Bird flu: Beijing demands rapid response By Bao Daozu (China Daily) Updated: 2005-10-25 05:51
Three hours. That's the maximum it should take for a bird-flu outbreak
anywhere in the country to be reported to Beijing.
The exacting timeline is part of a contingency plan hammered out by the
Ministry of Agriculture to counter possible outbreaks of the potentially-fatal
influenza this autumn and winter.
Health workers
disinfect vehicles coming out of Bayan township near Hohhot in the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region October 24, 2005, following the deaths of 2,600
birds from H5N1 bird flu strain in a farm there last week. [China
Daily] |
According to the plan made available to China Daily yesterday, an outbreak in
any county or city must be reported to provincial authorities within 2 hours;
and after confirmation, the provincial veterinary bureau must report to the
ministry within an hour.
Any one can report an outbreak to a veterinary bureau, and inform authorities
about any misconduct by a department or person in disease prevention, the
document said.
It added that drills should be conducted for emergency operation teams
consisting of veterinary and health workers and servicemen and volunteers
mobilized if necessary.
The measures come at a time when the world is worried about an impending
pandemic. In the latest cause of alarm, the deadly strain of the virus H5N1 was
confirmed in a dead parrot in the United Kingdom.
The virus is spread by migrating wild birds and has recently been found in
Russia, Turkey and Romania, spurring efforts around the globe to contain its
spread.
While H5N1 is easily transmitted between birds, it is hard for humans to
contract. But experts fear it could mutate into a form of flu that is easily
transmitted between humans and cause a pandemic that could kill millions.
In Beijing yesterday, the Ministry of Health denied earlier media reports
that China would close its borders if a single case of human-to-human
transmission of bird flu occurred.
|