| Latest on SARS Situation in China |
| 2003/04/20 |
|
The State Council Information Office held a press
conference Sunday afternoon updating SARS latest
developments on the Chinese mainland. The Executive Vice
Minister of Health Gao Qiang and Vice Minister Zhu Qingsheng
answered questions from both Chinese and overseas
journalists. f Foreign journalist: Officials told us at a
press conference a fortnight ago that Beijing was safe for
the Chinese people as well as for foreigners in China. But
the present epidemic situation is becoming more and more
serious. Just now you also explained why there were some
limitations to the data reported some days ago. What on
earth are the problems in Beijing (or in Chinas health
system) that deters you from telling us the truth? Gao
Qiang: SARS has not been fully understood by mankind and an
entirely effective therapy is still unavailable. Whats
more, it is very contagious. So I think if a place claims to
be safe, that safety is relative. Without good preventive
measures, a place that doesnt have SARS today might
have it tomorrow. At our last press conference officials
were saying Beijing was safe. I think their words were based
on the situation in Beijing at that time when most of
the SARS cases were in Guangdong and the epidemic situation
in Beijing was limited to very, very small areas. But there
have been some changes to the situation in Beijing recently,
as you can see in the data I announced just now. SARS cases
have been increasing gradually and this reflects that there
are some vulnerable spots in the present SARS prevention
work. The major problem is: medical institutions in Beijing
are subject to the jurisdiction of many departments -- the
Beijing municipal government, the Ministry of Health, the
military and so on. This loose administration system has
caused lack of communication among hospitals: a failure to
obtain accurate information on the epidemic and a failure to
take very effective quarantine measures to prevent the
disease from spreading. CCTV: In view of the situation you
just briefed us on, the present epidemic situation in
Beijing is serious. What measures will the central
government and the municipal government of Beijing adopt to
curb the development of the epidemic? Gao Qiang: First, I
think the most urgent and important matter now for Beijing,
as well as for all epidemic areas, is to resort to resolute
measures to prevent the epidemic from spreading. We have
employed rigorous preventive measures on medical agencies to
prevent medical workers from being contaminated. We have
adopted rigorous measures on confirmed SARS patients,
suspected SARS cases and those who have had close contact
with SARS patients. We have taken rigorous measures in
observation, surveillance and tracking on airlines, trains,
buses and other (public) vehicles. We have adopted another
important measure: the State Council has decided to suspend
the May Day vacation of seven days and return to the normal
holiday vacation system, to avoid the epidemic from possibly
spreading in the movement of large numbers of travelers. I
think this measure will result in a great loss of income for
Chinas tourist sector. However, the Chinese government
wants to give top priority to the lives and health of the
people. Second: enforce guidance of epidemic prevention work
in different areas in the country. The Chinese government
has dispatched supervision groups to Guangdong, Beijing,
Inner Mongolia, and more recently, to Shanxi, Henan, and
Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. Why did we send a supervision
team to Ningxia when there was only one SARS case there?
Ningxia is in the west of China where medical conditions are
relatively bad and the income level of the local residents
there is relatively low. Protecting the vast rural area of
west China from being caught by the epidemic is an issue of
great concern to the Chinese government. We want to enhance
preventive and surveillance measures in schools, especially
middle schools and primary schools, government offices and
the military where population is dense. We have taken
measures to protect the health of foreigners in China and
residents of Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan, too. Third:
integrate national medical research resources to tackle the
issue and improve medical measures to cure more patients and
reduce the mortality rate. Fourth: set up a medical aid fund
for low-solvency patients and farmers. A document issued by
the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Health and Ministry of
Labor and Social Security said that those who have economic
difficulties in paying the medical bill may receive
subsidies from the government. The budget comes from both
local and central government. In addition, medical workers
should receive medical care subsidies from government
revenue as well. Fifth: further strengthen the cooperation
with WHO. While we are holding this news conference,
officials from the Ministry of Health are reporting epidemic
conditions of both Beijing and other places (in the whole
country) to the WHO expert team, aiming to sort a better way
out. SKY TV: You just mentioned that there will be no long
vacation this May Day. As we know, 74 million people
traveled around China during the last May Day golden week.
Does the canceling of the vacation mean, officially, that
the Chinese government declares that China is not a safe
place to travel in now? Gao Qiang: The canceling of the May
Day holiday aims to further prevent the spread of SARS under
the current epidemic situation. We believe strict measures
are necessary. We dont forbid all traveling
activities. We suggest not to travel too far; local travel
is advocated. Reporter from Netherlands: In the cooperation
between the Ministry of Health and WHO, information
collection measures are clearly stated, but why are these
measures overridden by the Ministry of Health? Gao Qiang:
Due to insufficient awareness of the SARS situation, the
information collection system was far from perfect at the
beginning. As for Guangdong, they have a better system in
terms of reporting and technology, because Guangdong was
involved earlier; things are the opposite in Beijing.
Besides, the Ministry of Health has not undertaken powerful
direction and inspection work in Beijing and this is our
problem. ABC: You just mentioned that the inaccurate figures
are due to some mistakes in your work. But is it possible
that the Chinese government disguised the epidemic
deliberately, in particular those cases hidden from the
World Health Organization (WHO) team? Its been
reported that some SARS victims were hidden in ambulances or
hotels while the WHO team was inspecting. Do you believe
these reports are true? And is there any investigation under
way to determine whether SARS cases were intentionally
hidden from the public? Gao Qiang: I think that inaccurate
statistics are totally different from deliberate action to
disguise the facts. We asked all regions to report the
actual figures, and release the facts to the public. No
delay, cover-up or missing cases were allowed. Till now, I
havent found any place which has done so. Weve
dispatched some supervision teams to some regions. One of
their tasks is to check the actual conditions of the
epidemic. Wherever they are, they will punish those who have
covered up actual SARS cases and will inform you (the
public) in time. If any of you know of such cases, I hope
that you will tell me, but the information you offer must be
correct. Taiwan ETTV: I want to ask Mr. Minister, is there
any leading official or ministry taking responsibility for
SARS? Whats more, its said that a SARS peak will
come next week, what do you think of the news? Third, the
large number of migrants in Beijing makes it difficult to
curb the spread of the epidemic. Will Beijing take further
measures on non-natives? Gao Qiang: The main task currently
is to take effective measures to curb the spread of SARS,
and strengthen medical aid in order to make more patients
recover, instead of tracing someones responsibility.
Now, we are considering strengthening medical work, and
perfecting our measures in order to achieve a better result.
Just now, the lady asked if there will be SARS breakout: I
dont know what the breakout refers to? Since more than
300 SARS cases have been found, I think that its
already serious. Considering that some patients will be
excluded from over 400 suspected SARS cases after diagnosis,
and some will be confirmed to be infected, the number of
SARS patients will increase in the next few days. But it
doesnt mean that SARS will spread widely in Beijing.
These SARS patients were mainly hospitalized at the end of
March and beginning of April. Yesterday, I received
Beijings SARS report, which shows 7 more cases have
been found. These cases arent included in todays
report; we will add them in tomorrows report. As an
international metropolis, Beijing has a population of over
10 million and daily migrants of 4 million. I think we
should take effective measures to prevent the further spread
of SARS, and keep normal order in peoples life and
work at the same time. Both of them are wrong if we ignore
the spread of SARS or affect peoples life and work by
overestimating the epidemic also. We will adjust our plan
according to the actual SARS condition in Beijing to prevent
and control it. NBC: My question is what are the main
symptoms of the suspected cases? Does China follow
consistent standards with WHO in diagnosing suspected cases?
My second question: experts from WHO said a larger number of
patients are under close observation in Beijing who were
neither confirmed to have caught SARS nor proved to be
suspected? Do you have figures for this category? Zhu
Qingsheng: As Executive Vice Minister Gao pointed out just
now, SARS is a new kind of disease which started at the
beginning of this century and still remains unknown to
mankind. In the past months, the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region and Taiwan Province, as well
as other countries around the world, have diagnosed and
treated the disease and studied its cases, but we are still
at a stage of exploration. We cannot say all problems
relating to SARS are solved. We have had academic exchanges
with WHO; Hong Kong and Taiwan of China and other countries
recently on the diagnosis and treatment of SARS cases, and
suspected cases, through the Internet and other means. Now
in clinical diagnosis we follow three standards: first, the
patient has had some activity relating to the epidemic, for
example, contact with an infected patient or a history of
having been to an epidemic-infected area. Some data is easy
to get, for instance, one (team) has been to an area with
many SARS cases; while some is not so obvious (to follow),
such as taking a bus or going to a hospital. Its hard
to decide whether one is infected by a certain person or a
certain environment. Another aspect is the symptoms in
clinical diagnosis: a high fever, dry cough, being short of
strength, a shadow on a chest X-ray. To our satisfaction,
WHO has announced the discovery of the cause of SARS as a
new kind of corona virus. If one or two symptoms occur, we
judge it as a suspected case. China has kept contact with
WHO and some other countries and regions where SARS cases
are found. The diagnosis standards adopted by Chinese
doctors on confirmed SARS cases and suspected cases are
basically consistent with those of other countries and
regions. We have communicated well and had friendly
cooperation with WHO experts during their inspection tour in
Guangdong and Beijing; whether in clinical diagnosis or
treatment. We reached good consensus on the diagnosis and
treatment of the disease. WHO experts also acclaimed
Chinas contribution in this respect. The Chinese
mainland has the most SARS cases up to now and is the area
which has seen the earliest SARS cases. We should contribute
in this respect and may contribute more in the future. WHO
experts have conducted investigations in Guangdong Province,
south China, and the capital city, Beijing. They have
reached a consensus, to a great extent, with the Chinese, on
SARS diagnosis and clinical treatment. China Radio
International: Just now Vice Minister Gao said that the
Chinese government has set up a medical aid system to treat
SARS patients living in poverty or in rural areas. But there
are still reports that some patients were refused at some
hospitals because they could not afford the payment. Could
you confirm this situation? Gao Qiang: I have also taken
notice of the situation you mentioned. This phenomena really
exist in some places. But I should think these hospitals
have both subjective and objective reasons for actually
doing so. For example, some hospitals cannot handle
epidemics as they may be only centers for heart disease. If
a SARS patient goes there, he might possibly not receive
effective treatment. To solve these problems, we have taken
the following measures. First, we have designated six
special hospitals in Beijing to treat SARS patients. The
publication of the addresses and phone numbers of these
hospitals has enabled SARS infectors not only to receive
timely treatment, but also prevent the further transmission
of the disease. Second, in some well-equipped hospitals, we
have set up isolated and special out-patient service centers
for respiratory diseases. The hospitals should give timely
isolation, observation and judgment on patients who show
symptoms of fever and cough, certainly not the normal cough.
Also they (patients) should be reported to relevant public
health department. After receiving a report, the relevant
department must send out experts, medical workers and
ambulances immediately to the spot. If the patients are
diagnosed as suspected SARS cases, they should be sent to
designated hospitals. Third, we also put forward strict
requirements for the presidents of the hospitals and the
discipline they should observe. They should not reject any
patients on any excuse, including an economic excuse. If the
hospital really has difficulty in receiving patients, it
should find a place of temporary isolation for the patient
and immediately report the case. The relevant departments
will take measures. No hospital is allowed to reject a
patient out of its door. If we find any rejection case, we
will give them severe punishment. Report of such phenomenon
is also welcome by society. Wang Guoqing: What Gao mentioned
just now applies not only to Beijing but the nationwide
regions where SARS cases are found. UPI: Youre
promising to be more open with the numbers of the suspected
SARS cases and actual SARS cases; Im wondering you
also mentioned that there will be a daily report. What is
the mechanism for that report? And also since youre
going to be open with the numbers, could you perhaps be more
open with the numbers of the cost, for example, what the
budget is for the Ministry of Health right now, how much
money is the budget for SARS, and how is it going to be
divided between the central government and local government,
especially in the west, which doesnt have enough
money? Gao Qiang: Im not the full-time information
officer of the Ministry of Health, so I cant give such
a news conference everyday. I think that information will be
released through media organizations. No matter what kind of
form it will take, I hope that every journalist who cares
about SARS prevention and control in China gets related
information. As for the question the gentleman just asked
about the capital input in SARS prevention, thats my
special area, because I worked as the vice-minister of
finance for many years. As for the accurate figure of how
much money I have and how much money is needed for SARS
prevention and control, I can only tell you that its
X. But I pledge that the Chinese government will try to
prevent, control and cure the epidemic through both central
and local budgets, no matter how much money it will spend.
The Ministry of Health and Ministry of Finance have reached
a consensus that the Ministry of Finance will give full
financial support as long as the expenditure in their budget
is reasonable. After over 20 years of reform and opening-up,
China has accumulated a solid economic foundation, and
Chinas fiscal revenue has currently performed very
well. In the first quarter of 2003, fiscal revenue increased
26 percent over the same period last year, so the epidemic
prevention and control will not be influenced by capital
shortage. Voice of America: I have two questions. First, the
mortality rate seems to have gone up a little bit, is it
significant to the issue? Secondly, there are many calls and
promises for accountability. Are you aware of any official,
at the provincial, ministerial or central level of the
government, who will be jailed, fired or verbally punished?
Gao Qiang: We are very much concerned with the increase of
the mortality rate. We hope it will be zero. But so far we
do not have medicine which can effectively kill the virus.
Guangdong has developed some effective methods which can
cure 80 percent of the patients. The Ministry of Health is
now collecting Guangdongs experience in prevention and
treatment to popularize it in the affected areas. In terms
of accountability, the Chinese government is responsible to
the general public. Well try our best to correct and
rectify the mistakes and deficiencies in our work. At
present, the major task facing the Ministry of Health is to
study, with consorted effort, the methods of controlling the
spread of SARS. China Daily: China has a large rural
population whose income level is relative low while the
medical conditions in the countryside are poor. This may
lead to rapid spread of SARS among the rural population.
What can the Chinese government do to prevent such a trend?
Gao Qiang: So far, we havent found a large-scale
occurrence of SARS cases in rural areas. But we have been
highly vigilant for we know that the result will be very
serious if rural areas are affected since Chinese peasants
earn relatively less than urban people and medical
facilities there are poor and rural peoples sense of
self protection is less than the urban population. I think
its very possible for those rural people who have come
to work in the cities to carry the virus back to their home.
To curb the occurrence of such cases, we have adopted the
following four measures: First, all transportation tools are
required to take strict monitoring and isolation measures.
Any persons found having symptoms will be sent to the
floating inspection station in the locality. Second, we will
give the same treatment to migrant workers in the cities as
to its urban residents. Whenever there are cases appearing
among them, theyll receive immediate rescuing and
medical treatment. Third, we have urged the rural population
to watch out for the epidemic, immediately reporting any
suspected cases for timely isolated treatment. Fourth, any
peasant who is affected by the epidemic should be sent to
hospital for timely treatment. Those people who have
financial problems will receive subsidies from local
government. If a local government has financial problems,
the central government will subsidize the local government.
Far Eastern Economic Review: I have three questions. The
first is would you like to give us more information about
the cause of the epidemic in Beijing? You just now gave us
very large numbers for cases in the city. Can you tell us
when the numbers of the cases started to rise dramatically?
Can you tell us whether the numbers of the cases each day
has began to level off or is still arising and how does the
seven yesterday compare to the cases in the last ten days?
Could you give us more information about these? And also
could you explain why there are so few medical workers
affected among the Beijing cases? When in other outbreaks,
it seems medical workers have been a much greater proportion
of patients. My second question is that you have taken
extraordinary measures to get accurate numbers in the city
of Beijing. How confident do you feel about the numbers in
other parts of the country? Do you feel perhaps the
situation in places other than Beijing and Guangdong could
be as bad as in Beijing and Guangdong? My third question is:
Are you still encouraging the foreign community to come to
China as you did during the past few weeks? Gao Qiang: I
dont think the phrase to rise dramatically
is accurate. Just now, I have said that the increased
numbers were collected by tens and hundreds of personnel
sent by us, taking one week to check out patients scattered
in various hospitals. The truth is that the number of SARS
cases we have found and reported now has increased. Five
days before, the number was 37, now it is 339, increased by
302. But it doesnt mean the 302 people were infected
within the last five days. It could have been ten or twenty
days ago and they could be unregistered patients in some
hospitals. To check them out is a good sign of our statistic
work, but it doesnt mean the situation in the city of
Beijing is deteriorating dramatically. As for few infected
medical workers in Beijing, I think we should thank the
better medical conditions, public awareness, and protection
and prevention measures in the city. Just now the lady had
some doubts about the accuracy of numbers in local areas; I
can tell you that we have sent inspection teams to deal with
any cover-ups. As for whether we are still encouraging
international exchange: arent you staying in China?
Monitoring is necessary, but maintaining normal
international activity is necessary too. I am not in favor
of saying China is the safest country in the world, or that
we can promise for you not to be infected by SARS, and I
dont agree with any judgment that China is a dangerous
country and you are likely to be infected very much here
neither. This plague is not exclusive to China. It has
broken out in more than twenty countries. We hope that more
measures may be taken to protect foreigners and fellow
Chinese from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan, among whom, five
were under medical care in hospitals of Beijing. So far, one
Canadian has left the hospital, two Taiwanese are about to
be discharged after recovery. Whether Beijing is safe or
not, you may judge for yourself. CNN: First I want you to
understand why foreign journalists in China have been
suspicious of the Chinese authorities. Over the past weeks
we have received distorted information once and then again
and the information has misled us and stirred confusion
amongst us. For instance, two weeks ago Minister Zhang said
the epidemic had been put under control; a week ago, it was
said that Beijing had 37 SARS cases, and when we asked
whether the 37 cases include cases in military hospitals,
you said yes. Why is it so hard to squeeze accurate
information from you? President Hu has said that any
cover-up, delay or discounted reporting is intolerable. But
the data you announced just now is yesterdays
information and you also mentioned that there are seven new
cases. Why dont you report all the cases at one time?
Is this because you have not attached enough importance to
this issue? Gao Qiang: I think that I have given enough of
an explanation to similar questions but if you still
dont understand, Id like to say more. Beijing is
the capital of China and there are work units of central
government, local government and the military. These units
are respectively in charge of some hospitals. These
hospitals have received different patients. This is an issue
then about the Chinese medical system. With the present
system it is pretty difficult for the municipal authorities
of Beijing to collect accurate and timely epidemic
information in a hospital run by the military. President Hu
Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have sharply noticed the
problem and decided to put the epidemic prevention work of
all the Party; government and military organizations, public
instructions and enterprises under the leadership of the
Beijing municipal government. I think with the leadership of
this unified system the situation of the previous days will
not be repeated. |