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China's efforts to curb atypical pneumonia that has
claimed the lives of 46 Chinese have resulted in a rise of
recovered patients and a drop of new patients, Health
Minister Zhang Wenkang said Wednesday.
China's efforts to curb atypical
pneumonia that has claimed the lives of 46 Chinese have
resulted in a rise of recovered patients and a drop of new
patients, Health Minister Zhang Wenkang said Wednesday.
As of March 31, 1,190 atypical pneumonia
patients had been reported in the inland areas of China, and
46 had died, Zhang said in an interview with Xinhua.
Of the patients, 934 have been discharged from
hospitals fully recovered and another 210 remain
hospitalized.
Guangdong Province, in south
China, has reported 1,153 cases and 40 deaths, according to
the minister.
In the national capital of
Beijing, twelve people have been infected, however, the
disease has been contained thanks to timely and effective
measures taken by the local medical department.
The central authorities have expressed great
concern and have issued instructions regarding the control
of the disease, according to the minister.
The
Health Ministry has sent leading officials and experts to
Guangdong to help curb the disease, while local authorities
have mobilized all resources to cure the patients, inform
the public, and prevent the spread of the epidemic.
As a result, Guangdong reported 47 percent
less of new cases in March than in February, with 507 more
recovered patients discharged from hospital and the number
of deaths dropping sharply, the minister said.
He said the origin of the disease has yet to
be identified, adding that there has been no scientific
evidence establishing Guangdong as the source though the
province reported the first atypical pneumonia cases.
Cases have been reported in a number of
countries and regions, but some of the patients have not
been to Guangdong or neighboring Hong Kong, Zhang said.
The fact that HIV and AIDS cases were first
reported in the United States does not mean that the fatal
epidemic originated there, he noted.
The
minister said China and the World Health Organization (WHO)
have been in close cooperation and have achieved success
especially in the prevention and control of infectious
diseases.
Following the outbreak of atypical
pneumonia, the WHO dispatched experts to China on three
separate occasions at the invitation of the Chinese
government.
Zhang quoted some WHO experts as
saying that China's experience in controlling atypical
pneumonia is very useful for other countries.
Chinese and WHO experts will go to Guangdong
for further cooperation in curbing atypical pneumonia in the
next few days, the minister said.
He said
effective measures have been taken to bring the epidemic
under control and to ensure that foreign visitors in China
will not be infected.
According to him, the
central and local disease control departments have
stipulated a number of methods, criterion and guidelines for
the treatment and prevention of atypical pneumonia.
Atypical pneumonia is a kind of pneumonia
caused by mycoplasma,chlamydia, legionella, rickettsia,
adenovirus and some unknown microbes.
Atypical
pneumonia patients, who show symptoms of fever, cough and
respiratory difficulty, are quite distinct from general
pneumonia patients, who are infected through frothy saliva
from respiratory organs.
The minister advised
people to take the following measures to prevent infection:
-- Ensure strict hygiene, well-balanced meals,
seasonal clothing, physical exercise, adequate rest and
reduced stress, and avoid smoking;
-- Ensure
adequate indoor ventilation and avoid crowded public places;
-- Go to hospital immediately if symptoms
appear;
-- Do not visit atypical pneumonia
patients; and
-- Tell children prevention
methods.
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