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No wide-spread
transmission of SARS in China's rural areas
PLA Daily 2003-05-16
There has been no widespread transmission of the
severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic in China's rural
areas to date, Chinese Vice-Minister of Agriculture Liu Jian said
in Beijing Thursday.
Liu told a press conference held by the State
Council Information Office Thursday that, to date, the country
has identified a limited number of SARS cases in a few regions
in rural areas.
Official figures show that during the period
from April 26 to May 12, 155 SARS cases were reported in rural
areas in 85 counties of 15 provinces and autonomous regions, accounting
for roughly 6 percent of the country's total in the period.
The figures were revised later as the country
explored more effective channels for detecting and reporting SARS
cases in rural areas, Liu added.
He also revealed that China would take measures
to ensure an adequate number of medical workers treating SARS
in rural areas, including transferring doctors from more affluent
provinces to economically underdeveloped provinces, transferring
doctors from military hospital divisions and opening training
programs for medical workers at the county level.
A team of doctors was sent to the Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region Wednesday from Jiangsu Province to help control
SARS, Liu said.
According to the reports from China's ministries
of agriculture and health, most of China's farmers working in
urban areas have remained in their work places, which is considered
crucial to curbing the spread of the contagious disease to China's
rural areas.
Liu said China now has about 100 million farmers
working in urban areas, of whom between 36 and 40 million work
in provinces other than their places of birth. A recent survey
showed that, to date, about 8 million migrant workers have returned
home, half as part of the normal seasonal migration and half for
reasons related to SARS.
He said the Chinese government is taking active
measures to help families of migrant workers with the upcoming
summer harvest.
According to Liu, farmers working in cities will
receive free treatment if they are infected with SARS. Urban employers
are not allowed to fire farmers during the SARS crisis, and the
government will provide the enterprises concerned with tax breaks
and other kinds of financial aid.
Liu noted that the current SARS situation in
China's rural areas proves the measures China has taken are effective.
Qi Xiaoqiu, director of the disease control department
of the Ministry of Health, also pledged that China is absolutely
capable of containing SARS due to the three-level medical network
at the county, town, and village levels and the 1 million medical
workers in rural areas.
Chinese rural medical workers have successfully
blocked the spread of several epidemics in the past, Qi stressed.
(May 15, Xinhuanet)
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