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Baby’s whoop horror

A MUM told last night how her newborn baby nearly died after GPs failed to diagnose her with whooping cough three times.

Aimee Webber, 26, was told daughter Poppy had a chest infection.

But when a GP later heard the babys distinctive cough she realised it was the killer virus. Aimee said: The doctor just looked so alarmed. She said, I think its whooping cough and I just burst into tears.

Suffering ... Aimee Webber with baby Poppy

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Care assistant Aimee and police officer husband Rob, 26, were told to rush Poppy to Southend University Hospital in Essex. Medics were horrified to discover that one of her lungs had collapsed.

As she fought for her life, Poppy suffered shocking water retention making her DOUBLE in size. Now three months old, she is still suffering but doctors hope she will make a full recovery.

Aimee, of Southend added: We can only pray that she doesnt pick up any infections because her immune system is so weak.

We just hope she will get better and not have any long-term effects.

Parents have been warned to be on guard against the virus, which has killed 13 babies this year in the biggest outbreak for two decades.

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Baby’s whoop horror

HIV-infected woman's warning to VSU students: Bad choice can have deadly consequences

ETTRICK - HIV is a silent killer.

"You can never tell if someone is infected, and they might have the virus even if they look healthy," Deidre Johnson said. "Everything you do has consequences that may change your life," she said.

Johnson knows better than most. Living with HIV for 12 years, she has paid a high toll for her trust in the wrong man, who eventually gave her the virus. Yet Johnson is alive and able tell her story. Yesterday, she spoke to students at the World AIDS Day Observance at Virginia State University.

The purpose of the event, which is hosted by Student Health And Counseling Services, is to raise awareness and warn students that HIV still is a threat to the life of those who are infected - many of them young people who are careless in their choices of sexual partners and do not protect themselves.

"Fortunately, the topic of AIDS isn't as taboo as it used to be," said Dr. Bridget H. Wilson, assistant director of the VSU Student Health Center Center. "Our students take it seriously and openly discuss it," she said.

Wilson said that since VSU has begun hosting the event six years ago, between 150 and 200 students took the opportunity to get tested for HIV at no cost each year. "The good news is, we have never had a positive case on campus, which shows that our efforts are working," she said. But Wilson added that one never knows if HIV positive students come on campus without telling anyone.

Johnson is one of those young women who fell for a man who hid his infection from her and lured her into having unprotected sex. Her then-partner, the 37-year-old said, was "gorgeous and looked healthy." They started dating when she was already the mother of a young boy, but her new lover never told her that he was a convicted drug user.

The couple moved El Paso, Texas, when she found out that she was pregnant again.

"After they did some routine medical tests, they called me back into the doctor's office," Johnson said. "The doctor sat me down, but he would not look me in the eye. Then he told me that I was HIV-positive," she said.

Johnson, who had never had a sexual transmitted disease and who had unprotected sex with only two men in her life, was in denial. A second test confirmed the first. It would be only a matter of time - on average about seven years - until her infection would lead to AIDS, still a deadly killer today.

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HIV-infected woman's warning to VSU students: Bad choice can have deadly consequences

Council encourages testing for hepatitis B

LIHUE The Kauai County Council landed a right hook against one of Hawaiis most lethal and undetected killers, the hepatitis B virus. The council on Wednesday unanimously approved a resolution supporting a nonprofits efforts to wipe hepatitis B off the island through the Hepatitis B Elimination Project.

The most common cause of liver cancer in Hawaii is hepatitis B, Malama Pono Executive Director DQ Jackson said. Hawaii has the highest rate of liver cancer in the United States.

Malama Pono Health Services mission is to use education to stop the spread of viral hepatitis and other sexually transmitted diseases on Kauai, and to serve people affected by those diseases, according to Jackson.

The nonprofit is launching a three-year, $400,000 education project aimed at eliminating hepatitis B as a transmissible disease on Kauai. Hepatitis B is incurable, but it is treatable and the vaccination is highly effective for decades, he said.

We are here today to ask your moral support for this project, Jackson told the council. We ask you to use your high standing in the community to encourage at-risk persons to be screened and to be vaccinated.

Resolution 2012-60, introduced by Councilman KipuKai Kualii, encourages people to get tested for hepatitis B. The resolution states the virus is transmitted through blood and infected bodily fluids, which can occur through direct blood-to-blood contact, unprotected sex, use of unsterile needles and from an infected mother to the newborn during delivery.

The liver is such an important organ that the human body can only survive one or two days if the liver were to shut down, the resolution states.

Malama Pono Board of Directors President and Medical Director Jimmy Yoon said, conservatively, approximately 400 million people in the world are infected with hepatitis B virus, translating to more than 5 percent of the entire worlds population. In the U.S. alone, there are at least 2 million people infected.

Unfortunately its a silent killer; people dont get sick or feel sick or has symptoms until its virtually too late, Yoon said.

Malama Ponos best estimate, through consultation with the federal Centers for Disease Control and the Hawaii Department of Health, is that there are about 1,000 people on Kauai who are infected with the virus, according to Yoon. Statewide, it is estimated that about 40,000 people live with the virus.

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Council encourages testing for hepatitis B

World AIDS Day events in Fall River draw attention to disease

Living with HIV/AIDS continues to be a stigma more than 30 years after the virus was first documented in the United States.

It helps make AIDS the silent killer, said Paul B. Goulet, director of the consumer office at the Massachusetts Department of Public Healths Office of HIV/AIDS.

Goulet, a Fall River native, spoke Thursday at the Cultural Center on South Main Street to help commemorate the local observance of the 25th annual World AIDS Day.

Saturday is World AIDS Day. The worldwide event is intended to raise awareness of HIV/AIDS by showing support for people living with HIV, as well as commemorating those who have died from AIDS-related causes.

Thursdays World AIDS Day events in Fall River included a candlelight vigil at Gromada Plaza, followed by a procession to the Cultural Center, where more than 100 people gathered to celebrate the advances made in battling HIV/AIDS but to also be reminded that considerable work remains to be done.

Were still fighting to bring this disease to zero, said Connie Rocha-Mimoso, the program director of HIV Services for Seven Hills Behavioral Health.

Rocha-Mimoso said HIV awareness and education are still drastically needed, especially given that youth and young adults continue to become infected with HIV.

We need to be advocates for the youth, she said. The numbers are going up. The numbers of youths being infected by the virus are outrageous.

More than 25 million people have died of HIV/AIDS since the disease was first documented in 1981, making it one of the most destructive pandemics in history, according to UNAIDS, a program of the United Nations.

An estimated 34 million people across the world are HIV-positive, according to health statistics.

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World AIDS Day events in Fall River draw attention to disease