Time Asia: Unmasking A Crisis
BY Hannah Beech/ Shanghai
(Clearwisdom.net) This is the hospital ward China's Ministry of Health
doesn't want you to see. There are more than 100 Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) patients crammed into tiny rooms in the infectious diseases
section of Beijing's You'an Hospital. "Every single one of us in this building
is a SARS patient," says a nurse surnamed Zhang who worked at the People's
Liberation Army Hospital (P.L.A.) No. 301 until 11 days ago, when she was
diagnosed with the disease and admitted here. "There are at least 100 SARS
patients here, if not several hundred. The conditions here are really bad. We're
not allowed out of this room. We piss in this room, crap in this room and eat in
the room. As far as I know, at least half of the patients here are doctors and
nurses from other hospitals." As a Time reporter continued through the ward,
another nurse who wouldn't give her name stopped him and explained, "Look, I'm
not pushing you away. I do this for your own good. It's too dangerous here. It's
really a terrible disease, even we who work here don't know when we'll get it.
No place is safe in this hospital. All of these wards are full of SARS patients,
there are over 100 at least. Don't believe the government--they never tell you
the truth. They say it's a deadly disease with 4% mortality? Are you kidding me?
The death rate is at least 25%. In this hospital alone, there are over 10
patients dead already." According to the Chinese government, most of these patients--and perhaps
hundreds or even thousands of others across the nation--simply do not exist.
Before the reporter is hustled out of You'an's teeming isolation ward, nurse
Zhang warns, "Never believe what the Health Ministry tells you." China, flush from having won the right to host both the Beijing 2008 Olympics
and the 2010 Shanghai World Expo, may be presenting a rosy, reformist face to
the rest of the world. But the country's handling of the deadly SARS epidemic,
which is believed to have originated in the southern province of Guangdong last
November, shows that behind closed doors Beijing can be as inscrutable and
secretive as ever. Numerous reports from local doctors over the past week
suggest that the nation's health-care system remains hostage to a government
that values power and public order before human lives. "You foreigners value
each person's life more than we do because you have fewer people in your
countries," says a Shanghai-based respiratory specialist, who sits on an
advisory committee dealing with epidemic diseases. "Our primary concern is
social stability, and if a few people's deaths are kept secret, it's worth it to
keep things stable." The question is: Just how many deaths can be kept secret before the health
epidemic itself becomes a threat to social stability? For decades, China's
Ministry of Health has deliberately kept killer outbreaks hidden, hoping that
deadly diseases will burn out on their own without interference, or scrutiny,
from the international medical community. After all, China is a big country, it
says, and it's natural for a case or two of plague or rabies to pop up; why
worry the populace unnecessarily? But Beijing's emergency plan may be backfiring
with SARS, which has burst out of the mainland's national boundaries to kill 116
people and infect 2,890 worldwide as of last weekend. Yet even as the deadly
pneumonia proliferates around the world--Africa is the latest continent
afflicted with the bug--China continues to massively underreport its own SARS
epidemic. In the metropolises of Beijing and Shanghai, local doctors and nurses
whisper of hundreds of cases piling up in epidemic wards. And citizens who have
put faith in China's health-care system for decades are beginning to wonder
whether their long-held trust has been dangerously abused. Even as late as last Saturday, China's health authorities continued to stick
to an accounting of 60 SARS deaths and 1,300 cases--even though China's Premier
Wen Jiabao visited You'an Hospital, where medical staff say the full caseload
there has not been incorporated into the figures. In an effort to ease an
increasingly worried populace, Beijing's recently appointed Mayor Meng Xuenong
claimed last Thursday that Chinese health officials have "full control over
atypical pneumonia." Meanwhile, medical authorities maintained that most SARS
cases in China outside of Guangdong were "imported," proving that cities such as
Beijing and Shanghai were not themselves breeding grounds for the disease. But even as the government continued its policy of denial, a number of
whistle-blowers began contesting Beijing's numbers. On Tuesday a retired
military hospital surgeon alleged that in one Beijing hospital there were more
than 60 SARS patients and seven deaths from the disease. A local cadre from
Shenzhen told Time that during an internal meeting last week, a city health
official spoke of at least six deaths there so far while still publicly denying
any cases. And in Shanghai, local doctors spoke of 14 cases at one hospital,
while Dr. Li Aiwu of the Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital confirmed that seven
foreigners were being treated for the disease--contradicting the city's previous
claim that no foreigners were suspected of having SARS. "I guess that means I
don't exist," jokes a middle-age Englishman who has been confined to its
14th-floor isolation ward for a week. The Manchester native connects with the outside world by cell phone. "The
care here is good, but I must admit I'm feeling a little cut off from the real
world." China's continued obfuscation contributed to the U.S.'s issuing a travel
advisory warning against nonessential trips to China. At about the same time,
Malaysia barred all tourists from mainland China and Hong Kong. In Hong Kong,
the government reacted to the continued increase in local SARS cases and
criticism it had been slow in dealing with the disease by finally ordering
household contacts of confirmed patients to stay in home quarantine. Travelers
wishing to fly from Hong Kong's Chek Lap Kok airport would also have their
temperature taken before they were allowed to board their flights. In the
mainland, luxury-hotel occupancy in Shanghai has slipped from the usual
overbooked 120% this time of year to 30%. High-level trips by former U.S.
President George Bush, Singaporean Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong and a World
Economic Forum event have been postponed or canceled. "The drop-off in visitors
is worse than in 1989," grumbles a Shanghai foreign-affairs official, referring
to the foreign exodus after the Tiananmen crackdown. In a country where mass revolts have regularly paralyzed empires and regimes,
the Communist Party is apprehensive about panicking the people. And now that
China's booming economy is more dependent than ever on foreign investment--54%
of Shanghai's industrial output, for instance, derives from foreign-owned or
partially foreign-owned companies--the Party is doubly concerned about
maintaining the appearance of stability. "Look at what happened in Hong Kong,
where everybody's scared and wearing a mask," explains a senior aide to
Shanghai's vice mayor, blaming the foreign media for stirring up jitters about
the killer virus. "We don't want everyone to get panicked like that for no
reason and destroy our economy." Furthermore, with the major May 1 holiday week
rapidly approaching, local tourism officials are worried that the SARS scare
will deter Chinese from traveling and spending their yuan. China has a long history of not facing up to its medical problems. Prior to
SARS, the country had been notoriously unwilling to publicly admit to its
burgeoning AIDS epidemic. When news trickled out three years ago of tens of
thousands of farmers in central China infected by HIV after selling blood to
traffickers using tainted equipment, the government delayed more than a year
before conceding the truth. Even then, Beijing insisted the virus contaminated
only one tiny village in Henan province. Finally, in 2002, the Chinese
leadership revised its HIV estimate from 30,000 cases to 1 million--in a single
day. Similar night-and-fog tactics kept quiet an outbreak of food poisoning in
the northeastern province of Liaoning last month, when three schoolchildren died
and 3,000 were sickened after drinking tainted soy milk. Even with hundreds of
students flocking to hospitals, local authorities denied for weeks that there
was anything amiss. Most doctors are too frightened of losing their jobs to tell the truth about
such cover-ups. A doctor who told a TIME reporter that there were dozens of SARS
cases being isolated in a tuberculosis ward at Beijing's No. 309 People's
Liberation Army Hospital backed out of continuing the discussion, saying, "I'm
embarrassed that I can't talk to you. I had really wanted to, but I'm young and
I can't afford to lose my job." But other brave souls are finding the courage to
speak out. Last week, in a case first reported by Time, retired military surgeon
Jiang Yanyong alleged that at the same hospital there were 60 SARS cases and
seven deaths, and that at the P.L.A.'s No. 301 Hospital (where nurse Zhang
works) at least 10 doctors and nurses had contracted the disease from their
patients. Jiang, who initially submitted his statement to the state TV channel
CCTV 4 but received no response, says he was spurred to report more accurate
numbers because he was so dismayed that the Ministry of Health reported only 12
cases and three deaths in the capital in early April. According to Jiang,
another military hospital, No. 302, admitted two SARS patients first diagnosed
at No. 301 in early March just as Beijing was convening the politically
sensitive National People's Congress. It was only after both patients had died,
says Jiang, that health authorities called a meeting, but instead of instructing
doctors on how to contain the disease through public-education campaigns, Jiang
says medical officials told physicians they were "forbidden to publicize" the
SARS deaths "in order to ensure stability." Doctors in Shanghai have faced similar political interference. Early last
week, physicians at a hospital in the city's Huangpu district were called in by
their superior to discuss a new policy initiative straight from the municipal
health bureau. For the past couple of months, doctors had been clandestinely
searching the Internet for information about SARS, and they hoped for solid
information from their director. Instead, he told them not to wear masks in the
hospital, save in isolation wards and a few select diagnostic rooms. The
gathered physicians were confused. One top administrator meekly said, "I thought
wearing masks was supposed to stop SARS from spreading to medical staff." Their
superior responded curtly, "Wearing a mask will scare the patients. We do not
want panic, especially since SARS has already been controlled." Local health authorities can get away with such reckless policies because
there's little oversight from above. Health Minister Zhang Wenkang actually
ranks lower in the government hierarchy than the Communist Party secretaries of
Shanghai and Guangdong. That gives the regional Party bosses far more power than
the Health Minister to dictate even medical policies in their fiefdoms.
Furthermore, each city's center for disease control (CDC), which is responsible
for updating China's SARS caseload, reports first to the local Party boss, then
to the Ministry of Health. The head of each city's local health bureau is
appointed by local Party cadres, not by the Ministry of Health. That structure
means local health workers have little incentive to reveal the true magnitude of
the crisis. Even doctors on the front lines have been left in the dark, sometimes to
their detriment. At Beijing's You'an Hospital, for instance, nurse Zhang
estimates that about half of those in the isolation ward are medical staff from
other area hospitals. To complicate matters further, the only people who are
officially allowed to diagnose SARS in China are CDC researchers, not the
physicians who are treating the patients. "I had a patient whose symptoms
clearly seemed to be those of a SARS-positive patient," says a doctor who
consults at a hospital in a leafy district of Shanghai. "But after I contacted
the CDC, the patient was suddenly transferred without my knowledge and I never
found out whether he had the disease or not." The physician presumes the patient
did indeed have SARS; otherwise, why would he have been transferred so
mysteriously? "We doctors are all left with a lot of questions," he says. "I
think it's shameful to not let us know what's going on." That information
blackout has resulted in unnecessary deaths as local doctors have resorted to
trial-and-error treatments rather than using therapies that have proved
relatively effective in other hospitals. Physicians in some Guangdong hospitals,
for example, were told by Beijing to treat SARS patients for mycoplasma
pneumonia and chlamydia pneumonia, which are bacterial infections, even though
they had already found that a combination of antiviral medications and steroids
showed better results. Part of the confusion might be springing from China's accounting methods.
Current diagnostic tests for SARS are unreliable at best, and doctors worldwide
have had to diagnose primarily by evaluating symptoms and proximity to other
SARS patients. But with places like Beijing refusing to acknowledge true numbers
of infected patients, it becomes difficult to prove that a person has been near
a SARS patient, because those victims aren't supposed to exist in the first
place. That, plus a more stringent set of requirements applied before confirming
a case as SARS means that many patients who would be diagnosed as having the
virus elsewhere in the world are only considered "suspected" cases in China. The
English patient at the Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital, for instance, has been
quarantined for a week, yet the physicians there have told him there's no way
they can tell whether he has SARS. "I've heard that in other countries they're
able to diagnose within a few days," he says, between dry coughs. "Why can't
they diagnose our cases? It's very strange." (The Englishman's doctor says he is
treating the man's case as SARS, although the CDC has yet to confirm the case as
such.) Last Thursday it seemed the Ministry of Health couldn't even agree on its own
SARS count. At a press briefing in Beijing, Qi Xiaoqiu, director of the Ministry
of Health's Disease Control Department, said China's official SARS statistics
include "confirmed and suspected cases." Just minutes later Vice Minister of
Health Ma Xiaowei told reporters that the numbers he had stated referred only to
confirmed cases. Either way, experts agree that the ministry's reckoning still
seems far too low. Mainland doctors fret that with continuing ignorance about
the disease, the virus could spread even farther. Misinformation abounds: a
Shenzhen-based health official named Zhang Shunxiang warned last week that
people shouldn't wear masks because they impede proper breathing and contribute
to public panic--contrary to advice given almost everywhere else in the world.
State-run newspapers in the mainland suggested that a protein-rich potion
containing cicada shells and silkworms could be a SARS panacea. Even more
worrisome is the possibility that the disease is making its way into China's
estimated 100 million-strong migrant worker community, which has little access
to health care. Already, doctors suspect that the first case of SARS in Beijing
was a migrant who worked in Guangdong. If the virus is indeed infecting members
of China's vast floating population, experts fear it could spread quickly into
the country's undeveloped interior. With much of China still in the dark about
the killer bug, the worst may be yet to come. ----With reporting by Bu Hua/Shanghai and Huang Yong
http://www.time.com/time/asia/magazine/article/0,13673,501030421-443226-1,00.html

Photo taken in Shanghai on April 16. AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko.
Because of the government's deliberate cover-ups, more and more Chinese
people's health is in jeopardy without being aware of it.

A boy in Beijing covers his eyes with respirator.
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2003/4/17/48518.html
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