All the 550,323 registered dogs in Beijing have received
anti-rabies inoculations, the municipal agriculture bureau said on
Monday.
Liu Yaqing, vice director of the bureau, said 319 anti-rabies
inoculation stations had been opened in the capital to offer free
inoculations for all registered dogs.
Deng Xiaohong, another bureau vice director, said Beijing has
recorded 12 rabies cases by November 15.
Eleven cases involved non-Beijing residents who came to seek
medical help in the city. The only case involving a Beijing
resident was bitten by a dog which had been brought to the city
from outside.
This means the vaccination of dogs has paid off, said Deng, who
also observed that more than 118,000 people had received
anti-rabies inoculations in Beijing after being bitten or scratched
by dogs or cats by mid-November, up 22 percent on the previous
year.
Deng said Beijing had also set up 45 anti-rabies clinics to
provide 24 hour medical assistance to those bitten by dogs.
However, experts believe there are around one million dogs in
the city, which means the city authorities' job is only half
done.
Police in Beijing have implemented a "one-dog policy" - one
family is only allowed one dog - and banned dangerous dogs or dogs
taller than 35 cm, such as Dobermans, Saint Bernards and Great
Danes.
Rabies accounted for 326, or 46 percent of all fatalities caused
by infectious diseases reported on the Chinese mainland in October,
according to the Ministry of Health.
(Xinhua News Agency December 12, 2006)