Jun 14, 2009 3:00 pm US/Eastern
U.K. Reports Its First Swine Flu Death
LONDON (AP) ―
-
-
Suspected swine flu samples in rack ready for testing at Washington State Public Health Laboratories in Shoreline, Wash.
AP
Poll
How concerned are you about the swine flu outbreak?
You need the latest Flash player to view our Poll.
Click here to download.
Click here to
bypass this detection if you already
have the latest Flash Player.
A person has died of swine flu at a hospital in Scotland in the first death from the illness reported in Britain, officials said Sunday.
It also was the first death from the H5N1 strain of influenza reported outside the Americas by the World Health Organization in Geneva or the European Centers for Disease Control in Stockholm, which both keep tabs on confirmed cases of swine flu and deaths from the illness in countries around the world.
Scotland's government said the patient suffering from swine flu died at a hospital there. It said the patient was one of 10 people being treated for the influenza at the facility.
The statement did not identify the patient or the hospital. "The patient had underlying health conditions," the government statement said, without saying what they were.
Britain has been harder hit by the virus than elsewhere in Europe. Earlier Sunday, Britain had reported another 61 cases of swine flu, bringing the U.K. total to 1,226 cases.
Friday's last WHO report said 74 countries have officially reported 29,669 cases of swine flu, including 145 deaths. Fatalities had occurred in eight countries in the Americas: Mexico, the United States, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic and Guatemala.
Last week, the World Health Organization declared the flu a pandemic. WHO said it expected further cases -- and deaths -- to occur as the pandemic plays out over the next few years.
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)