Vietnam’s first monkeypox patient discharged from hospital
The first patient with monkeypox in Vietnam was discharged from hospital on October 14 after three weeks of treatment, according to the Ho Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical Diseases.
Vietnam's first patient with monkeypox discharged from hospital (Photo: Ho Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical Diseases)
HCM City (VNA) - The first patient with monkeypox in Vietnam was discharged fromhospital on October 14 after three weeks of treatment, according to the Ho ChiMinh City Hospital for Tropical Diseases.
After treatment, the female patient’s fever has gone. Theblisters on her face, hands, and feet have dried up, flaked off, andcicatrised, while those inside her throat have been healed. With her pain gone,the patient now eats well, gains weight, and is optimistic.
The 35-year-old patient, residing in Ho Chi Minh City, fellill on September 18 while traveling in Dubai with symptoms of fever, fatigue,chills, muscle aches, headache and a cough, as well as red, itchy bumps on herarms, body, and face. She returned to Vietnam on September 22.
On September 23, she was admitted to the city’s Tu DuHospital and then transferred to the municipal Hospital of Dermato Venereology,where she was quarantined. Two days later, she tested positive for monkeypoxand was transferred to the municipal Hospital for Tropical Diseases for furtherquarantine, treatment and genetic sequencing./.
The Ministry of Health has recommended people to follow six measures to protect themselves from monkeypox, as Vietnam announced the first case of the disease on October 3.
The first patient with monkeypox in Vietnam has tested negative to the virus, while people with close contacts with her have shown no suspected symptoms so far.
Vietnam now boasts a nationwide healthcare network with 1,665 hospitals, 384 of which are non-public, supported by local commune- and ward-level stations. At the end of 2024, hospital bed capacity reached 34 per 10,000 people, slightly above the global average.
The 56-year-old patient from Quang Tri province was discharged in stable condition as he no longer experienced shortness of breath and was able to walk, move around, and eat normally.
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After more than three weeks of intensive treatment, the patient's pneumonia improved, breathing stabilised, sedation was reduced, and the breathing tube was removed. He is now conscious, able to eat orally, and in recovery.