Severin Carrell, Scotland correspondent 

Glasgow pensioner becomes second Briton to die from swine flu

Elderly man had other serious underlying health problems and had been in intensive care for 15 days
  
  


An elderly man from the Glasgow area has become the second Briton to die from swine flu.

The 73-year-old, who had other very serious underlying health problems and has not yet been named, died at the Royal Alexandra hospital in Paisley on Saturday night. He had been in intensive care for 15 days, health officials said.

Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish health secretary, said: "Our thoughts are with the family and friends of the patient at this tragic and very sad time. The family have asked for the patient's identity to be kept private.

"Although it is concerning that the patient had swine flu, we are aware that the patient had very serious underlying health issues."

A family spokesman said: "Our beloved relative was private in life and we would ask that his privacy continues to be respected."

The first Briton to succumb to the H1N1 virus, Jacqui Fleming, also died at the Royal Alexandra after giving birth prematurely to her third child. She was the first person outside the Americas to die after contracting the virus.

Fleming also had significant underlying health problems and had been critically ill for several weeks before she died.

Officials have repeatedly stressed that the virus appears to be relatively mild.

The latest official figures show that 4,322 Britons have so far contracted the virus, with significant outbreaks now in Birmingham, London and the Glasgow area, but health experts believe the real figure will be much higher.

In the US, specialists at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta estimate that at least 1 million Americans may have had swine flu and not been diagnosed, although the official figures put confirmed US cases at 27,717, with 127 deaths.

However, the virus is now spreading quickly in the southern hemisphere, where it is winter – the traditional season for flu epidemics.

The last update of the World Health Organisation put total cases at 59,814 with 263 deaths.

 

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