China has launched a plague
outbreak exercise along the Qinghai-Tibet Railway to test the country's ability to
respond to such disasters.
The scenario for the simulation exercise, which lasted
for two hours, was the discovery of a feverish passenger in a train
on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway suspected of having plague.
The work staff on the train discovered the case and
reported to local health departments, and prevented further
transmission of the disease.
The exercise raised awareness about plague prevention
and tested the capabilities of the Ministry of Health, the Ministry
of Railways, Qinghai Province and Tibet Autonomous Region, the
Ministry of Health said.
The experience also provided a reference for other
cities that have a railway service to Tibet so that they can
prevent plague being transported along the railway.
Plague is a fatal bacterial disease transmitted by
fleas from infected rats and by contact with infected blood or
tissue. The most common form, the bubonic plague, results in high
fever, delirium and swollen lymph nodes.
Qinghai is one of the
provinces that have witnessed human deaths from plague over the
past five years.
Experts say that plague, usually carried by marmots in
Qinghai and Tibet, could be carried further afield by the
Qinghai-Tibet Railway.
The Ministry of Railways has worked out an emergency
response plan in the event of an outbreak of plague on the
railway.
Plague outbreaks have killed about 200 million people
in the past 1,500 years. The most infamous epidemic, Europe's Black
Death, which started in 1347, killed 25 million people in Europe
and 13 million in the Middle East and China in the space of five
years.
(Xinhua News Agency September 21, 2006)
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