CHINA> National
China outlines tighter anti-flu measures
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-06-12 20:31

BEIJING - China on Friday promised to increase efforts to stem the A(H1N1) virus after the World Health Organization (WHO) raised the flu alert to its highest level.

Mao Qun'an, a spokesman with the Health Ministry, said the country "understands, supports and cooperates with" the world health body's pandemic declaration, pledging to further beef up its flu prevention and control work.

Related readings:
 WHO: H1N1 flu pandemic now, 1st in 41 years
 WHO raises swine flu alert to highest level
 Chinese mainland reports 111 A/H1N1 flu cases
 China may see localized outbreaks of A(H1N1) flu

 WHO close to declaring flu pandemic

The WHO on Thursday raised its pandemic alert from phase 5 to phase 6, the highest level, formally declaring the widely spreading A(H1N1) influenza has developed into a global pandemic.

"As the objective for the current stage, we'll endeavor to decrease domestic cases, prevent community transmission, step up treatment of serious cases and cope with possible future changes of the epidemic," Mao told a press conference here.

He said the previous policy of "keeping the virus outside the border and preventing its spread within the country" had proved to be effective and practical and would be continued.

As of 8 am Friday, 13 Chinese mainland provinces and municipalities had reported 126 confirmed A(H1N1) flu cases, of whom 60 had recovered and been discharged from hospitals. There have been no deaths.

Mao outlined concrete steps, including improving the joint prevention and control mechanism at different regions and different levels, increasing the number of labs and designated hospitals nationwide, enhancing medical workers' diagnosis and treatment ability to avoid fatalities, increasing drug stockpiles and vaccination production, and increasing public health awareness and winning public support.

As of Thursday, 75 countries and regions had officially reported 28,774 cases of A(H1N1) infections, including 144 deaths.