China yesterday confirmed that it had recent cases of Severe Acute
Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) in
Guangdong
Province under control.
"The disease is now effectively under control and the patients have
recovered gradually and are resuming their normal lives," Foreign
Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said yesterday.
Kong revealed that two officials of the World Health Organization
(WHO) and a group of experts visited China in late February and
early March to investigate the SARS cases in Guangdong
Province.
The illness is an atypical pneumonia that begins with high fever,
chills, cough and breathing difficulties and can deteriorate
rapidly into pneumonia.
It
is reported that the mystery killer has claimed nine lives and
infected over 400 people worldwide.
The organization expressed its appreciation of the Chinese
Government's handling of the atypical pneumonia cases in Guangdong
Province.
The WHO hopes to continue to work with China to prevent and control
the disease, according to Kong.
"China will actively cooperate with the WHO," said Kong.
In
its press release on Monday, the WHO called upon national health
authorities to closely watch for suspected cases of SARS.
According to the WHO, suspected cases have been largely limited to
Chinese mainland and Hong Kong, Viet Nam and Singapore.
(China Daily March 19, 2003)