Beijing
Prepares for Avian Flu
2
April, 2013
A
decade after the deadly SARS virus wrought havoc in Beijing and other
Chinese cities, hospitals in China’s capital are gearing up in the
event that another pandemic begins to spread. Following news that at
least two men in Shanghai have died from the H7N9 avian flu virus—the
first known human deaths from the virus—the Beijing Municipal
Bureau of Public Health released a statement that medical facilities
in China’s capital are now taking extra precautions to screen for
the virus, as Xinhua News reported on Tuesday.
Beijing
hospitals are already stocking up on relevant medical equipment,
stepping up screenings, and preparing for the possibility of avian
flu-related emergencies. No cases of avian flu in humans have been
confirmed in Beijing as of Tuesday, according to state media.
In
the age of social media, however, rumors that bird flu has come to
Beijing are flying fast and thick, setting off a wave of popular
panic. In particular, a widely circulated post on Tencent’s (700)
social-media platform Weixin suggests that avian flu victims may have
already been admitted to Beijing’s Dongzhimen Hospital. Some
anxious workers in Beijing are opting to work from home, ingest
Vitamin C supplements, and take further precautions believed to
minimize the risk of becoming infected. In a nation whose citizens
have learned to routinely distrust official media, it is hard to
contain public fear. And those fears may just turn out to be
justified.
Meanwhile,
separately, public health authorities in Shanghai are trying to
unravel whether there is any link between the avian flu deaths there
and the 16,000 dead pigs recently discovered floating down a nearby
river. On Tuesday, Malik Peiris, a virologist at the University of
Hong Kong’s School of Public Health, told Science magazine, “It
is not expected that any form of influenza would lead to such a huge
die-off in pigs.” At the moment, pig carcasses in Shanghai are
still being tested for avian flu.
Laurie
Garrett, senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign
Relations, has this advice for people living in Shanghai, Beijing,
and other cities where the presence of the avian flu virus is
suspected: “Stop shaking hands, and wear gloves in crowded public
places like subways or stairs. Wash hands before touching your face,
and try to avoid unconsciously touching your nose, mouth or eyes
unless your hands are clean. . . . There is no drug to take that
keeps you from getting infected—anybody trying to sell you one is a
thief.”
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