Police are investigating how rat poison ended up in the
breakfasts served at a Harbin hospital cafeteria on Monday, leaving
one person dead and 202 others sick.
The hospital's patients and staff who fell ill had earlier eaten
breakfast in Heilongjiang Provincial Hospital of
Traditional Chinese Medicine located in the capital of Harbin.
The hospitalized victims were in stable condition by yesterday
afternoon, but were in need of further observation, according to
local sources. Four patients were in serious but stable
condition.
Local police and the provincial disease control center confirmed
yesterday that a lethal rat poison, fluoroacetamide, caused the
incident.
Wang Enhai, head of Heilongjiang Health Emergency Command
Center, told Xinhua that investigators could not yet rule out that
someone intentionally poisoned the food.
The victims, most of whom were already patients in the hospital,
suffered from symptoms of nausea, vomiting and diarrhea after they
ate breakfast.
"I heard that someone poisoned the hot water jug, which the cafe
uses to make porridge," said a hospital staffer.
The restaurant was shut down immediately and the local health
watchdog collected food samples for analysis.
"Luckily it was in the morning when most of our staff had not
come to work yet, otherwise there would have been many more people
poisoned," the staff member said.
The poison led to the death of 77-year-old Du Qingrong Monday
afternoon. She was hospitalized last Friday for cardiovascular
disease.
Wang of the command center said local health authorities have
developed a detailed treatment plan to help victims.
The Ministry of Health quickly shipped more than 3,000 doses of
acetamide injections to Harbin to treat the poisoned patients.
Earlier, 290 doses were transferred from the neighboring Jilin Province.
Public security departments were taking evidence yesterday from
various sources in the hospital and details of the incidents were
not released, said a hospital official.
The hospital, founded in 1957, is one of the largest and
best-equipped medical institutions in Harbin, with more than 600
staff.
(China Daily April 11, 2007)