Story Published:
Dec 29, 2003 at 4:17 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:22 AM PDT
BEIJING - The World Health Organization sent a four-member
team to southern China on Monday to help investigate a suspected
SARS case, while state media said none of the 42 people quarantined
after having contact with the patient has shown symptoms.
The WHO experts will help Chinese experts double-check test
results on the hospitalized man and track down anyone else who
might have had contact with him, said Dr. Julie Hall, the SARS team
leader for WHO's Beijing office.
The patient, a 32-year-old television producer, is hospitalized
in Guangdong province, where severe acute respiratory syndrome
first emerged in 2002.
China's prompt announcement Saturday of the suspected case - its
first since July - and its collaboration with WHO are in contrast
to the earlier outbreak, when Beijing was criticized for its
sluggish response and failure to respond to pleas for information
and cooperation.
China has given information "very freely" to an Australian
laboratory expert also sent by WHO, Hall said.
"From what we've seen and all the information that has been
shared with us, the correct steps have been taken" to isolate the
patient and track down people who had contact with him, Hall told
The Associated Press.
Chinese experts have found only "inconclusive results" from
repeated tests on samples from the man, Hall said.
"This case at the moment has clinical symptoms that would fit
SARS but at the same time his pneumonia could be explained by many
other different disorders," Hall said.
"It is important that we get the correct result, so many tests
will have to be repeated," she said. "And there is a possibility
that samples may have to leave China and go to an international
reference laboratory."
SARS killed 774 people worldwide and sickened nearly 8,100
before subsiding in June.
The flu-like illness claimed 349 lives on China's mainland and
more than 5,000 were sickened. Beijing declared the mainland's last
12 patients free of the disease in July.
The WHO experts will try to help figure out where the man in
Guangdong might have contracted the virus, Hall said. She said he
didn't have any known contact with high-risk groups such as health
workers or animal handlers before becoming sick.
Meanwhile, people quarantined after having contact with the new
suspected case are expected to finish medical observation within a
week, the state newspaper China Daily said. It said 32 of those
people are medical workers.
The discovery prompted China to step up screening for possible
cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome, ordering train stations
and airports to check travelers for fever.
"The whole (Chinese anti-SARS) system is a lot stronger than it
was at the beginning of the year," Hall said.
The suspected case was hospitalized Dec. 20 with a headache and
fever, according to the government. He was transferred last
Wednesday to a quarantine ward and declared a suspected SARS case
on Friday.
On Sunday, the man was in stable condition and his temperature
was normal for the fourth straight day, according to China's Health
Ministry.
SARS killed 774 people worldwide and sickened nearly 8,100
before subsiding in June.