A nationwide surveillance system and health network to report the
atypical pneumonia epidemic faster is needed in China to ensure the
disease is controlled effectively, the World Health Organization
(WHO) said yesterday.
WHO expressed satisfaction with and confidence in the preventive
and control ability of the health system against the infectious
disease in comparatively developed areas of the country.
Henk Bekedam, WHO Representative in China, said these included
South China's Guangdong Province and Beijing.
But he was concerned about the ability of provinces in western
China, which are much poorer, to respond promptly and effectively
to severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
Efforts to help poorer people, especially farmers in rural areas,
must be stepped up because they may have great difficulty in paying
for medical treatment if infected, said WHO expert James Maguire.
He was part of a team that has just finished a four-day
investigation in Beijing.
Related departments under the State Council are currently drafting
a regulation on the operation of the mechanism and strengthening
surveillance and reporting of public health accidents, said a
Ministry of Health official, who declined to be named.
The WHO team of experts in Beijing have visited military hospitals
to assess SARS cases, which have been the source of numerous rumors
concerning the magnitude of the outbreak of the disease.
Rumors that the real number of SARS cases in Beijing may be more
than officially reported are mainly caused by the large number of
people under medical observation, Maguire said. Few of these
patients will be confirmed as having SARS.
Beijing yesterday denied reports that several primary and middle
schools in the city have stopped classes because of SARS.
"No confirmed SARS case has been found at any Beijing school so
far," Deputy Director of the Beijing Municipal Health Bureau Guo
Jiyong told China Daily.
His words came after reports that several primary schools and some
buildings of Beijing-based universities have been closed after SARS
cases were found among students.
"There is a student in our school who has stopped going to school
because his grandfather was suspected of having SARS," a staff
member with one primary school said on condition of anonymity.
He
admitted other students were staying at home for health concern,
but the school had not begun "suspending classes."
A
special lecture on SARS was held yesterday for employees in more
than 100 foreign-funded enterprises in the Chinese capital.
Participants were given handbooks on SARS prevention and related
guide books in both Chinese and English which introduce the disease
and give hotline telephone numbers.
Showing that SARS has affected China's tourism industry, many
agencies have turned to promoting short-distance tours rather than
overseas trips during the coming May Day holidays.
(China Daily April 17, 2003)
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