Special Report:
World Tackles A/H1N1
Flu
¡¡
By George Bao
LOS ANGELES, May 6 (Xinhua) -- Some U.S. experts said
on Wednesday that China's strict quarantine measures against foreign travelers
from flu-affected countries and regions were "understandable."
Richard Baum, a scholar at the Center for Chinese
Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, said the disastrous SARS (Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome) outbreak which occurred in China several years ago,
had made Chinese health authorities wary of the A/H1N1 flu virus.
He said this explained why China took strict measures
to quarantine travelers from Mexico in its initial response.
Baum told Xinhua on Wednesday that China's quick
response and actions were necessary, though he thought it was a little bit
"over-reactive" at the beginning, but that was understandable.
"It is a learning process for the Chinese," Baum
said, adding that the quarantine process has now been modified, the policies
were more pragmatic and reasonable, and the Chinese health authorities
well-informed on what needs to be done.
"We should understand that SARS has made many people
very nervous about the A/H1N1 flu virus," Baum said.
He said it was understandable that the Chinese
preferred to take the "better safe than sorry" view at the beginning.
He said it was necessary to take precautions but it
should be done in a way that would have minimal disruption to the lives of
ordinary people.
"I am glad China has modified its policies," he said,
adding that it was a "difficult situation to balance, particularly when people
did not know how serious the outbreak was."
Clayton Dube, associate director of the U.S.-China
Institute at the University of Southern California, said China was right to take
necessary measures and to be concerned about the outbreak because the disease
had killed more than 40 people around the world.
Dube said it was understandable that China would want
to protect the health of not only the Chinese but everybody in China, including
Mexicans, Canadians and other foreigners, though he said the quarantine itself
could have been handled differently.
World Journal, a leading Chinese-language newspaper
in the U.S., published an editorial on Wednesday, saying that the world should
look at China's actions to quarantine travelers from North America with
"goodwill."
The paper said the international community should not
react too emotionally against China's measures to quarantine travelers from
Mexico and students from Canada even if no symptoms of the disease had been
found.
Mexico and Canada are countries where the A/ H1N1 flu
first started, and therefore there is no reason to criticize other countries for
their high vigilance against the disease, the paper added.
The World Journal said China wants to make 100
percent sure that no A/H1N1 flu virus spreads in the country, and thus it was
necessary to quarantine travelers, especially group travelers from North
America.
The paper said China has lower public health
standards and a higher population density than the United States, Canada and
Japan, and once the A/H1N1 virus enters the country, it could easily spread and
be more disastrous than that in Mexico.
The paper said that in the eyes of some Western
countries, China's actions left much to be desired. But if taking into account
China's SARS experience several years ago, it could be excused.
