China's Ministry of Health yesterday announced one more human
case of bird flu, bringing the tally up to 10 cases.
The infected person is a 29-year-old woman surnamed Cao from
Jinhua Town of Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan Province, said a
report released by the ministry. She has been hospitalized in
Chengdu and is in critical condition.
Coinciding with the news, the country's veterinary workers were
urged not to relax their containment efforts during the coming
Spring Festival when a supply of safe poultry must be ensured.
"We must see clearly the severe situation during
Spring Festival and always put people's health and safety
first," Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu said in Beijing yesterday, one
week before the traditional Chinese gala.
Hui, also chief of the national bird flu control headquarters,
said consumption of fowls and their products will soar during
Spring Festival and early spring, when the transfer of poultry will
be more frequent, and the migratory birds begin their journey
north.
Earlier, the country's Chief Veterinary Officer Jia Youling said
winter and spring are the peak seasons for bird flu, and 60 percent
of China's domestic birds are raised on backyard farms with
inadequate management, which makes epidemic prevention
difficult.
The country reported 32 outbreaks of H5N1 bird flu last year.
All the epidemic sites had ended quarantine isolation by January 3,
according to the Ministry of Agriculture.
Despite the achievements, containment workers are facing new
challenges, and no one can afford to relax their efforts, Hui told
the meeting on the prevention and control of avian influenza.
During the week-long holidays, there must be people on duty to
deal with any emergencies and to ensure the smooth flow of
information, he said.
Supervisors must make sure vaccination, monitoring and
disinfection measures are implemented conscientiously and all
hidden perils are eliminated, he said.
To prevent human infection of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird
flu, screening of suspicious pneumonia cases and training of
contingency squads must be strengthened, the vice-premier said.
China has reported 10 human cases of bird flu. Six of them
died.
The eighth case, a 6-year-old boy surnamed Ouyang who was
confirmed to have contracted the disease on January 9 in central
China's Hunan Province, is recovering at a local hospital, Xinhua
reported on Saturday.
But bird flu control is just one side of the coin. As poultry is
almost an indispensable cuisine for traditional Chinese festivals,
the vice-premier also called for solid work to monitor the market
supply of poultry products for reliable quality and safety.
Quarantine and inspection must be enhanced to guarantee that all
products are up to standards. Anyone who averts quarantine or is
involved in the transferring, processing and marketing diseased and
dead animals and poultry products must be penalized.
In addition, there should be more publicity to promote
consumption of bird products, he said.
Sales of eggs and other poultry products have picked up as the
Lunar New Year draws near.
(China Daily January 24, 2006)