X-Message-Number: 21486
From: "Mark Plus" <>
Subject: ABC News: Hong Kong Gov't to Quarantine Over 1,000
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2003 11:22:23 -0800

http://abcnews.go.com/wire/Living/ap20030327_1000.html

Hong Kong Gov't to Quarantine Over 1,000
Hong Kong to Quarantine More Than 1,000 and Close Schools to Stem Spread of 
Mystery Illness

The Associated Press

HONG KONG March 27  
The government here said Thursday it would quarantine more than 1,000 people 
and close its schools, while the World Health Organization urged airlines to 
screen passengers for the deadly flu-like illness that a U.S. official said 
is spreading faster than expected.

The Geneva-based U.N. agency fighting to contain the disease said passengers 
should be asked if they have flu-like symptoms or if they may have had 
contact with anyone infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome.

The new warning about airline travel reflects heightened concern by the 
world health agency, which previously had said the disease was unlikely to 
spread on airplanes. However, Hong Kong reported nine passengers became ill 
from exposure to one passenger on a flight earlier this month.

The WHO's request will go to the world's governments, and it will be up to 
them to decide whether to enforce it with airlines. Asia has been 
hardest-hit by the disease, which has a 4 percent death rate, but there are 
45 suspected cases in the United States and three people in Canada have also 
died from it.

There is no treatment for the disease, which is believed to be a virus.

Testifying before Congress Thursday, U.S. Health and Human Services 
Secretary Tommy Thompson said, "It's spreading a little bit faster than we 
anticipated."

He also said SARS is believed to have infected 1,500 people; the WHO is 
reporting over 1,300 cases. The number of deaths Thursday rose to 54, based 
on information from government officials.

In their new warning, WHO officials said close contact in a plane which they 
described as sitting within two rows of an infected person was compounded by 
the length of flights.

"Exposure in a plane is much longer than, say, in an elevator," said the 
WHO's infectious diseases chief, Dr. David Heymann.

Meanwhile, Asian officials continued to take harsh measures to get the 
disease under control. Singapore, which earlier quarantined hundreds of 
people, also shut its schools, and weekend concerts in Hong Kong by the 
Rolling Stones were postponed for fear of the disease.

Those steps came a day after mainland China disclosed a sharply higher death 
toll for the flu-like illness, spreading fears of a wider outbreak.

Thousands of Hong Kong residents wore surgical masks while going about town, 
giving this vibrant city the feel of a sprawling hospital ward. The Health 
Department recommended masks only for people with flu-like symptoms so they 
won't infect others.

"If people feel more safe wearing a mask, it is up to them to decide," 
Health Department spokeswoman Sally Kong said.

The Taiwanese capital of Taipei declared a full medical alert Thursday after 
a major engineering company temporarily closed because five of its employees 
were suspected of being infected. They had recently traveled to mainland 
China.

Hong Kong's government leader, Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa, said Thursday 
night that officials had ordered the quarantine of 1,080 people believed to 
have been in close contact with SARS victims. They are being urged to stay 
home and must check in regularly with health officials over a 10-day period 
starting Monday or they could be fined or jailed.

Tung said Hong Kong schools, except for universities, will shut down early 
for spring break, closing from Saturday to April 6 as a precaution.

"For the sake of our health and for the sake of the health in our community, 
we must win this battle," Tung told a news conference.

The quarantine affects those who have visited SARS victims in hospitals or 
people who recently spent time on the ninth floor of Hong Kong's Metropole 
Hotel, where an infected mainland Chinese medical professor passed the 
disease to seven other people and started a global outbreak.

Singapore, which has suffered two deaths, has already quarantined 840 people 
who may have had contact with victims and on Thursday shut all of its 
schools through April 6.

The Rolling Stones postponed a pair of weekend rock concerts in Hong Kong 
due to disease fears, and three rugby teams France, Italy and Argentina 
pulled out of a weekend tournament in the former British colony.

In Canada, health authorities in the most populous province have advised 
hundreds of people to quarantine themselves to try to stop the spread of the 
illness. The move is part of a health emergency declared Wednesday in 
Ontario due to an outbreak of SARS that has killed three people and sickened 
dozens of others.

Chinese authorities revealed Wednesday that 34 people in the mainland had 
died from SARS, including 31 in Guangdong province, where officials had 
previously acknowledged just 305 infections and five deaths. China said 
almost 800 people had been infected.

World Health Organization doctors indicated Wednesday for the first time 
that they were treating the Guangdong cases as part of the SARS outbreak, 
which apparently spread globally from Hong Kong after an infected mainland 
Chinese medical professor gave it to seven people at a hotel last month.

China made its latest disclosures on the disease with three deaths also 
reported in Beijing after coming under sharp international criticism and 
repeated requests by WHO to be more forthcoming in its cooperation and more 
diligent in tracking cases.










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