The farmer from east China's Anhui Province, who contracted the deadly H5N1
strain of bird flu last December but was later cured of the avian
disease, was called in to donate his serum for treatment of another
rural Chinese woman who was confirmed last month to have been
infected of the same virus.
Xu Longshan, spokesman and chief of the Fujian Provincial
Professional Panel for Prevention and Control of Human Infection of
Bird Flu, told Xinhua Saturday health workers from Anhui Province
Thursday escorted the farmer, identified by his surname as Li, to
Fuzhou, capital of Fujian Province, where experts from the blood
center affiliated to the Fujian Provincial Bureau of Health got
serum from him the second day.
Li has returned back home.
"The serum was brought to Jian'ou on the same day, and so far,
medical workers have carried out the first round of injection on
the woman who was just confirmed of being infected of the lethal
strain of the avian disease," said Xu.
"The method is new but is for sure to be of some effect in
improving the woman's capability of fighting against new rounds of
infection," said Xu, who admitted it would take some time before
the woman could develop immunity of her own against the avian
disease.
Li from Fujian, 44, is a native of Damiao Village, a marketplace
in the mountainous township of Xiaosong. The woman, who kept five
chickens at her home, developed symptoms including fever on Feb.
18. She had visited village clinics and township hospitals before
being hospitalized on Feb. 24 in the Jian'ou City hospital.
She was confirmed to be infected with the virus by the Chinese
Center for Disease Control and Prevention on Feb. 27. She is known
to have eaten two chickens she had raised, but her husband and son,
who also ate the chicken, have not developed bird flu.
According to Xu, the woman patient was found with inflammation
on her left lung when she came to the hospital on Feb. 24, but her
pneumonia symptoms developed quickly and she went into a coma the
next day. A chest X-ray on Feb. 25 shows large shadows on her
lungs.
As of Thursday evening, Li's body temperature and pulse had
returned to normal, and her lungs and breathing appeared to be
functioning better but she was still breathing with the help of a
respirator, Xu said.
Doctors say Li is still in a critical condition and they are
trying to boost her immunity to prevent further organic
infection.
Over ten doctors and medical experts from local hospitals, and
Beijing-based Chaoyang Hospital and Ditan Hospital are trying to
work out a detailed treatment plan to save Li, said Xu Yongxi, head
of the hospital.
Policemen and hospital staff have been seen guarding the ward
where the patient is staying and doctors are wearing thick,
disinfected suits.
The patient's husband is with her in the hospital, and her
13-year-old son, who now stays in her four-storey house with his
grand-mother, looked saddened, and said he hoped his mother could
recover soon.
Li from Fujian is the country's first human case of bird flu in
seven weeks since China reported on Jan. 10 that the other Li from
Anhui, 37, had contracted bird flu last December but had
recovered.
The deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed 14 people in China
since 2003.
(Xinhua News Agency March 3, 2007)
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