Doctors turn to plasma therapy to save victims from virus ‘abyss’

In this Feb. 18 photo, Dr. Zhou Min, a recovered COVID-19 patient who has passed his 14-day quarantine, donates plasma in Wuhan’s blood center in China’s Hubei province. Plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients contains antibodies that may help reduce the viral load in patients that are fighting the disease. (AP)
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Updated 05 April 2020
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Doctors turn to plasma therapy to save victims from virus ‘abyss’

  • Italian hospital launches donor hotline, saying radical treatment offers ‘final hope’

ROME: Doctors in northern Italy are hoping an experimental “super-plasma” therapy will deliver a breakthrough in the treatment of coronavirus patients.

Several patients in the San Matteo Hospital in Pavia, one of the northern Italian areas in the eye of the coronavirus storm, are believed to have benefited from the treatment, which involves a transfusion of blood plasma from people who have recovered from the virus and developed protective antibodies against the deadly infection.
The initial two donors were doctors from the town of Pieve Porto Morone. The husband and wife were among the first to contract and survive the virus in the province.
“We believe that this kind of hyperimmune plasma can cure people,” Dr. Cesare Perotti, director of the immunohematology and transfusion department at the San Matteo Hospital, told Arab news.
“A similar practice proved effective against Ebola and SARS in the past, so we believed we should give it a try here, especially on those patients in the most critical condition. At least it gives them a final hope,” he said.
Dr. Massimo Franchini, a hematologist and chief of the transfusion center at the Poma hospital in Mantua, said that the plasma treatment is a viable option “while we wait for the vaccine, which everyone says will take several months.”
“When the treatment works, a ‘regression’ is observed: It almost seems that we are able to hold the patient by the hand and pull him out of the abyss,” Franchini said.
After the practice was given formal approval by the Italian Superior Authority for Health, the first procedures were carried out in the past few days, with five treatments at San Matteo and four at the Mantua hospital. The outcome is believed to have been positive, although no official figures have been released. However, off the record, some doctors involved in the project say that the results “are more than positive.”
“We had been thinking of plasma therapy for a few weeks,” Perotti said. “Two weeks ago we shared our research with a visiting delegation of Chinese doctors from Wuhan, the city recognized as the initial hotspot for the pandemic.

BACKGROUND

Prospective donors undergo testing for immunity against the virus and can then provide much-needed blood plasma through a procedure that takes no more than 40 minutes.

“In China, it was conducted on some patients, too, with excellent results. So we decided to launch a hotline appeal to all the patients in our area who have recovered from coronavirus after being treated in hospital — they could become donors of the super-plasma we needed for our project,” he said.
Prospective donors undergo testing for immunity against the virus and can then provide much-needed blood plasma through a procedure that takes no more than 40 minutes.
“This therapy has also the great advantage of producing no side effects, and can be combined with other treatments already in progress,” Perotti said.
Pavia in Lombardy has been one of the regions hardest hit by the virus. More than 100 victims reported in the province were residents in aged care homes where the deadly infection spread rapidly.
The local newspaper publishes up to four pages of obituaries daily, mostly of the elderly but the younger generations are also paying a heavy toll because of the infection and most families in the area are mourning at least one dead relative.
Requesting anonymity, the two doctors who became the first donors in the plasma therapy trial told Arab News: “We managed to recover, we succeeded in escaping from this nightmare. As lucky survivors and as doctors, my wife and I thought volunteering for this experiment was the best thing to do. And the results are encouraging.”


Slovak Prime Minister Fico released from hospital, media reports

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Slovak Prime Minister Fico released from hospital, media reports

The hospital said earlier on Thursday Fico underwent further follow-up examinations
Fico, 59, was hit in the abdomen and was taken to a hospital

BRATISLAVA: Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico was released from a hospital in the central city of Banska Bystrica, where he had been recovering from an assassination attempt, and taken to his apartment in Bratislava on Thursday, Slovak media reported.
The hospital and the government office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The hospital said earlier on Thursday Fico underwent further follow-up examinations, which confirmed the positive development of his health condition, and that he had started rehabilitation.
An attacker hit Fico with four bullets at short range when the prime minister greeted supporters at a government meeting in the central Slovak town of Handlova on May 15.
Fico, 59, was hit in the abdomen and was taken to a hospital in Banska Bystrica in serious condition. He immediately underwent a more than five hour operation and another one two days later.
The attacker, identified as 71-year old Juraj C. was detained on the spot and charged with attempted premeditated murder.

Russia not invited to D-Day 80th anniversary, French presidency says

Updated 11 min 8 sec ago
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Russia not invited to D-Day 80th anniversary, French presidency says

  • Organizers had said in April that President Vladimir Putin would not be invited to the events in France
  • The commemorations will be attended by dozens of heads of state and government

PARIS: Russia will not be invited to events marking the 80th anniversary of the Second World War’s D-Day landings next week given its war of aggression against Ukraine, the French presidency said on Thursday.
Organizers had said in April that President Vladimir Putin would not be invited to the events in France, but that some Russian representatives would be welcome in recognition of the country’s war-time sacrifice.
Prior to France’s announcement on Thursday two diplomatic sources told Reuters that the Ukraine war and unease among some allies about Moscow’s presence had led Paris to reverse its initial thinking.
The commemorations will be attended by dozens of heads of state and government, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and US President Joe Biden.
Briefing reporters ahead of next Thursday’s anniversary, a French presidency official confirmed Russia’s absence and that Zelensky had been invited given his country’s “just fight” in the war against Russia.
“Russia has not been invited. The conditions for its participation are not there given the war of aggression launched in 2022, which has only increased these last weeks,” the official said.
Russia is advancing modestly but steadily in eastern Ukraine as two years of war saps Ukraine’s ammunition and manpower.
Earlier this month, three other EU diplomats told Reuters that a number of states from the bloc had said they would be uneasy if Russia attended.
More than 150,000 Allied troops launched the air, sea and land D-Day landings in Normandy on June 6, 1944, an operation that ultimately led to the liberation of western Europe from Nazi Germany.
The Soviet Union lost more than 25 million lives in what it calls the Great Patriotic War and Moscow marks the victory with a massive annual military parade on Red Square.
Russians officials have attended D-Day ceremonies in the past. During the 70th-anniversary events in 2014, Putin along with the then-leaders of France, Germany and Ukraine set up the so-called Normandy format — a contact group aimed at resolving the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, which then focused on the Donbas and Crimea regions.
“When there’s a person, there’s a problem. When there’s no person, there’s no problem,” said one of the diplomatic sources using a quote of former Soviet leader Josef Stalin’s, to describe the decision to not invite Russia.


Israel condemns Slovenia’s Palestinian statehood move

Updated 30 May 2024
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Israel condemns Slovenia’s Palestinian statehood move

  • Foreign Minister Israel Katz said the decision, which requires Slovenian parliamentary approval, rewarded Hamas for murder and rape

JERUSALEM: Israel’s foreign minister denounced the Slovenian government’s decision on Thursday to recognize an independent Palestinian state.
Foreign Minister Israel Katz said the decision, which requires Slovenian parliamentary approval, rewarded Hamas for murder and rape, a reference to the Palestinian Islamist group’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel that sparked the war in Gaza.
In a statement, Katz said the move also strengthened Israel’s arch-enemy Iran and damaged “the close friendship between the Slovenian and Israeli people.” He added: “I hope the Slovenian parliament rejects this recommendation.”


UK govt calls for release of Hong Kong democracy campaigners

Updated 30 May 2024
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UK govt calls for release of Hong Kong democracy campaigners

  • “We call on the Hong Kong authorities to end NSL prosecutions,” junior foreign minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan said
  • Britain has become increasingly critical of Beijing’s influence on its former colony

LONDON: The British government on Thursday urged Hong Kong to halt prosecutions under its National Security Law and release 14 pro-democracy campaigners found guilty of subversion.
“We call on the Hong Kong authorities to end NSL prosecutions and release all individuals charged under it,” junior foreign minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan said in a statement.
Britain handed back Hong Kong to China in 1997 but has become increasingly critical of Beijing’s influence on its former colony, accusing it of breaking its promise to protect democratic freedoms.
Relations have soured between the two capitals, including after Hong Kongers were given residency and a route to citizenship in the UK due to the crackdown on pro-democracy campaigners.
Trevelyan said Thursday’s verdict was “a clear demonstration of the way that the Hong Kong authorities have used the Beijing-imposed National Security Law to stifle opposition and criminalize political dissent.”
The 14 people found guilty, who were among 47 charged, were “guilty of nothing more than seeking to exercise their right to freedom of speech, of assembly and of political participation,” she said.
“Today’s verdict will only further tarnish Hong Kong’s international reputation. It sends a message that Hong Kongers can no longer safely and meaningfully participate in peaceful political debate.”


Animals collapse, water shortages bite amid India’s searing heat

Updated 30 May 2024
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Animals collapse, water shortages bite amid India’s searing heat

  • India’s capital Delhi recorded first heat-related death on Wednesday as sun scorches
  • Extreme temperatures spark fires in several regions of country such as Jammu and Kashmir

NEW DELHI: Animals collapsed, people jumped on water tankers with buckets amid shortages and government employees changed their work hours as blistering summer heat kept its grip on north India on Thursday.

Although Thursday’s readings were marginally lower in Delhi than the previous day when one area recorded an all-time high of 52.9 degrees Celsius (127.22 Fahrenheit), the region still saw temperatures touching 47 C (116.6 F).

Delhi, which has a population of 20 million, recorded its first heat-related death on Wednesday, with a 40-year-old laborer dying of heatstroke, local media reported. Authorities said they are investigating if the 52.9 C reading in the Mungeshpur neighborhood on Wednesday was caused by a sensor error at the local weather station.

Television images showed people chasing water tankers or climbing on top of them in parts of the city to fill containers amidst an acute water shortage that the government blames on low levels in the Yamuna River — Delhi’s primary source of water.

Along the river’s banks, women in shanties endured stifling conditions in their homes as their cooking stoves aggravated the sweltering weather.

“The heat is worse this year. We work like this every day so we get into the habit,” said Seema, 19, who cooks for her family twice a day.

In the neighboring state of Uttar Pradesh, a policeman used CPR to revive a monkey that he said had fainted and fallen from a tree because of the heat, pumping its chest for 45 minutes, local media reported, and Delhi also saw cases of heatstroke among birds.

As more people chose to order food and groceries by home delivery instead of venturing out in the heat, delivery personnel have been spending more time on their scooters and motorbikes, their employers said.

“Order frequency has been higher during the afternoon when people are avoiding stepping out,” said Ateef Shaikh, a delivery fleet manager at a Swiggy delivery app store in Mumbai.

Zomato and its grocery delivery business, Blinkit, have taken additional measures to help delivery workers, including providing refreshments and comfortable clothing, their spokespersons said.

Blinkit is installing air coolers in the waiting areas of all its stores, the spokesperson added.

The extreme temperatures have also sparked more fires in several parts of the country, including in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir, where authorities are using drones to monitor forest fires.

The country, which is nearing the end of multi-phase national elections, is not alone in experiencing unusually high temperatures. Billions across Asia are grappling with the heat and in neighboring Pakistan the temperature crossed 52 C (125.6 F)this week.

Scientists say this trend has been worsened by human-driven climate change. India, the world’s third-biggest greenhouse gas emitter, has long held that, as a developing nation, it should not be forced to cut its energy-related emissions but has set a target of becoming a net-zero emitter by 2070.