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This is an archive article published on April 16, 2010

Chinese officials warn of plague in quake-hit province

Chinese health experts have warned of a possible outbreak of diseases,especially the fatal pneumonic plague in quake-hit Qinghai province.

Chinese health experts have warned of a possible outbreak of diseases,especially the fatal pneumonic plague in quake-hit Qinghai province.

Given that Qinghai has seen a sporadic rise in cases of the pneumonic plague in recent years,surveillance over the epidemic,which is passed on to humans by marmots,has been strengthened to work out and implement effective measures to avert potential outbreaks.

“The Ministry of Health has asked all personnel involved in rescue work in the region to keep a close eye and report suspected cases of the plague as soon as they are detected,” Feng Zijian,Director of the Emergency Response Department of the Centre of Disease Prevention and Control,was quoted as saying by the official media.

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Pneumonic plague,once established in a human population,is particularly virulent because it can be spread from person to person via coughing.

If left untreated,mortality can range from 50-90 per cent,according to the World Health Organisation. In 2004,eight villagers in Qinghai died of the plague.

Most of them were infected after killing or eating wild marmots,which live in the grasslands of Northwestern China,where people hunt them for meat.

Contact with household animals like dogs,which get infected by eating the marmot,can also lead to human infection,experts warned.

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To prevent infection,people,including rescue workers in the affected areas,should avoid contact with dead animals,Feng suggested.

He,however,maintained there was no reason for panic.

Currently,marmots are in hibernation and are expected to wake up in late April or early May,which,to a great extent,lessens the possibility of the plague spreading to humans,he said.

But he also conceded marmots might wake up earlier due to the impact of the massive earthquake,making epidemic prevention and control efforts tougher.

To avert other disease outbreaks,like diarrhoea,that commonly occur after an earthquake,the top health authority has outlined an epidemic control and response plan,including safe water and food distribution methods.

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Besides,special attention should also be paid to prevent and control potential frostbite and heart and lung conditions related to high altitude among locals and relief workers,given the harsh natural conditions of the quake zone,experts said.

But ‘the top priority now is to pull out survivors from the rubble and save lives’,Feng said.

Hundreds of medical workers from across the country,including doctors and nurses specializing in general surgery,neurosurgery,and pediatrics,were sent to Yushu with tons of relief materials.

By yesterday,more than 500 injured had been transferred by air and railway to designated hospitals in the cities of Xining,Lanzhou,and Chengdu,said the ministry.

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