Special Report:
World Tackles Swine
Flu
BEIJING, May 1 -- China has developed an effective
method for instant diagnosis of H1N1 influenza, known as "swine flu", Minister
of Health Chen Zhu said on Thursday.
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Chinese Health Minister Chen Zhu attends a press conference held by the State Council Information Office of China in Beijing on April 30, 2009. Chen said on April 30 that the country is "confident" and "capable" of preventing and containing the H1N1 influenza epidemic, which is believed to have claimed 160 lives globally. (Xinhua/Chen Shugen) Photo Gallery>>> |
The new method, which features a testing chemical
reagent, will be used at the center for disease control and prevention (CDC)
offices at all levels, he told a news conference.
News of the breakthrough came as the World Health
Organization raised the official alert level to Phase 5, one notch below a
full-fledged global pandemic.
"All countries should immediately activate their
pandemic preparedness plans. Countries should remain on high alert for unusual
outbreaks of influenza-like illness and severe pneumonia," WHO Director-General
Margaret Chan said late on Wednesday.
In response to the heightened alert, Mexican
President Felipe Calderon told his people to stay home from on Thursday for a
five-day partial shutdown of the country, where 176 people have been killed by
the epidemic.
As soon as China was warned by the WHO about the
possible outbreak, research work began on an effective diagnostic method for
quick detection, Chen said.
Only a few countries have the capacity for instant
diagnosis of the virus, according to Dr Jeffrey McFarland of the U.S. Center for
Disease Control and Prevention China Office.
Chen also said China has asked the WHO, and some
disease-hit countries including the United States, for the virus strain of the
variant H1N1, which is crucial in the ongoing research for a vaccine.
Li Dexin, a senior official at China's CDC, said that
the WHO might provide the virus strain by mid-May.
"Once we get the H1N1 virus strain, it's possible to
produce the vaccine in three months," Li said.
Yang Weizhong, deputy director of China's CDC, said
it is unlikely the country can avoid being affected because the window of
opportunity to prevent a global outbreak had passed.
The best the government can do is to delay the spread
of the virus to win more time for the research and production of vaccines, he
said.
The health minister said that little is known about
the new virus and it may mutate after human-to-human transmission.
But the government is "confident" and "capable" of
preventing and containing the epidemic, he said, adding the country has gained
valuable experience after fighting SARS in 2003 and the bird-flu virus in recent
years.
"We have to do our best to prepare for the worst," he
said.
Cases of H1N1 influenza will be immediately reported
and infected people will be treated in isolation, he said.
There has no reported case in the country of H1N1
infection in either humans or animals.
(Source: China Daily)
