The number of people confirmed to have fallen ill after eating
raw or half-cooked snails contaminated with parasites at a Beijing
restaurant has risen from 70 to 87, the Beijing Health Bureau
reported on Wednesday.
They were diagnosed with a type of angiostrongyliasis, a disease
caused by parasites that affects the brain and spinal cord, and can
lead to meningitis, the bureau said.
In the past few days, the Tropical Diseases Department of the
Beijing Friendship Hospital, which specializes in treating the
disease, has been crowded with people who have headaches or stiff
necks, including some people who hadn't even eaten raw or
half-cooked snails or other river or seafood.
The hospital has opened three more clinics and extended
consultations, with each doctor seeing nearly 100 people a day, but
they still cannot meet the demand, a hospital spokesman said.
After two to three weeks' treatment, most of the first group of
patients the Friendship Hospital received are now in a stable
condition, and some of them will be discharged from hospital this
week, the spokesman said.
Because the disease may produce sequelae such as headaches and
dementia, the hospital will follow up the medical treatment to
ensure the patients' complete recovery, he said.
Dr. Yin Chenghong, an expert with the hospital's Tropical
Medicine Institute, warned citizens not to panic, saying that if
they hadn't eaten raw or half-cooked snails or other aquatic food,
they wouldn't fall prey to the disease.
"There's no need for the public to panic, they had better go to
a clinic first if they have fever or a headache," he said.
The Friendship Hospital's first case of meningitis occurred on
June 24 when a 34-year-old man was admitted suffering from a
violent headache and nausea after eating a dish of cold snail meat
at an outlet of the Shuguo Yanyi Restaurant.
The Shuguo Yanyi Restaurant that sold parasite-contaminated
snails made an official apology to customers on Wednesday.
Qu Chuangang, spokesman for the Shuguoyanyi Restaurant, which
serves Sichuan-style food, said they will assume responsibility for
the incident and try their best to deal with the problems
caused.
"All the 390 staff members of our restaurant feel deeply sorry
about the incident. We hope we can do something to make up for it,
" said Qu.
The restaurant admitted that the snails had not been processed
correctly, which was the main reason customers had fallen sick.
The restaurant has formed a team to cooperate with the Beijing
Health Bureau in the investigation.
The spokesman said his restaurant is ready to compensate those
who fell ill after eating the snails.
He said patients can bring them their restaurant bill and those
who do not have a restaurant bill can also be compensated because
Shuguoyanyi can confirm their visit by tracking dining records.
According to the Beijing Health Bureau, treatment for each
patient will cost at least 3,000 yuan (about US$375).
A patient surnamed Zhang said that he has spent 20,000 yuan
(US$2,500) on medical treatment. He wants compensation for physical
and mental suffering.
To date, no deaths have been reported.
Among the patients, the youngest was 13 years old and the oldest
51. All the patients ate raw or undercooked Amazonian snails two to
four weeks ago in outlets of the Shuguo Yanyi Restaurant, according
to the Beijing Health Bureau.
The bureau confirmed in its earlier report that the infection
was caused by processing problems in the restaurant, which failed
to eradicate eel worms on the snails.
The restaurant was ordered to stop selling the snail dishes on
August 8.
The Beijing health monitoring department posted an urgent notice
on Monday, asking all the restaurants in the city to stop providing
the customers with any undercooked snails.
The municipal food safety office ordered on Tuesday that all the
agricultural markets, supermarkets, department stores and
restaurants must stop buying, selling and processing the Amazonian
snails.
Many Beijing citizens are sending text messages to their friends
or family members, warning them against the disease-caused
food.
Yet Yin Quanxi, director of the emergency center of the Beijing
health monitoring department, said the snails are still edible
after they are cooked under the temperature above 90 Celsius
degrees for more than two minutes.
The health bureau is trying to trace the suppliers of the snails
contaminated with eel worms.
The bureau also demanded the city's disease control and health
monitoring departments, together with the restaurant, make reports
upon the infectious cases every day.
Amazonian snails originated in South America and first came to
China in the 1980s as a delicacy. The first patient to fall ill
after eating the snails was reported in Guangzhou, capital city of
south China's Guangdong Province.
The large, black snails were a hot-selling aquatic product in
big Chinese cities like Beijing.
(China Daily August 24, 2006)