Story Published:
Jan 5, 2004 at 3:13 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 1:22 AM PDT
BEIJING - China on Monday confirmed its first SARS case
since an outbreak of the disease was contained in July and
authorities ordered the emergency slaughter of some 10,000 civet
cats and related species after tests linked a virus found in the
animals to the patient.
The Philippines also isolated a woman and her husband who might
be infected, triggering fears across Asia that a second season of
the highly contagious illness might be at hand.
The Chinese Health Ministry said the illness contracted by a
32-year-old television producer in the southern province of
Guangdong "has been confirmed as a diagnosed case" of SARS. The
World Health Organization in Beijing also confirmed the case as
SARS.
"Based on the combined tests of the Ministry of Health and
Guangdong provincial health experts, the suspected SARS case has
been confirmed," the ministry said on its Web site. "This is the
first case of SARS since it was effectively controlled last year."
In the Philippines, officials quarantined a woman in a Manila
hospital when she developed a fever after flying from Hong Kong.
They also quarantined her husband after he became feverish. "We
are waiting for a test to confirm if she has SARS," health
department official Dennis Magat said.
SARS, which first broke out in Guangdong in November 2002,
infected more than 8,000 people and killed 774 worldwide - mostly
in Asia - before it was brought under control in June.
A battery of previous tests on the man, who was hospitalized on
Dec. 20, by mainland Chinese labs had proven inconclusive, and his
samples were examined by scientists in Hong Kong during the
weekend. By Monday, the ministry said, "all the results show that
the man has contracted the SARS virus."
The patient's condition was reported stable Monday afternoon,
the government said, and those who came into contact with him have
shown no symptoms of SARS.
Still, it warned the Chinese public: "Be vigilant."
The confirmation represents the first known case of SARS
contracted in China since July - and the first this season to come
from the general population. Two other cases - in Singapore and
Taiwan - were linked to researchers who apparently had been exposed
in laboratories.
The diagnosis came hours after China ordered 10,000 civet cats
in wildlife markets - and several related species - killed in its
southern province of Guangdong after genetic tests suggested a link
to the patient there. The civet has long been suspected as a vector
for the disease's suspected jump from animals to humans.
All of Guangdong's wildlife markets were ordered to close on
Monday, Feng Liuxiang, deputy director of the province's health
department, said on national television. The weasel-like mammals
are considered a delicacy in Guangdong and are served in wild game
restaurants.
Researchers at Hong Kong University said they had found
similarities between a virus found in the civet cats and in the
suspected SARS patient, suggesting the disease might have recently
jumped from animals.
"We will take resolute measures to close all the wildlife
markets in Guangdong and to kill the civet cats," Feng said on the
noon newscast of China Central Television.
CCTV said about 10,000 civets were believed to be on sale in
Guangdong wildlife markets.
Zhong Nanshan, director of the Guangzhou Institute of
Respiratory Diseases, said species related to civet cats also will
be killed, including raccoon dogs, Chinese ferret badgers, hog
badgers and Eurasian badgers. It wasn't immediately clear how many
animals in total might be slaughtered.
SARS killed 349 people on China's mainland before subsiding in
June.
China banned trade in civets and 53 other wild animals last
April amid sweeping efforts to stop the spread of SARS. That
prohibition was lifted in August despite warnings by scientists
that the animals might still be a health threat.
Meanwhile, stringent tests on air travelers continued across
Asia.
Chinese health officials denied reports by Hong Kong newspapers
that a waitress at a wild game restaurant in Guangzhou, the
Guangdong provincial capital, was a suspected SARS case.
"We do have a fever patient due to pneumonia, but this has no
direct connection with any suspected SARS case," the official
Xinhua News Agency quoted Wang Ming, deputy director of the
Guangzhou municipal disease prevention and control center, as
saying.
Malaysian health officials also ruled out SARS in a 31-year-old
woman who was hospitalized with a fever after visiting Guangzhou.
The quick announcement of the confirmed case was a sharp
departure from China's early responses to the virus last year.
International observers complained of stonewalling, bad information
and a reluctance to acknowledge the problem.
In late April, China fired its health minister and promised a
more open and aggressive approach - something that even many of its
critics say it has moved toward.
Zhong said it was not clear how the Chinese patient had
contracted the virus. He said he had not eaten any wild game dishes
but had touched at least one rat before falling sick.