An 8-year girl is in a critical condition in hospital in Chengdu
with the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu.
Health chiefs said on Friday she was receiving treatment at
Suining Municipal People's Hospital in southwest China's Sichuan Province.
She is the third person to contract bird flu in Sichuan and the
18th in the country.
Twelve of the country's 18 cases have proved fatal.
Su Lin, chief of the Emergency Response Office of the Sichuan
Provincial Department of Health, said the latest victim was in a
critical condition.
The girl, surnamed Sun, is from Tangjia Township in Suining, a
city in central Sichuan.
She showed symptoms of fever and pneumonia on April 16. Poultry
deaths occurred in her house before she fell ill. "Investigators
report the deaths of chickens in several farm houses nearby, too,"
Su told China Daily.
Tests on the girl carried out by the Sichuan Provincial Centre
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) revealed she was suffering
with bird flu. China's national CDC confirmed she had the H5N1
strain on Thursday.
She is confirmed to be infected with bird flu in line with the
standards of the World Health Organization (WHO) and Chinese
official standards, said the Ministry of Health.
Governments and health departments at all levels in Sichuan took
immediate prevention and control measures after the case was
revealed.
Nearly 150 people who had been in close contact with the girl
have been put under medical observation by local health
authorities.
"Every day, medics take their temperatures and observe whether
they have symptoms of a cold. So far, no one has shown any abnormal
symptoms," Su said.
The Ministry of Health has reported the case to WHO, Hong Kong
and Macao special administrative regions and Taiwan Province, as
well as several countries.
Sichuan's first two human bird flu cases occurred in January,
and both patients died. The first case involved a 35-year-old woman
surnamed Wei in Jianyang in western Sichuan. She was a poultry
slaughterer.
The second case involved a 29-year-old grocery store owner
surnamed Cao in Jinhua Town in the suburbs of Chengdu. She had not
been in contact with any dead poultry before falling ill.
(China Daily April 29, 2006)