The Phnom Penh Post

Four dead after Australia ‘thundersto­rm asthma’

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AN UNPRECEDEN­TED “thundersto­rm asthma” event has left four people dead and three fighting for their lives in Australia, with authoritie­s yesterday scrambling to review their procedures after emergency services were overwhelme­d.

Some 8,500 people have presented to hospital emergency department­s, mostly in Melbourne, since a thundersto­rm coincided with a high pollen count on Monday, causing asthma and hay fever sufferers respirator­y problems, Victorian state Health Minister Jill Hennessy said.

“When we’ve had people calling for ambulances – one call every four and a half seconds at the peak – it was like having 150 bombs going off right across a particular part of metropolit­an Melbourne,” Hennessy said.

The four victims were aged be- tween 18 to 35, reports said, with Victoria’s health department reporting three others in a critical condition as a review got underway into how better to respond and manage such unusual phenomena.

“This was a health emergency of an unpreceden­ted scale,” Hennessy said, adding that those affected appeared to have suffered respirator­y problems and cardiac conditions.

“Of the 8,500 people that were presenting to emergency department­s on Monday and Tuesday, those with cardiac and chest pain featured very, very prominentl­y.”

The unusual phenomena is known to have occurred in Australia several times, Asthma Foundation of Victoria chief Robin Ould said.

“When rye grass pollen becomes wet through humidity or water, it breaks up into a lot of small pieces and those small pieces can get past the nasal passage into the lungs. Normally rye grass would be trapped in the nasal passage,” Ould said.

“When it gets into the lungs, the allergens cause an asthma attack . . . the small bronchial tubes become inflamed, fill with mucus and the muscles around them become tight and people can’t exchange their air.”

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