Time Magazine: Hiding The Patients (Photo)
By HANNAH BEECH
Monday, Apr. 21, 2003 A team of World Health Organization (WHO) officials who visited Beijing's China-Japan Friendship
Hospital last week to investigate the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) raging in the country
were taken for a ride. So, it turns out, were the patients. Sources tell TIME that before the WHO
team arrived at the hospital, 31 coughing, shivering staff members who had caught SARS from patients
were hastily loaded into ambulances and driven around until the investigators left. China claims the virus that causes SARS has infected 1,530 of its citizens and killed 67, but WHO
officials suspect the numbers are higher. "We have clearly told the government the
international community doesn't trust your figures," said Henk Bekedam, the WHO representative
to China. "Now it's time to start building some trust." That will take some doing. Across China's capital last week, officials went to extraordinary
lengths to conceal SARS patients from WHO inspectors. A doctor at the No. 309 People's Liberation
Army Hospital says 46 patients were pulled out of their beds and moved to a hotel on the hospital
grounds just before the WHO team got there. At the No. 302 People's Liberation Army Hospital, where
two wards had been filled to capacity, only a handful of the ailing were on site for the WHO visit. Some provincial health workers are equally unlikely to be candid. At a secret staff meeting
overheard by a TIME reporter, Dr. Zhang Hanwei, director of the Shanxi Provincial People's Hospital
in Taiyuan, relayed what he called the "three nos" disseminated by China's Ministry of
Central Publicity: no talking to the media about SARS, no talking to the public about treating the
disease and no tattling to WHO if its experts come calling. And with that warning, the meeting
ended. The same, sadly, cannot be said of the epidemic. -- With reporting by Susan Jakes and Huang Yong/Beijing From the Apr. 28, 2003 issue of TIME magazine http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101030428-444980,00.html

A hospital worker in Beijing performs her chores at an
isolation ward for SARS
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