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State Council passes lab safety regulations to prevent new outbreaks
BEIJING, Nov. 27 (Xinhuanet) -- A new set of
regulations taking effect Saturday will prohibit Chinese lab directors from
allowing experiments on risky pathogenic microbes without approval.
The Chinese cabinet passed the 32-page and 72-item regulations in response to the incident in March when two
people were infected by severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) virus at a lab
of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
China will grade its pathogenic microbe labs by four
levels. The first and second grades are labs forbidden to conduct experiments on
risky pathogenic microbes, which can cause severe diseases in human and animals
and easily spread, the regulations said.
The third and fourth grade of labs are off limits for
experiments without special certificates from the health and veterinary medicine
administrations, the regulations said.
These labs also must get approval from the
administration when they plan to take up the experiments on risky pathogenic
microbe and report the result when the research ends, the document added.
Early this year, the Diarrhea Virus Laboratory under
the Institute of Virus Diseases of the center did experiments with the SARS
virus without proper qualification and facilities to prevent the virus from
spreading.
The administration found that the lab researchers
used an untested method to kill the SARS virus and did not test the resultof the
process.
This was later confirmed as the source of SARS
outbreak in China this year. The 2004 recurrence of SARS caused nine people to
fall ill and one death.
The director and deputy director of the center
resigned. The head and deputy head of the center's Institute of Virus Diseases
as well as director of the lab were dismissed in July.
Now, according to the regulations, the head of the
institution that owns a lab and head of the lab will be dismissed if a
mistakelike this happens again.
The biosafety regulations were the first and most
authoritativeone in China for medical labs, said an official with the Ministry
of Health Saturday.
"The ministries of Health, of Agriculture and of
Science and Technology all issued relevant documents and rules on this aspect
but no standardized one was issued," he said, "We are working on an plan to
implement the regulations."
Gao Qiang, executive vice-minister of health, said
early July that strengthening lab biosafety is an important and urgent task for
the national health system.
"The March outbreak sounds the alarm for the nation's
lab safety management," Gao said. "The necessary punishment for some cadres is
to help consolidate the responsibility awareness for relevant officials and
establish a responsibility system for majoraccidents."
The regulations also ask medical labs to set up
special departments or personnel to supervise the facilities. The labs must
report to the superior administration if an accident takes place, the
regulations said.
The first outbreak of SARS happened in early spring
2003 and a total of 5,327 cases were reported that year in 24 provincial areas
on the mainland. Nearly 350 people died of the disease.
The Ministry of Health issued a plan to prevent SARS
and bird flu this winder and next spring early this month, promising to send out
experts within 24 hours after the first suspected case isfound. Enditem
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