Audio By Carbonatix
It has emerged the four Kumasi Academy students who died over the last few days died of Influenza Type A popularly referred to as Swine Flu.
Health Minister Kwaku Agyemang Manu has said 12 out of the 19 cases sent to the Noguchi Memorial Institute has tested positive for the virus.
Providing more details, the Minister said the Influenza type A has the H1N1 Pandemic strain.
At least 44 Kumasi Academy students were rushed to various hospitals in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region in what was initially suspected to be an outbreak of meningitis.
The students complained of "fever-like conditions" at the school's clinic.
Tests however proved negative for meningitis with health officials contemplating what exactly may have caused the deaths of four students in the last seven days.
Kwaku Agyemang Manu
It was organised chaos in the school as parents and guardians rushed to pick their wards home fearing the worst may happen to them.
School authorities, Regional Minister as well as the Regional Health authorities appealed to the guardians to bring back their children to be administered with some antibiotics.
There were fears the students may transmit whatever virus they may have contracted to their families and close relations. Some of the parents were said to have brought back their wards.
In the midst of the chaos samples were taken from the affected students and sent to the Noguchi Memorial Institute, the country's medical research institute to ascertain what may have caused the deaths.
After investigation by the research medical institute, it has emerged the students died of the swine flu virus.

The Health Minister reiterated that students who were sent home must immediately return so the vaccination will be administered to them.
He said no new cases have been reported over the last three days.
Kwaku Agyemang Manu said the way forward is to keep the students on campus while immediate steps are activated to supply vaccines to the school to contain the outbreak.

About Swine Flu
According to the World Health Organisation, the Influenza A (H1N1) virus emerged in 2009.
It is transmitted through the respiratory system mainly through droplets disseminated by unprotected coughs and sneezes.
Short-distance airborne transmission of influenza viruses may occur, particularly in crowded enclosed spaces. Hand contamination and direct inoculation of virus is another possible source of transmission.
Nature of the disease
An acute respiratory infection of varying severity, ranging from asymptomatic infection to fatal disease. Typical influenza symptoms include fever with abrupt onset, chills, sore throat, non-productive cough and, often accompanied by headache, coryza, myalgia and prostration.
Latest Stories
-
‘Behind The Lens with Queen Liz’ explores the true meaning of Valentine’s Day, Love, Lust or Legacy?
29 minutes -
‘I wanted to be an architect but ended up as a nurse’ – Diana Hamilton reveals
1 hour -
From wards to worship: Diana Hamilton reveals how nursing school shaped her destiny
2 hours -
Mahama demands binding deadlines for African reparations
2 hours -
This is not the time to settle political scores – Bawumia to government
3 hours -
5 definitive Valentine’s Day gifts to win your lover’s heart in Ghana
4 hours -
37% of SHS students exposed to drugs – Opare-Addo
4 hours -
NLC secures court injunction against striking tertiary unions
4 hours -
OSP says it remains guided by law after INTERPOL deletes Ofori-Atta’s Red Notice
5 hours -
Waiting in the Ring: life inside Bukom’s halted boxing scene
5 hours -
Red Notice cancellation: OSP official fires back at Ofori-Atta’s lawyers
5 hours -
Ofori-Atta saga: Red Notice ends after arrest – OSP official clarifies
6 hours -
AAG raises alarm over billboard demolitions, calls for presidential intervention
6 hours -
Health Minister to chair probe into ‘No Bed Syndrome’ death; promises system overhaul
6 hours -
Prime Insight to tackle ‘galamsey tax’ debate, cocoa reforms and Ayawaso East fallout this Saturday
7 hours
