Beijing has unveiled a new anti-SARS government taskforce aimed
at preventing any future outbreaks of the virus.
The inter-departmental Command Center for the Prevention of SARS
will begin operating immediately after the October 1 National Day
holidays.
The center will consist of medical and other personnel from more
than a dozen Communist Party, government and military departments,
according to media reports.
It will be headed by Vice-Premier and Health Minister Wu Yi, who
played a key role in the campaign to stem out the severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak earlier this year.
The virus, believed to have jumped from animals to humans, first
surfaced in southern China last November.
More than 8,000 people worldwide were infected, with over 900
dying from the disease. In Chinese mainland, there were 5,327 cases
and 349 deaths.
The World Health Organization in July declared the SARS outbreak
contained around the world but has warned the disease could
resurface again in winter.
Under the new Chinese guidelines for dealing with SARS, once a
case has been discovered anywhere in the country, the entire nation
will be put on alert.
The Beijing-based center will then direct efforts to quarantine
and attend to the affected patients and their relatives and
co-workers.
The China Youth Daily reported that from last week,
hospitals and specialist clinics in the capital's 18 districts and
counties began an intensive series of anti-SARS preventive
exercises.
Throughout this month, more than 3,000 doctors and nurses in
Beijing's 350 medical facilities have received training in the
prevention and handling of SARS and other infectious diseases.
A spokesman of the Beijing Health Department said central health
authorities had demanded that by the end of September, municipal
hospitals must complete SARS-related training, set up an advance
warning and tracking system, and stockpile enough medicines and
other supplies.
The Health Ministry has recently resumed the practice of issuing
daily bulletins on new SARS cases or suspected cases. So far, none
have been reported.
China News Service quoted medical and weather experts in
Shanghai as saying that a temperature range of 17 to 28 degrees
Celsius might be relatively congenial for the outbreak of the SARS
virus.
The experts said late October to mid-November might be a
high-risk season for Beijing, and late November to mid-December,
for Shanghai.
(Xinhua News Agency September 30, 2003)