BEIJING, May 22 -- When Sun Weisi returned home
from the United States on Tuesday, she thought the temperature check at the
airport and the health declaration form she submitted there were all that were
needed as a precaution against H1N1 flu.
But the phone rang the next morning, and the voice at
the other end suggested she begin a seven-day medical observation at home.
The call was from the community health service center
of Xiaoguan Street in Beijing's Chaoyang district where Sun and her parents
live.
"They call me four times a day," said Sun, a
sophomore student at the University of Iowa.
The health workers check on temperature and whether
she has any flu symptoms, and report to the local office of the Center for
Diseases Control twice a day.
Should any flu-like symptoms be found, the CDC will
dispatch an ambulance to collect the patient.
Such in-house prevention and control measures
directed at people returning from overseas, particularly students coming home
for the summer vacation, were adopted in Beijing on Tuesday.
The Beijing Health Bureau has also asked parents of
returning students to take prevention measures and have their child stay home
for seven days for medical observation.
The quick implementation of grassroots monitoring
stems from the community-level network established after the 2003 SARS outbreak.
There are two channels for health workers to gather
information on any suspected cases: One is from the CDC which sorts out
information from airport health declaration forms and relays it to community
centers, said Yuan Li, deputy director of the center, which has more than 20
full-time and part-time employees.
The other is from the residents or management offices
in apartment buildings.
"These people are our ears and eyes," she said. "They
know who enter the building and who leave."
By Wednesday, more than 9.6 million travelers had
been screened and 1,318 cases with fever and respiratory symptoms were found.
The Health Ministry has expanded its national
monitoring network by adding another 119 laboratories and 167 hospitals to deal
with H1N1 flu.
Yuan, a veteran community health worker who was
involved in efforts to fight SARS, said she thinks the bottom-up prevention and
control measures are essential.
"Maybe the wolf will not come in the end. But we are
doing our best to protect our sheep."
(Source: China Daily)
Special Report:
World Tackles A/H1N1
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