28 July,2009 02:25 PM IST | | IANS
A 23-year-old resident of Punjab's Patiala town, admitted to a Chandigarh hospital, has tested positive for the influenza A (H1N1) virus.
Officials said the patient from Patiala, about 70 km from here, had returned from Thailand last week. On Friday, he approached doctors at the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) here with complaints of fever and cold.
"Seeing his travel history, we admitted him in an isolated ward and sent his throat swab samples to NICD (National Institute of Communicable Disease) in New Delhi. We got his report yesterday evening that confirmed the infection," HC Gera, Chandigarh's nodal officer for swine flu, said.
"We have also informed health officials in Patiala so they can quarantine the family members of the patient."
ALSO READ
Punjab and Haryana High Court judges, Justice Deepak Gupta & Justice Vikram Aggarwal inaugurate 'Madhyastha' Centre of Excellence at Chandigarh University
Congress leader holds demonstration against Punjab govt on outskirts of Chandigarh
Polling for Panjab University students' council held in Chandigarh
WinZO partners ISB Chandigarh for gaming talent mentorship Programme
Chandigarh University's Commitment to Academic Excellence Transcends Beyond Borders, 1900 International Study Offers Received by its Students from Top Global Universities
This is the third confirmed case of swine flu in the city.
Two more Patiala residents were admitted Friday with similar symptoms but their reports were negative. Chandigarh has got two more suspected cases of swine flu - a 14-year-old boy from neighbouring Panchkula town who has returned from Malaysia and a 26-year-old woman who had been to Singapore.
Both are admitted in isolated wards at a government hospital here.
On Monday, a student from Patiala who had recently returned from Singapore tested positive for swine flu.
Punjab has reported over a dozen swine flu cases, most of them students from a school in Jalandhar, 150 km from Chandigarh, who had returned from a trip to NASA in the US.