Number of hand-foot-mouth disease patients continues rising in Ho Chi Minh City
The city logged 581 cases of HFMD last week
The city logged 581 cases of HFMD last week
During last week alone, eight clusters with 195 patients were documented in Hanoi, the HCDC reported, warning that the city is entering a peak of the HFMD epidemic
The patient tested positive for HFMD, not monkeypox as earlier suspected
People of all age groups are susceptible to HFMD, but up to 90 percent of the infections occur in children aged under three
The shipment is expected to supplement currently available drugs for the treatment of severe HFMD cases
HFMD is common among children
HFMD infections recorded at the Can Tho Children’s Hospital have shown no signs of abating
The number of HFMD patients is rising at an alarming rate in southern localities
In Ho Chi Minh City, the number of HFMD cases has increased rapidly in the past four weeks to over 2,400 cases
The country has seen a rising number of hand-foot-mouth cases, especially in the Mekong Delta region, with three child deaths reported so far
The number of children with severe HFMD in the city accounted for a relatively high proportion just at the start of the hand-foot-and-mouth season
One was two and the other was seven
An eight-month old baby in Ho Chi Minh City has died of Hand, Foot and Mouth disease (HFMD), the first death from the illness in the city this year
Japanese Encephalitis (JE) spreads rapidly in northern Vietnam, while the hand, food and mouth disease is also on the rise in the country’s southern region
As the number of HFMD cases in Ho Chi Minh City is on the rise, the disease may become an epidemic this year, health authorities warn
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has called for more action to cope with hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD) and dengue fever, which have killed six people so far this year
Vietnam’s Ministry of Health has established five working teams to cope with the hand, foot and mouth disease (HFMD), which has affected more than 17,400 people nationwide
Researchers in China said Wednesday a trial vaccine provided "significant" protection against a virus that can cause potentially deadly hand, footand mouth disease (HFMD) in children