Tag Title: myanmar
New poppy blight poised to boost opium price: U.N. 
June 26th, 2012
Afghan farmers work at a poppy field in Jalalabad province May 5, 2012. Credit: Reuters/ Parwiz By Michael Shields VIENNA | Tue Jun 26, 2012 10:18am EDT VIENNA (Reuters) – A fresh blight is poised to hit Afghanistan’s poppy fields this year, driving up opium prices and threatening to fuel a shift to potentially lethal heroin substitutes like “krokodil”, the U.N. drugs watchdog said on Tuesday
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China changes patent law in fight for cheaper drugs 
June 8th, 2012
By Tan Ee Lyn HONG KONG | Fri Jun 8, 2012 12:59pm EDT HONG KONG (Reuters) – China has overhauled parts of its intellectual property laws to allow its drug makers to make cheap copies of medicines still under patent protection in an initiative likely to unnerve foreign pharmaceutical companies. The Chinese move, outlined in documents posted on its patent law office website, comes within months of a similar move by India to effectively end the monopoly on an expensive cancer drug made by Bayer AG by issuing its first so-called “compulsory license”
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Drug-resistant malaria spreads along Thai-Myanmar border: study 
April 5th, 2012
By Tan Ee Lyn HONG KONG | Thu Apr 5, 2012 2:06pm EDT HONG KONG (Reuters) – A malaria strain increasingly resistant to the most effective drug used to treat the disease has spread along the Thai-Myanmar border, a 10-year study published in The Lancet medical journal found, and may reach India and Africa unless ways are found to contain it. The findings in the U.K.-based publication released on Friday observed that patients at malaria clinics took longer to get better when treated with combination therapies containing artemisinin – a drug derived from the sweet wormwood shrub and which is recognized as the best drug against malaria, according to one of the authors. “The malaria strains that are resistant to artemisinin are definitely found in the western border of Thailand and eastern Myanmar,” said Professor Nicholas White at the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, in Bangkok, Thailand, and Centre for Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford
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Lead poisoning common in Burmese refugee kids 
January 17th, 2012
NEW YORK | Tue Jan 17, 2012 5:36pm EST NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Many Burmese refugee children bound for the U.S. may have dangerously high levels of lead in their blood, a new government study finds. Researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that of 642 U.S.-bound Burmese children, 90 percent had some amount of lead in their blood. Overall, 5 percent had lead poisoning — including nearly 15 percent of children younger than 2. High lead exposure is especially dangerous for young children, since it can permanently damage their developing brains. In the U.S. and other developed countries, children’s lead exposure dropped substantially after the heavy metal was removed from gasoline, house paints and other products. But studies have found that lead poisoning is still fairly common among refugee children who come from countries where lead exposure is a bigger problem. For the new study, CDC researchers focused on Burmese children who were living in one of three Thailand refugee camps before coming to the U.S. In 2008, there had been reports of high lead poisoning rates among children who were resettled in the U.S. after living in those camps — suggesting that at least some of their lead exposure happened in the camps. The CDC researchers found that of 642 refugee-camp children tested over two months in 2009, nearly all had some detectable lead in their blood. And the number with lead poisoning was several times higher than what’s seen in U.S. children. Of children younger than 6 — the most at-risk age group — about 7 percent had lead poisoning. In the U.S., it’s estimated that 1 percent of kids in that age range suffer lead poisoning. What’s more, refugee children younger than 2 had a lead poisoning rate of 14.5 percent. Children were considered to have lead poisoning if their levels were at least 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. That’s the CDC’s current threshold. A federal advisory panel, however, just recommended that the threshold be lowered to 5 micrograms. It has long been known that even lead exposures lower than 10 micrograms per deciliter are linked to lower IQ in children. The CDC already recommends that all refugee children have their lead levels checked within three months of arriving in the U.S. CAR BATTERIES, REMEDIES, ANEMIA AT FAULT? The current study is the first to test children’s lead concentrations before they come to the U.S., according to the CDC researchers, led by Dr. Tarissa Mitchell. And the findings point to some factors that put children at particular risk while they’re still in refugee camps. Many children with lead poisoning were exposed to car batteries in their homes, which families used to generate power for electronic items. Children younger than 2 were particularly likely to have touched or “mouthed” the batteries. Young children who’d been given traditional remedies at the camps were also at increased risk of lead poisoning, the researchers found. Past studies have found that some traditional medicines are contaminated with lead. When Mitchell’s team tested seven remedies sold at the Thai refugee camps, they found that one — a “multipurpose infant remedy” called Gaw Mo Dah — had lead levels far above what’s considered acceptable in foods in the U.S. But the biggest factor seemed to be anemia, which is most often caused by iron deficiency. Anemia is known to make children more vulnerable to lead poisoning. The CDC recommends that when refugee children in the U.S. are tested for lead levels, they also be screened for anemia and have a “nutritional assessment.” But the current findings also show that efforts are needed in the refugee camps themselves, according to Mitchell’s team. The Thai camps, they say, have already started educational campaigns to warn families about the dangers of lead exposure. Once children are in the U.S., the CDC researchers say, families should be placed in “lead-safe” housing. And after their first lead test, children younger than 6 should be re-tested within six months of settling into permanent housing. Burma, also known as Myanmar, was under military rule until last year, when a civilian government was installed following elections. Each year since 2007, up to 15,000 Burmese refugees have resettled in the U.S. from camps in Thailand. SOURCE: bit.ly/zNNv7x Pediatrics, online January 16, 2012. Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints
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Afghan opium output hit by disease but Myanmar’s up: U.N. 
June 23rd, 2011
A large field of poppies grows on the outskirts of Jelawar village in the Arghandab Valley north of Kandahar April 18, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Bob Strong BANGKOK | Thu Jun 23, 2011 10:04am EDT BANGKOK (Reuters) – Global production of opium fell 38 percent in 2010 as plant disease hit crops in top producer Afghanistan, but output in second-largest producer Myanmar jumped after a big increase in land under cultivation, the United Nations said on Thursday. In its annual World Drug Report, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said heroin consumption has stabilized in Europe while cocaine consumption has declined in North America, which it described as “the most lucrative markets” for those drugs. But there were worrying trends: a big increase in cocaine use in Europe and South America over the past decade, the recent expansion of heroin use in Africa and the increased abuse of synthetic “designer drugs” and prescription drugs in places. Yury Fedotov, UNODC’s executive director, noted in the report some progress in the prevention of drug use and said more should be done to facilitate “healthy and fulfilling alternatives” so that drug use was not accepted as a way of life. “On the demand side, there is growing recognition that we must draw a line between criminals (drug traffickers) and their victims (drug users), and that treatment for drug use offers a far more effective cure than punishment,” he added. BLIGHT IN AFGHANISTAN Various plant diseases combined to cut Afghanistan’s opium production in half last year and UNODC said production could fall a little further in 2011. The country accounted for 74 percent of global opium production in 2010, down from 88 percent in 2009. Myanmar’s share of global production reached 12 percent, up from 5 percent in 2007. The area under cultivation there fell by 21 percent to 185,900 hectares (459,400 acres) between 2007 and 2009 but it rose to 195,700 hectares last year, UNODC said. Myanmar’s military rulers said in March that nearly one-sixth of the country’s illicit opium crop had been destroyed. A nominally civilian government has taken over since but the army still pulls the strings behind the scenes. Analysts say several top generals enjoy close ties with Burmese businessmen linked to the opium trade. The global area under coca cultivation shrank in 2010, declining 6 percent to 149,100 hectares (368,000 acres). UNODC said cocaine production had fallen sharply in Colombia since 2007, which offset increases in Peru and Bolivia. In 2009, the use of cocaine had substantially declined in North America, although the 5.7 million users there accounted for more than a third of all cocaine users worldwide. “While there are stable or downward trends for heroin and cocaine use in major regions of consumption, this is being offset by increases in the use of synthetic and prescription drugs,” it said. “Non-medical use of prescription drugs is reportedly a growing health problem in a number of developed and developing countries.” UNODC estimated that between 3.3 percent and 6.1 percent of the world’s population aged 15 to 64 used illicit drugs in 2009, the latest year for which data was available, with cannabis by far the most widely used substance. The wide range reflected a lack of information from populous countries such as China and India, as well as from Africa, where consumption is on the rise, it said. Global seizures of ATS drugs (amphetamine-type stimulants) hit a record high in 2009, UNODC said. “Africa is a region of concern with regard to the trafficking of ATS,” it said, noting that West Africa was emerging as a new source of methamphetamine for markets in East Asia. (Reporting by Frederik Richter; Editing by Alan Raybould and Yoko Nishikawa) Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints
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Polio afflicts child in Myanmar, vaccinations planned 
February 23rd, 2011
GENEVA | Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:10am EST GENEVA (Reuters) – Myanmar is stepping up its polio vaccinations after the crippling virus emerged for the first time in more than three years, infecting an infant, the World Health Organization said on Wednesday. A seven-month-old girl caught a rare strain of polio that can spread when some people in a community are immunized with oral polio vaccine (OPV) and others are not, WHO spokesman Oliver Rosenbauer said. She had not been vaccinated against the disease. “On very rare occasions, when replicating in the human gut, OPV strains genetically change and may spread in communities that are not fully vaccinated, especially in areas where there is poor hygiene, poor sanitation or overcrowding,” he said. Polio is transmitted in human excrement. Communities that lack clean water, toilets and sewer systems are particularly vulnerable to infections when not enough people are immunized against the virus. There are no other known cases of paralysis from the strain in Myanmar, which was found in December, according to the WHO. More than 10,000 children have been immunized in response to the discovery and more vaccinations are planned. “It seems to have occurred in an area with population immunity gaps, so the key is to rapidly raise immunity levels,” Rosenbauer said. Polio attacks the nervous system and can cause irreversible paralysis within hours, with young children most vulnerable. There has been a 99 percent drop in the number of infections worldwide since 1988, when the WHO, Rotary International, UNICEF and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention launched an effort to eradicate the virus as was done for smallpox. Polio is now endemic in only four countries — India, Pakistan, Nigeria and Afghanistan — compared to 125 when the eradication drive began. At the time, polio caused paralysis in nearly 1,000 children every day. Myanmar was declared polio-free in 2000 but had a brief outbreak in 2007 when the virus was imported from elsewhere. The military-ruled country is also battling drug-resistant malaria along its border with Thailand. (Reporting by Laura MacInnis; Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton) Share this Link this Digg this Email Reprints
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