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China
Reports Ninth Recent Possible SARS Case
This is
an official CDC Health Update
Distributed via Health Alert
Network
April 29, 2004, 18:30 EDT (06:30 PM EDT)
CDCHAN-00199-04-04-29-UPD-N
The Chinese Ministry of Health
(MOH) reported one new possible case of severe acute respiratory
syndrome (SARS) in Beijing yesterday, bringing the total to nine
possible cases. This new possible case was in a person known
to have been in close contact with a 20-year-old nurse who was previously
reported as a “confirmed” case by the Chinese MOH.
Chinese
health authorities also reported that two additional cases that
were previously listed as “suspect” now meet the MOH criteria for
“confirmed” cases. Of the nine reported cases in China, four
are classified by Chinese health authorities as “confirmed” and
five are listed as “suspected.”
According to World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines for the
global surveillance of SARS, classification as a confirmed case
at the start of an outbreak requires independent verification of
results by an external international reference laboratory. Such
procedures are considered by WHO to be necessary in view of the
implications that confirmed SARS cases can have for international
public health.
Two of the nine patients
worked at the National Institute of Virology Laboratory of China’s
Center for Disease Control in Beijing. The laboratory is known
to conduct research on SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV). The laboratory
has been closed, potentially exposed personnel are being screened,
and possible sources of infection for the two laboratory workers
are being investigated.
Chinese authorities are currently involved in active surveillance
activities to identify other possible cases of SARS, including enhanced
surveillance for any flu-like illness and pneumonia of unknown etiology.
They have also initiated measures to prevent the spread of SARS
among travelers, including health screening of travelers at ports
of entry. For additional information on the SARS situation
in China, see the WHO
website.
Canada is now distributing
SARS Health Alert Notices (i.e., health information cards describing
SARS) at major ports of entry to arriving passengers from China.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is prepared
to respond at U.S. ports of entry, including the distribution of
SARS Health Alert Notices, if there is an increase in SARS-CoV activity.
CDC is closely monitoring the situation in China and neighboring
countries and remains in close contact with international partners
to determine the timing and type of response required.
According to the Taiwanese
Center for Disease Control, an elderly man who developed fever and
pneumonia after returning to Taiwan from China on April 24 was evaluated
for possible SARS. Testing for SARS-CoV was reported to be
negative.
On April 28, CDC sent an email
letter to laboratories to which it had previously shipped live SARS-CoV. The
letter alerts the laboratories about the possible laboratory-acquired
SARS-CoV infections in China; reminds laboratories of the need to
strictly adhere to biosafety level 3 procedures while working with
the virus; and provides web links to documents that outline laboratory
procedures to be followed while working with SARS-CoV.
Additional information about the SARS situation in China will be
provided on the CDC SARS
website as it becomes available.
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