The Ministry of Health on Monday issued guidelines on rabies
treatment in response to an increasing number of rabies cases in
the past few months.
The guidelines provide medical professionals with detailed
treatment procedures including disinfection and vaccination. They
emphasize that the timely inoculation of the rabies vaccine is
crucial to preventing the disease.
Rabies, often spread by dog bites, attacks the nervous system
and is fatal in humans if not treated prior to the onset of
symptoms.
China has some 150 million pet dogs. It ranks second in the
world after India in the number of reported cases of rabies,
according to the ministry. Every year more than 50,000 people
around the world die of the disease - most of them are from
developing countries.
Experts say pet owners who abandon their dogs are mainly
responsible for the high prevalence of rabies in China as stray
dogs that have not been vaccinated are most likely to contract the
disease.
The control of rabies became the top public health priority
three months ago when the disease caused the deaths of three people
in southwest China's Yunnan Province and local authorities in
Yunnan and Shandong provinces sought to curb the risk through
killing dogs.
The ministry recorded 2,254 rabies cases in the first nine
months of the year, an increase of 29.69 percent over the same
period last year. September was the fifth month rabies has topped
the list of most deadly infectious diseases.
Beijing has launched campaigns to clamp down on unlicensed dogs.
Dog owners in Beijing now face harsh penalties if they raise their
pets in violation of regulations.
The municipal government requires rabies cases or suspected
rabies cases to be immediately reported to the health
department.
No urban resident in Beijing has contracted the disease this
year.
The health ministry has also vowed to strengthen prevention of
rabies in rural areas, where dogs are not widely vaccinated and
medical treatment for people is inadequate.
(Xinhua News Agency October 17, 2006)