Xinjiang reports 7th outbreak in 10 days By Zhao Huanxin (China Daily) Updated: 2005-11-25 05:47
The WHO, in response to Wednesday's report that a second person had died of
H5N1 in Anhui Province, yesterday said the organization would most likely send
an investigation team there next week.
The WHO has already secured permission to investigate the first human death
in the province a 24-year-old woman farmer in Zongyang County earlier this
month.
"Now that the second case occurred, it's very likely this will be also part
of the Anhui mission," Roy Wadia, a WHO spokesman, said last night.
The second human victim of bird flu in Anhui was a 35-year-old woman farmer.
Meanwhile, health authorities yesterday intensified an information campaign
on prevention of human infections, using prime-time TV slots and major
newspapers urging people to maintain a hygienic and healthy lifestyle; and
process poultry products with caution.
The ministry has also published an updated version of Diagnosis and Treatment
Guidelines for Human Infection by Avian Influenza, detailing the sources,
symptoms, prevention and treatment for health workers.
In a related development, the United Nations said on Wednesday that it
supports China's massive animal vaccination programme to combat bird flu, but
cautioned that quality control on vaccines must be assured.
Joseph Domenech, chief veterinary officer of the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization, said agency officials would be among those visiting Chinese
laboratories, the Associated Press reported yesterday.
In a circular issued on Wednesday, the State Council China's cabinet asked
local governments to support and supervise designated vaccine producers, and
strike hard at those manufacturing fakes.
In Harbin, capital of Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, where water
supply has been cut off since midnight Tuesday, production of vaccines has not
been affected, said Han Biao, an executive with the First Biological Products
Plant of the Harbin Pharmaceuticals Group.
The plant, one of the nine designated vaccine producers in China, produces 60
per cent of doses used in the country, Xinhua News Agency reported.
(China Daily 11/25/2005 page1)
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