Leading officials in the fight to quell bird flu Thursday affirmed
China's confidence in reining in the devastating avian infection,
thanks to the country's ever intensifying prevention and control
measures.
Since the country has basically brought the epidemic under control
in all identified outbreak areas, China is looking to improve its
animal epidemic prevention system to guarantee poultry safety for
the long haul, officials said.
Elsewhere in Asia, the human death toll from the bird flu epidemic
rose to 16 Wednesday, when Viet Nam said a 16-year-old girl in the
south of the country had become its 11th bird flu victim. The other
deaths all occurred in Thailand, which now has 19 suspected
cases.
Speaking at a news conference Wednesday, Vice-Minister of
Agriculture Liu Jian said between January 27 -- when the first bird
flu outbreak was confirmed -- and Wednesday, China had reported 23
occurrences of the contagion, which prompted culling of 1.215
million fowl, mainly chicken and ducks.
But Wednesday the ministry confirmed the previously suspected
outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu in East China's Anhui
Province and Jiangxi Province and reported four new suspected bird
flu cases -- in Dongxiang County in Jiangxi Province, Shilin County
in Yunnan Province, Luoding and Haifeng County in South China's
Guangdong Province.
All the cases have been basically contained, and no humans in China
has contracted the disease, said Liu, also a leading member of a
national command headquarters team battling the disease.
Nonetheless, Liu conceded the infection control maintains still an
arduous task for China, partly because Chinese poultry farms are
sporadically distributed in a vast network throughout its
territory, where animal disease prevention systems are sometimes
"weak and vulnerable.''
Although massive efforts of the public can help halt the contagion,
from long-term point of view, it is a robust and sound animal
disease prevention and control regime that decisively stems such
lethal infections from happening and spreading, he said.
The official said China will strengthen its systems through
plugging loopholes detected. The ministry has instated 300 animal
disease surveillance stations across the country, in addition to
147 disease monitoring points along its border line, according to
Liu.
In
the years ahead, China will invest more in bolstering its animal
protection system, he said.
Roy Wadia, spokesman of the World Health Organization Beijing
Office, said international experts will soon visit China's bird
flu-tainted areas to look into and advise the nation on its human
and bird surveillance systems.
As
to areas currently free of bird flu, Liu said the country will lose
no time in taking control measures to protect key poultry
producers, breeders and large poultry processing households.
In
terms of bird flu disease reporting, Liu said China has implemented
a daily mechanism based on a diagnosis procedure that includes
initial clinical diagnosis by experts, suspect case confirmations
by provincial labs, virus strain identifications by a national
reference lab and final confirmation by the ministry.
Governments at various levels have been required never to cover up
any outbreaks, and the national command headquarters has been
deploying inspection missions to check up on the work in all
affected regions, he said.
The government had established sound communication with United
Nations agencies and between government departments to check
outbreaks.
Since the first confirmed bird flu case, China has kept the Beijing
offices of WHO and the Food and Agriculture Organization well
informed of epidemic developments, Liu said.
The vice-minister said with the full support of the people, and the
experience and expertise the country accumulated in its fight
against the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), China is able
to do an excellent job in controlling the bird flu epidemic.
(China Daily February 5, 2004)
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