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BEIJING, Feb. 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Infectious diseases
claimed 6,474 lives on the Chinese mainland last year, up nearly a quarter on
figures for 2002.
And 173 of the deaths occurred last month, down nearly 18 per cent on the same month in 2003, according to Ministry of Health statistics released Wednesday.
This is the first monthly report on infectious
diseases. From now on, the ministry will make public figures on infectious
illnesses and related information every month, said ministry spokesman Mao
Qun'an.
The service forms part of the national infectious
diseases surveillance and reporting system which was set up after the severe
acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic, Mao said.
Last year, there were about 2.6 million cases of 27
infectious diseases, which must be reported to health authorities.
The hepatitis virus tops the list of the top 10 most
common infectious diseases. The others are tuberculosis, amoebic and bacillary
dysentery, gonorrhea, measles, syphilis, typhoid fever, malaria, epidemic
haemorrhagic fever, and scarlet fever.
Rabies killed 1,980 people last year, becoming the
most fatal of the top 10 infectious diseases.
SARS claimed 349 people last year, 30 less than
HIV/AIDS.
The infectious diseases that have increased the most
over the period are rabies, viral hepatitis, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and measles.
HIV/AIDS and six other infectious diseases infected
more people in January this year than January last year.
In the same month, fewer or no cases of another 19
infectious diseases under legal management were recorded. Enditem
(China Daily)
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