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Vice-Premier
Wu Yi urged continued SARS vigilance
PLA Daily 2003-06-10
Vice-Premier Wu Yi Monday called on people in
North China, a region hard-hit by the SARS outbreak, not to relax
their vigilance despite the remarkable achievements made in controlling
the disease.
She was speaking at a regional meeting in Beijing
covering all of North China -- Beijing and Tianjin municipalities,
Hebei and Shanxi provinces and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
Wu said fighting the epidemic of severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS) and developing the country's economy
would continue to be the top priorities of the central government.
Prevention work used under the emergency conditions
should continue to be used after SARS is under control, she said.
Monitoring work should be strengthened, she added.
Wu said close attention should be paid to SARS
prevention and control work in rural areas and urged officials
to solve farmers' problems.
The Ministry of Health said there were no new
confirmed SARS cases on the Chinese mainland in the 24 hours up
to 10 am Monday but there was one death in South China's Guangdong
Province.
According to the ministry, 129 SARS patients
were discharged from hospital upon recovery in the same 24-hour
period.
Of the discharged SARS patients, 110 were in
Beijing. There were eight in Inner Mongolia, six in Shanxi, three
in Northeast China's Jilin Province, and one each in Hebei and
South China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
There was one new suspected SARS case in Guangdong.
The authorities also declared that 106 suspected
SARS patients did not have the virus. There were 99 such cases
in Beijing, two each in Inner Mongolia and Jilin, and one each
in Guangdong, East China's Jiangsu Province and Northwest China's
Shaanxi Province.
In another development, researchers with the
Key Science and Technology Group under the National Task Force
for SARS Prevention and Control announced Monday in Beijing that
the combination of traditional Chinese medical methods and Western
medical treatment used to fight SARS has been proven to be scientific
and successful.
Their conclusion was based on clinical studies
from 562 SARS patients in Beijing You'an Hospital, Xiyuan Hospital,
People's Liberation Army Hospital No 302 and eight other hospitals
in Beijing.
Under the group's co-ordination, more than 400
medical workers have been involved in curing the SARS patients
through a combination of Western and traditional Chinese medical
methods. After a month of observation from early last month to
Friday last week, researchers completed analyses on 222 patients'
chest X-rays, the saturation level of oxygen in the blood and
other physical indices. Studies on the remaining 340 patients
will be completed by the end of this month. The scientists compared
the 222 patients with another 200 patients who were treated solely
with Western methods.
(June 9, People's Daily)
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