WORLDWIDE ALERT
QUARANTINES PLANNED
Sunday, April 26, 2009 11:29 AM
WE HAVE A PROBLEM
GENEVA (AP) -- Countries planned quarantines, tightened rules on pork
imports and tested airline passengers for fevers as global health
officials tried Sunday to come up with uniform ways to battle a deadly
strain of swine flu. Nations from New Zealand to France reported new
suspected cases.
World Health Organization Director-General Margaret Chan held
teleconferences with staff and flu experts around the world but
stopped short of recommending specific measures to stop the disease,
urging governments to step up their surveillance of suspicious
outbreaks.
Governments including China, Russia and Taiwan began planning to put
anyone with symptoms of the deadly virus under quarantine. Others were
increasing their screening of pigs and pork imports from the Americas
or banning them outright despite health officials' reassurances that
it was safe to eat thoroughly cooked pork. Some nations issued travel
warnings for Mexico.
Chan called the outbreak a public health emergency of "Pandemic
Potential" because the virus can pass from human to human. Her agency
was considering whether to issue nonbinding recommendations on travel
and trade restrictions, and even border closures. It is up to
governments to decide whether to follow the advice. "Countries are
encouraged to do anything that they feel would be a precautionary
measure," WHO spokeswoman Aphaluck Bhatiasevi said. "All countries
need to enhance their monitoring."
New Zealand said that 10 students who took a school trip to Mexico
"likely" had swine flu. Israel said a man who had recently visited
Mexico had been hospitalized while authorities try to determine
whether he had the disease. French Health Ministry officials said four
possible cases of swine flu are currently under investigation,
including a family of three in the northern Nord region and a woman in
the Paris region. The four recently returned from Mexico. Tests on two
separate cases of suspected swine flu proved negative, they said.
Spain's Health Ministry said three people who just returned from
Mexico were under observation in hospitals in the northern Basque
region, in southeastern Albacete and the Mediterranean port city of
Valencia.
Mexico closed schools, museums, libraries and theaters in a bid to
contain the outbreak after hundreds were sickened there. In the U. S.,
there have been at least 11 confirmed cases of swine flu in
California, Texas and Kansas. Patients have ranged in age from 9 to
over 50. At least two were hospitalized. All recovered or are
recovering.
New York health officials said more than 100 students at the St.
Francis Preparatory School, in Queens, recently began suffering a
fever, sore throat and aches and pains. Some of their relatives also
have been ill. Some St. Francis students had recently traveled to
Mexico, The New York Times and New York Post reported Sunday.
Preliminary tests of samples taken from sick students' noses and
throats confirmed that at least eight had a non-human strain of
influenza type A, indicating probable cases of swine flu, city health
officials said. The exact subtypes were still unknown, and the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was conducting further
tests.
Hong Kong and Taiwan said visitors who came back from flu-affected
areas with fevers would be quarantined. China said anyone experiencing
flu-like symptoms within two weeks of arrival an affected area had to
report to authorities. A Russian health agency said any passenger from
North America running a fever would be quarantined until cause of the
fever is determined.
Tokyo's Narita airport installed a device to test the temperatures of
passengers arriving from Mexico.
Indonesia increased surveillance at all entry points for travelers
with flu-like symptoms - using devices at airports that were put in
place years ago to monitor for severe acute respiratory syndrome, or
SARS, and bird flu. It said it was ready to quarantine suspected
victims if necessary.
Hong Kong and South Korea warned against travel to the Mexican capital
and three affected provinces. Italy's health ministry also advised
citizens to postpone travel to affected areas. Symptoms of the
flu-like illness include a fever of more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit
(37.8 degrees Celsius), body aches, coughing, a sore throat,
respiratory congestion and, in some cases, vomiting and diarrhea.
At least 81 people have died from severe pneumonia caused by the
disease in Mexico, according to the WHO.
The virus is usually contracted through direct contact with pigs, but
Joseph Domenech, chief of animal health service at U. N. Food and
Agriculture Agency in Rome, said all indications were that the virus
is being spread through human-to-human transmission. No vaccine
specifically protects against swine flu, and it is unclear how much
protection current human flu vaccines might offer.
Russia banned the import of meat products from Mexico, California,
Texans and Kansas. South Korea said it would increase the number of
its influenza virus checks on pork products from Mexico and the U. S.
Serbia on Saturday banned all imports of pork from North America,
despite reassurances from the FAO that pigs appear not to be the
immediate source of infection. Italy's agriculture lobby, Coldiretti,
warned against panic reaction, noting that farmers lost hundreds of
millions of euros (dollars) because of consumers boycotts during the
2001 mad cow scare and the 2005 bird flu outbreak.
Japanese Agriculture Minister Shigeru Ishiba appeared on TV to calm
consumers, saying it was safe to eat pork.
In Egypt, health authorities were examining about 350,000 pigs being
raised in Cairo and other provinces for swine flu.
The WHO's pandemic alert level is currently at to phase 3. The
organization said the level could be raised to phase 4 if the virus
shows sustained ability to pass from human to human.
Phase 5 would be reached if the virus is found in at least two
countries in the same region. "The declaration of phase 5 is a strong
signal that a pandemic is imminent and that the time to finalize the
organization, communication, and implementation of the planned
mitigation measures is short," WHO said.
Phase 6 would indicate a full-scale Global Pandemic.
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