.

The screening process for IEM includes special blood (serum amino acid) and urine (uric organic acid) tests of newborns by using the technology called tandem mass spectrometry.
Currently, there are more than 1,000 patients on record. Since one in 1,500 children is born with the condition, there may be more than 300,000 cases a year from the 500,000 babies born in Malaysia every year, said Dr Choy.

The Health Ministry had initiated the project to look into the feasibility of screening all newborn babies for genetic metabolic disorder. The two-year project is currently being carried out at government hospitals in Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, Selayang, Alor Star, Penang, Kota Baru, Kuching and Malacca, said Dr Choy.

“We want to see how prevalent IEM is in our population and how feasible the treatment process is so that we can plan for the health needs of the population,” he said.

“Screening babies at birth allows for early treatment and preventing complications,” he said. “It also reduces the extent of brain damage and organ failure.”

Depending on the type of IEM, patients can be treated with special diet, vitamin supplements, medications, enzyme replacements, liver transplants or bone marrow transplant, said Dr Choy.

For further information, contact Norliya 012-315 5421, Ivy 017-330 2632 or Chan 012-338 1706.






Banking on hope
By LOH FOON FONG


The CT scan results for the four-month-old boy looked suspicious. They showed bleeding in the head, caused either by a fall or abuse. Doctors queried Winnie Chan, the baby’s mother, if either had taken place. She denied it, but was deeply troubled by the questions.


She had brought Chang How Nam to the hospital because he had difficulty swallowing, could not grip with his hands or initiate movements.


It was not until Chang was seven that his condition was diagnosed. The cause: glutaric aciduria type I, a rare genetic disorder in which the body is unable to process the amino acid lysine, hydroxylysine and tryptophan properly. He suffered brain damage that resulted in mental retardation.


Some people with glutaric aciduria develop bleeding in the head (subdural haemorrhage) and the bleeding can be mistaken for acts of child abuse, said Dr Choy Yew Sing, chief investigator of the Health Ministry’s pilot project, Newborn Screening for Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM), which started on Sept 1.


“Bleeding could be mistaken for acts of child abuse,’’ he explained.


How Nam was misdiagnosed due to the general lack of expertise in Malaysia. As he grew, he could not sit, crawl or call his parents. Now, at 12 , he cannot stand, walk, speak or swallow food because the right diagnosis came too late.

Tan Yee Ping using the computer to communicate with his only brother. Beside him is his father, C.L. Tan.“I was told that if his condition had been known earlier, he would be able to talk and walk,” said 47-year-old Chan.


She had brought her son to many specialists and ended up in a neuro clinic. He was treated as a cerebral palsy case but his condition continued to worsen.


“I could not accept it. He was normal until he was four months old. I insisted that the doctor carry out an MRI scan for him because he was not getting better despite all the treatment,” she said.


The neurosurgeons then decided to refer her case to a geneticist. Special blood and urine tests were done. That was when his condition was finally diagnosed, in 2004.


“I was so relieved when we finally found out what was really wrong with him,” she said.

Tan Yee Ping, at 17, before he was diagnosed with Inborn Errors of Metabolism.How Nam now takes 10 different types of medication and vitamin supplements. His condition has affected his capacity to swallow, so an opening is created at the abdomen to feed him.


“I am glad that the Health Ministry is looking into the possibility of making IEM screening available to all newborns in future. Then cases such as mine could be prevented,” she said.
Tan Yee Ping was a normal, healthy baby until he started having fits at around four and a half months, recalled his 57-year-old retiree father C. L. Tan.


“He would have more than 20 fits a day and it was impossible for us to feed him. We saw a lot of doctors and they would give medication. But the medication did not stop the fits. It only reduced (the frequency),” said Tan.


“The doctors said he was epileptic and told me that when his immunity is stronger by the time he is 15, the fits might go away,” he said.


However, they did not. Yee Ping grew up thinner and smaller than most children his age. He could not sit or stand, and he salivated all the time. Every two or three hours, he would need to lie down because he would be tired.


“Yee Ping has run out of ‘battery,’ the teachers would say and let him rest,” recalled Tan.
His condition shifted between being as soft as jelly when he was not having a fit, and stiff when he had one, Tan said.


Two years ago, when Yee Ping was 18, Tan brought him to see a paediatrician in Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Hospital.


Coincidentally, Yee Ping had a fit at that time and the doctor saw his seizure. He said that it was not epilepsy but some kind of neurotransmitter disorder due to the lack of certain enzymes, said Tan.


“He referred me to a specialist at KLH,’’ he added. The specialist had just returned from overseas and had set up a special clinic called the metabolic clinic. I didn’t know what metabolic disorder was,” he said.


The geneticist saw his son, asked him to walk and told Tan that it could be a neuro-transmitter disorder. He took blood and urine samples and wanted to admit Yee Ping the following week to take some spinal fluid.


“One of my relatives told me that his child became abnormal as a result of spinal fluid being removed from him while others told me that it would be a high risk procedure. I was troubled. I had to make a decision and I decided to admit Yee Ping,” he said.


After the spinal fluid was removed, Yee Ping felt dizzy, vomited and could not sit up, the side effects from the procedure. He stayed in the hospital for five days before he was discharged.


Test results showed he suffered from tetrahydrobiopterin deficiency, a rare disorder that increases the blood levels of a substance called phenylalanine.


The specialist changed all the medication except for the one that treated seizures. The treatment helped him produce the enzyme that he lacked.


He suffered side effects for more than a month due to the change in medication but within six months, Yee Ping, who had never walked since he was born, began walking.


“He is literally a walking miracle,” said Tan, tears welling up in his eyes.


“He became physically stronger and more alert, unlike before, often in a daze due to fits and medication. No more floppy eyes, sleepiness or frequent fits. Now he is undergoing speech therapy,” he added.


From 20 fits a day to about six when Yee Ping was under medication, it is now down to once or twice a year.


When asked what he hopes for the future, Yee Ping, with his slurred speech, said he wants to be a policeman.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

News : Retarded, because of bad diagnosis

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

Retarded, because of bad diagnosis

KUALA LUMPUR: About one-third of babies with inherited metabolic diseases have been misdiagnosed, resulting in the infants becoming mentally retarded or physically handicapped, and some failing to survive, according to a geneticist.

From a recent study on 812 cases of Inborn Errors of Metabolism (IEM), one-third were severely handicapped and their condition was not properly diagnosed, or had been misdiagnosed, said Dr Choy Yew Sing, chief investigator of the pilot project, Newborn Screening for Inborn Errors of Metabolism, which started on Sept 1.

Many of these cases went undetected because the condition presented common symptoms, hence the misdiagnosis of poor feeding, fits, comatose, mental retardation, behavioural problem, hearing or visual problem or organ dysfunction, he said.

The lack of expertise and IEM testing facilities also added to the lack of detection.

“There are only three geneticists in Malaysia trained to detect IEM and only KL Hospital and the Institute for Medical Research have the diagnostic facilities,” said Dr Choy.

One in 1,500 children are born with the condition. With 500,000 babies born every year in Malaysia, there would be more than 300 cases a year, he said.

Dr Choy said the Government had initiated the pilot project to look into the feasibility of screening all newborn babies for genetic metabolic disorder.

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Friday, June 09, 2006

News : Snozelen at Society for the Severely Mentally Handicapped Selangor and Federal Territtory

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

Kids benefit from charity draw
By BAVANI M

FIFTEEN-YEAR-OLD Tan Ji Teck's angelic face lit up with a smile that would have melted the hardest of hearts as he touched the cushioned walls blinking with pretty little lights.
The darkened room, which had a cosy feel to it, had glowing fibre optic strands and was filled with soothing coloured lights, while music played and a fragrance pervaded the room.

It was his favourite time hanging out in the Snoezelen therapy room at the Society for the Severely Mentally Handicapped Selangor and Federal Territory in Petaling Jaya.
Costing RM50,000, the Snoezelen room helps stimulate the senses of the home's special children.

Tan (right) and Adam Firdaus, seven, hanging out in the snoezelen room of the Society for the Severely Mentally Handicapped Selangor and Federal Territtory.Tan suffers from Cornelia De Lange Syndrome, a growth defect.

Although he is 15, he looks more like a five-year-old child.
The centre's head teacher, M. Mangamah, said the room gives the kids the ability to experience the five senses – sight, touch, smell, taste, and hearing.
“Children lacking certain senses, are encouraged to play with equipment that helps stimulate those senses,” she said.

The Snozelen room helps stimulate the senses of the children.“The room certainly has a calming effect on them each time they come here.”





About 13 special children suffering from various mental disorders such as Cornelia De Lange Syndrome, cerebral palsy, Down Syndrome and epilepsy come here on a daily basis to learn to be independent.

“They come here totally dependent on everyone and we try to teach them to become as independent as possible,” Mangamah said.

“Ji Teck, for instance, is able to communicate with us and tell us if he wants to go to the bathroom and he can easily recognise people,” she added.

A similar Snoezelen therapy room has been set up at Bethany Home in Taiping, Perak.
The Ronald McDonald Children’s Charities Fund of Malaysia (RMCC) set up both facilities; the one at Bethany Home cost about RM100,000.

“The facility has done wonders to benefit the severely handicapped members of the home,” RMCC president Fadillah Yakin said.

The funds for the second room, at Bethany Home, came from the Malaysian Charity Draw I held last year, Fadillah Yakin said, adding that without the funds it would not have been possible.

“We received RM250,000 from the last charity draw and, of that, RM100,000 went towards setting up the Snoezelen room in Bethany Home, while the balance was channelled to the Give a Gift of Smile campaign, which aids children born with cleft lip and palate undergo corrective surgery that helps them lead a normal life,” said Fadillah.

According to Fadillah, through this campaign, RMCC had helped restore the smiles of 60 children from all over Malaysia since 2003.


“Cleft lip and palate is the fourth most common birth defect, and is the most common facial defect in the world.

“In Malaysia, it is estimated that 600 babies of the total average of 570,000 born every year are born with this defect.

To date, there are almost 12,000 babies born with cleft lip and palate. These children need surgery as without it, the defects affect their appearance, speech and dental condition.

For details on the centre, call 03-7874 6703.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

News : Meningitis can cause cerebral palsy or epilepsy

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

A shot for protection

DON’T say children don’t know how to share. Why, they share all sorts of things! Sometimes it’s their toys, their food, but most often, they share the microscopic organisms that live on and inside them.

Lice, for instance. You know how it is – one child has kutu and all the other kids in the class go home scratching.

Or the common cold virus, which is why your child sometimes develops a sniffle after coming home from kindergarten.

Daycare centres, kindergartens and schools are hotbeds for infectious diseases like cold, sore throat, chickenpox and hand-foot-and-mouth (HFM) disease because children are in such close contact all day long.

There is now a conjugate vaccine that can prevent pneumococcal bacterial infection in infants and children up to nine years old.And unlike adults, a child’s immune system is more vulnerable to being invaded by disease-causing bacteria and viruses.

Most of the time, the illnesses that spread are harmless. Plus, you can rest assured that if your child has been vaccinated following the National Immunisation Schedule, he is already protected against many common infectious childhood diseases like rubella, mumps, measles and whooping cough.

Unfortunately, emergencies can happen when you least expect it, as in the case of seven-year-old Thomas Lee. What started out as a normal fever one day turned into a full-blown emergency case of pneumococcal pneumonia.

It was two weeks of agony for little Thomas and his parents who had to watch helplessly as their son succumbed to a frightening disease that did not respond to antibiotics.
Seen under a microscope, the pneumococcus or Streptococcus pneumoniae bacterium looks deceptively pretty, like a strand of pearls, or a string of beads. But don’t be fooled, it’s nastier than it looks.

Pneumococcus causes a group of illnesses called pneumococcal disease, with the scariest ones being the invasive infections. These include bacteremia (infection of the blood), meningitis (infection of the membranes covering the brain or spinal cord), sepsis (an infection in the blood associated with shock and organ failure) and pneumonia (infection of the lungs).
Pneumococcus is the most common cause of meningitis in Malaysia, replacing Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), for which children are now vaccinated against.

Meningitis is dangerous because the lining of the brain becomes inflamed, and this can cause death or, for those who survive, multiple neurological problems like mental retardation, cerebral palsy, blindness, deafness or epilepsy.

Pneumonia can be near fatal as well. In our country, it is one of the common illnesses that causes childhood hospitalisation and death.

Pneumococcus also causes non-invasive diseases, including otitis media (middle-ear infection) and sinusitis.

These diseases are dangerous, too; a child with middle-ear infection may develop complications like hearing loss, learning disabilities and delays in speech development.
The impact of the pneumococcus bacterium is devastating: each year, more than one million children throughout the world die as a result of pneumococcal disease.
If antibiotics are the marvel that scientific discovery produced to fight bacteria, why didn’t it cure Thomas’ pneumonia?

Many years ago, it might have. But Thomas was probably infected by a strain of pneumococcus that has recently become resistant to penicillin and other antibiotics. This is happening in many countries around the world, including Malaysia, due to the overuse and misuse of antibiotics
Children infected with antibiotic-resistant strains of the bacteria may have prolonged illness because they do not respond to formerly effective drugs. Their disease may spread more rapidly, unless treated with expensive alternative antibiotics.
Clearly, antibiotics are not the answer.

So how do you protect your child from something that spreads through a simple cough, a sneeze, or by the touch of a hand?

Through vaccination, that’s how. And fortunately for parents in Malaysia, there is now a conjugate vaccine that can prevent pneumococcal bacterial infection in infants and children up to nine years old.

The vaccine provides protection against 60%-80% of pneumococcal infections. It is safe, but may sometimes cause some mild reactions like local irritation and fever. Some children may experience other temporary side effects like irritability, drowsiness, restless sleep, decreased appetite, vomiting and diarrhoea.

Although Thomas did not receive the vaccination, he recovered from the infection with no ill effects.

His mother, having gone through the trying ordeal, now advises parents to have their children, especially the very young ones, vaccinated against pneumococcal infection.

“A child cannot live in isolation, and you never know when the infection will strike, and whether you will be as lucky as Thomas to survive unscathed,” she says.
Article courtesy of the Malaysian Paediatric Association


Saturday, May 13, 2006

News : Story of Wong Lee Foong born with cerebral palsy and epilepsy

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

She loves her like her own

By LOONG MENG YEE
newesdesk@thestar.com.my



KLANG: When Wong Lee Foong was about a year old, her grandmother wished her dead.
“It's better for you to die before I do. If not, who will care for you?” she once asked.
But the grandmother was not being cruel.

Lim: ‘Who can resist her smile and her twinkling eyes?’The family was just too poor and hard-pressed to care for the youngest child, born with cerebral palsy and epilepsy and could neither walk nor talk.



To eke out a living, the grandmother would troop the four grandchildren under her care to the fields to plant lady's fingers in Kundang, Rawang.
While the rest of her siblings played, Lee Foong was left under a tree, attracting flies as she urinated and defecated.



Grandma fed the child with condensed milk, the only kind of baby food she could afford.
And then along came Roxanna Lim, a social worker who took the child as her own.
She was a single working woman then, but she promised to be the best mother to the disabled child.



For the next 20 years, Lim tried to live up to the promise. She quit her job to become a full-time mother and has been living on donations since.
When Lee Foong 's contorted body needed a special medical bed, Lim begged a private rehabilitation school to give her one.



When the special child's eyes were diagnosed with retina detachment, Lim took her to Singapore for a corrective surgery. A couple sponsored the trip and the surgery was a success.
“I want my Lee Foong to continue seeing the beautiful rainbow, her favourite Barney show and her pretty Christmas dress,” said Lim, 53.



The journey through life for the awesome twosome has been peppered with laughter, sorrow, despair and encouragement and, above all, faith, hope and love.
Asked if she regretted taking in Lee Foong, Lim said: “It has not been easy, but I have God on my side.



“Who can resist her smile and her twinkling eyes? My baby may not be like the rest, but she is definitely not a child of a lesser God,” said Lim.





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Thursday, May 11, 2006

News : Malaysian Care Supporting families for child with disability or complex needs

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

Shared care

Opening your home to a person with a disability for a few hours a week or an overnight stay can be a mutually enriching experience and can change lives in profound ways, writes VICTORIA L. PARKER.


CARING for a child is not an easy job, especially when the child has a disability or complex needs. As the child grows, so does the parent's ever-increasing job specifications. Parents become professional jugglers of time: they learn to balance giving their child with a disability the support he needs, working, running a household and being there for their other kids. Unfortunately, somewhere along the line, something has to give.


Shared Care Schemes have been a life-line support system for many families all over the world. Informal groups of families are already implementing the concept here in Malaysia. Supporting families for a few hours a week by taking their disabled children swimming, to the park and having them over for dinner or for an overnight stay is all it takes.


While I was working in England as a specialist community nurse, I introduced Jane, a single mother, to the concept of Shared Care. Jane had two children, a daughter Kelly, 14, and son, John, 10. When John was four, he was diagnosed with autism and epilepsy. He had very limited self-help, socialisation and communication skills and was not his happiest when there were changes in his daily routine.


When Jane first considered the idea of Shared Care, she was sceptical until she met Carol and Jack, and their two sons aged eight and 11, and their dog Jasper. They had just become Short-break carers in the local Shared Care scheme. Carol had some experience with epilepsy but knew very little about disabilities.

Welcoming a disabled child into your home can bring countless benefits.Initially Jane, John and I would drop in at Carol’s house for tea on a regular basis and Jane would explain to Carol different aspects of John’s needs. She then started to leave him alone at Carol’s house for a half-day visit once a week. Slowly John and Carol built up a relationship and soon John was staying overnight every couple of weeks. In the beginning they had their rough patches; it was a learning curve for both families, and especially for John.


Interacting with new people in a new environment was extremely stressful for John. There were many frantic phone calls from Carol, as John would scream and bite himself for hours on end. One of Carol’s neighbours even called the police once as they thought she was abusing her children! We got all the neighbours together and explained the situation and eventually they became very supportive of Carol.


John occasionally had severe epileptic seizures. Carol’s husband, Jack, found them very distressing until he understood how to manage them. Slowly John settled in and Carol learnt to read what John needed, to make him feel safe. After six months it was as if John had a second home.


Carol and her husband grew very fond of John, and when John came home after his visits, he smiled continuously until he went to bed.
Jack thought it was a great experience for his family, having John stay with them. His sons learnt more about disabilities and if any one stared at John or called him names, the boys would put them in their place.


The nights that John stayed over at Carol’s place, Jane would go to the cinema or go shopping with her daughter Kelly and focus all her attention on her. Unfortunately, one of the areas of family life that has got to give is time spent solely with other children in the family.
They had been having problems. Kelly was rude to her mother and stayed out late. After John was placed in a Shared Care scheme and stress levels in the family had eased, Kelly admitted that she resented her brother getting all the attention. The time they had alone was a great opportunity for Kelly to relax and open up. The relationship between the siblings improved too.
The most positive outcome of the Shared Care Scheme was the progress John had made. He had become more independent, could dress himself and eat with improved table manners.
His socially inappropriate behaviour had diminished considerably and he began vocalising a lot more. John had rarely spoken in the past and failed to show he recognised his family members or anything in his environment. As Jane said, her jaw dropped when she was in the garden with him one day and in the distance a dog barked and instantly John ran to the garden fence and shouted: “Mummy dog Jasper!” It had been a struggle for both families in the beginning but with that one sentence, all the hard work had been worth it.


In many countries, shared care within a family or facility provision is a statutory requirement. Over the years there has been endless research carried out in Britain, the United States and Australia on Family Linked Short Break Care, or the favoured term at the moment – Shared Care.


Shared Care or Family Link Care is immeasurable in the benefits to the families and child involved. It’s a form of family support that can change the lives of families with disabled children in profound ways. It breaks down barriers and inadvertently brings about positive awareness of disabilities.


Shared Care opens up endless opportunities for disabled children and adults to have new experiences. At the same time, it gives families a break to do the necessary things.
Every family does things differently, even if the cultural and religious aspects of their lives are similar to others in the community. Their day-to-day routines, interests and relationships are different.


When a child with a disability spends time with another family, he is exposed to all these new things and in the long run, the more exposure he gets, the better it is for him. Our daily life experiences increase our cultural understanding: we learn society's rules, problem-solving, and social and communication skills.


The opportunities for a person with a disability are endless. John grew immeasurably from being part of Shared Care, as did Jane and Carol and their families. Supporting people is not just a “charity” activity. It’s about opening your home to another human being and promoting mutual understanding.

Dignity & Services has initiated forums on why and how Shared Care could be implemented in Malaysia. Any family with or without a disabled family member, who would like to know more or be involved in a local Family Linked Shared Care Scheme, can contact Dignity & Services.


One Voice is a monthly column which serves as a platform for professionals, parents and careproviders of children with learning difficulties. Feedback on the column can be sent to dignity@tm.net.my.


For enquiries, call Malaysian Care ( 03 90582102) or Dignity & Services ( 03-7725-5569).


Tuesday, December 06, 2005

News : Vital protection for children

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

Vital protection for children

With the introduction of the Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine in 2002, S. pneumoniae has replaced Hib as the most common cause of meningitis in children in Malaysia. And now, there’s a vaccine for it, too.

ON 7 OCTOBER 1996, parents around the world went about their daily routine, oblivious to the fact that two scientists they did not know, and would never meet, had discovered something that would impact their lives directly.

It was the day that Peter Doherty and Rolf Zinkernagel were awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discoveries concerning “the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence”.

Their discovery of how the immune system recognises virus-infected cells “laid a foundation for an understanding of general mechanisms used by the cellular immune system to recognise both foreign microorganisms and self molecules.”

Dr Musa Mohd Nordin and Dr Theodore Tsai agree that the way ahead to prevent invasive pneumococcal diseases in infants and young children is with vaccination.In other words, their work has paved a better platform for the construction of new vaccines, among them the pneumococcal saccharide conjugate vaccine.

This is the first licensed vaccine to protect children under the age of two from invasive pneumococcal disease caused by several of the most common types of the pneumococcal bacteria.

Nasty pathogen
Pneumococcus, formally known as Streptococcus pneumoniae, is a gram-positive bacteria discovered way back in 1881 by French microbiologist Louis Pasteur.
“Pneumococcus contains a sugar capsule (polysaccharide) that encapsulates the bacteria. It is this capsule that makes this germ very infectious,” says Dr Musa Mohd Nordin, consultant paediatrician and neonatologist.

This germ is very easily transmitted via inhalation of aerosols or direct physical contact, for example through a cough or a sneeze.
Once it has landed in your nose, the germ parks itself in there, ready to cause troublesome infections like sinusitis and otitis media (infection of the middle ear).
However, it doesn’t stop there.

S treptococcus pneumoniaeis a nasty pathogen that is the number one cause of sinusitis, otitis media, bacteraemia, pneumonia and meningitis.“(Pneumococcus) breaches the barrier lining of the nose and the pharynx, and enters the blood. When it has invaded the bloodstream, it causes bacteraemia, or blood poisoning,” Dr Musa explains.
The Health Ministry has estimated that the incidence of pneumococcal bacteraemia is about 30 per 100,000 in Malaysian children under five years old, with at least 750 cases and 20 deaths per year.

“And if it goes across the blood-brain barrier into the cerebrospinal fluid, it causes meningitis,” he adds.

Meningitis, where the meninges or the lining of the brain becomes inflamed, is every parent’s worst nightmare. Without prompt diagnosis and treatment, a child with meningitis may die. Even those who survive may have multiple neurological deficits, such as mental retardation, cerebral palsy, blindness, deafness or epilepsy.

“It’s a very tragic survival,” Dr Musa stresses.
Previously, pneumococcus has been overshadowed by the Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) bacteria, which was the number one cause for meningitis. However, after the Health Ministry introduced the Hib vaccine in 2002, the rates of Hib meningitis have declined tremendously.
“Now, S. pneumoniae has replaced Hib as the most common cause of meningitis in Malaysia,” Dr Musa points out.

Pneumococcus can also infect segments of the lungs, causing pneumonia. The relentless little germ is actually the number one cause of acute respiratory infections in Malaysia, which is, in turn, the leading cause of childhood illnesses, according to the National Health and Morbidity Survey 1996.

“There are at least 90 different types of pneumococci. But only about eight to 10 of the different pneumococci are responsible for the majority of invasive pneumococcal disease,” says Dr Musa.
His favourite phrase, “pneumococcus is number one” is justified. WHO reports that one million children in the world below the age of five die every year from invasive pneumococcal disease.

Antibiotics not the answer
Gone are the days when antibiotics could be deployed to battle attacks by any bacteria.
Today, bacteria and other microorganisms that cause infections have developed ways to survive drugs meant to kill or weaken them, leading to an emerging public health problem known as “antibiotic resistance”.

“In the 1940s, when penicillin was discovered, it was thought that this was the magic bullet that would eradicate all forms of bacteria. This would be the end of the pneumococcus,” relates Dr Musa.

Instead, the bacteria has managed to clone itself to be resistant to common antibiotics like penicillin and macrolides.

In a study carried out by the Asian Network for the Surveillance of Resistant Pathogens (ANSORP) between 1999 and 2001 in 12 Asian countries, the group concluded that there is a worrying increase in the prevalence of penicillin- and macrolide-resistant pneumococcus.
Antibiotic resistance is believed to arise from the abuse, overuse and misuse of antibiotics. As a result, pneumococcal infections, and many other diseases like tuberculosis, malaria and cholera, are not responding to formerly effective drugs and are spreading rapidly.
In the same study, the ANSORP group recommended that there should be continuous surveillance of pneumococci, while doctors should be more circumspect about the use of antibiotics.

ANSORP also concluded that pneumococcal vaccination is urgently required in Asia, a point that Dr Musa fervently agrees with.

“Antibiotics are not the solution to the pneumococcal problem. The way ahead is to prevent these invasive diseases with vaccination,” he says.

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Monday, October 24, 2005

News : Bethany Home Training Centre for Children with Disabilities

Excerpt from STAR ONLINE

Children can now take the bus

TELUK INTAN: It was a dream come true for children of Bethany Home when it received a donation of RM230,000 for a special bus.


“We are grateful for the contribution,” said the home’s director, R. Jayasingh.
The donation is part of the RM730,000 net proceeds collected from ticket sales for the Wild Zebra shows organised by The Star and presented by Artistry by Amway in Kuala Lumpur recently.

Jayasingh said the special bus was needed to pick up students who could not walk independently from their homes here and in Bagan Datoh and other parts of Hilir Perak.

WELCOME AID: Dr Victor and Ngiam holding up the mock cheque in a group picture with (standing from left) Aeria, Tan and Jayasingh (right) and the home’s children after the ceremony on Saturday.“The bus will have a hydraulic wheelchair lift and safety features such as safety belts in each of the seats,” he said.


The bus would also be used to transport the children for outings, picnics and outstation trips, he said after home chairman Dr A. Victor received the donation from Star Publications (M) Bhd deputy group general manager Datin Linda Ngiam on Saturday.

Located at Simpang Empat near here, the home is a training and educational centre for 176 children and adults with a variety of disabilities, including epilepsy, intellectual disabilities, cerebral palsy and autism.

Star Publications group managing director Datuk Steven Tan and his wife Datin Jenny Tan, who also attended the brief ceremony, were given a tour of the home.
Accompanying them were deputy group chief editor (I) Michael Aeria, senior marketing services manager Iris Tan and security manager B.T. Tan.
Dr Victor said when the idea of raising funds first came up, the home was thinking of a smaller bus.


”Now that we have the funds for it, we will get a 44-seater bus, which will cost about RM330,000, so that it can accommodate more children,” he added.

Proceeds from the Wild Zebra shows, held from July 29 to Aug 3 at Istana Budaya in Kuala Lumpur, will also go to the Salvation Army, Tasputra Perkim Kuala Lumpur, Asrama Darul Falah of Perkim in Kuala Lumpur, Shelter in Petaling Jaya and the Paediatric Institute of Hospital Kuala Lumpur.