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						WHO warns of deadly 
						outbreak of rat-borne hantavirus in Argentina 
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		[January 25, 2019]  
		(Reuters) - At least 11 people have died in 
		Argentina after becoming infected with hantavirus, a disease carried by 
		rats and other rodents, according to a news alert from the World Health 
		Organization (WHO). | 
        
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			 Among 29 cases of the disease confirmed with laboratory tests 
			between late October 2018 and Jan. 20, 2019, almost 60 percent were 
			in women or girls, the WHO said. 
 Around 50 percent of these confirmed cases - all of which were in 
			Epuyén, in southern Argentina's Chubut province - reported symptoms 
			within the past three weeks.
 
 "Potential human-to-human transmission is currently under 
			investigation," the WHO said.
 
 There is no treatment, cure or vaccine for hantavirus infection, and 
			the case-fatality rate can reach 35-50 percent.
 
			
			 
			
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			The WHO advised health authorities in the region to be vigilant and 
			to step up efforts to detect, investigate, manage and control cases 
			of the disease. It said particular attention should be given to 
			travelers returning from affected areas.
 Hantavirus is a viral respiratory disease usually acquired through 
			contact with infected rat droppings or saliva of infected rodents. 
			It is characterized by headaches, dizziness, fever, nausea, diarrhea 
			and stomach pain, followed by the sudden onset of severe respiratory 
			symptoms.
 
 (Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Dale Hudson)
 
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