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Knight Ridder/Tribune: China again criticized over lack of cooperation on SARS
Knight Ridder Washington Bureau April 29, 2003, Tuesday By: By Michael Dorgan BEIJING More than a week after promising to end the SARS cover-up in
China's capital, where the epidemic is raging, government officials have
continued to withhold information crucial to combating the spread of the deadly
virus, the World Health Organization's chief representative in Beijing charged
Monday. "It's high time that information became available," Dr. Henk Bekedam said at
a news conference. Since April 20, when the city's mayor and the nation's health minister were
fired for mishandling the epidemic, the number of reported cases of severe acute
respiratory syndrome in Beijing has shot from 37 to 1,210. That number, plus more than 1,300 suspected SARS cases, many of which will
become confirmed cases in coming days, puts Beijing on a trajectory to quickly
become the SARS capital of the world. Already, 59 people in Beijing have died.
Over the past week, officials have taken drastic steps to contain the virus
in the crowded capital of 13 million people. Nearly 8,000 people have been
quarantined. Schools, nightclubs, cinemas, museums, libraries and many office
buildings have been closed. People entering or exiting the city are checked for
fever, a key symptom of SARS. Yet nearly eight weeks after Beijing's first official SARS case was
diagnosed, health officials have still not provided the WHO or their own
residents with essential information about the epidemic, Bekedam said. Health authorities have reported an average of nearly 150 new SARS cases a
day during the past week in Beijing. But Bekedam complained that they still have
not disclosed how many of the newly reported cases are new cases and how many
are old cases tardily reported. Without that information, it is impossible to determine whether the infection
rate is growing, declining or leveling off. Officials also have not provided key information on the pattern of cases,
Bekedam said. That includes the crucial matter of whether a few large clusters
at hospitals or universities or elsewhere account for the bulk of the cases, or
whether they are scattered widely across the city. Also missing is data needed
to profile the victims of SARS by age, sex, occupation or other factors that
could help identify the groups most at risk. Without such basic information, Bekedam said, it is difficult for health
officials to design effective measures to contain the epidemic, and difficult
for residents to know what precautions to take. "You need to know more to be able to protect yourself," he said. The continuing dearth of honest, detailed information also appears to have
contributed to the alarm and gloom that have gripped the city. Beijing's rumor
mills have worked overtime to fill the void, often with false reports that
heighten fear and insecurity. One widely circulated rumor last week _ that the government was going to seal
off the city and impose martial law _ sparked a flurry of panic buying and food
hoarding. That was followed by rumors over the weekend that government planes would
spray the city with toxic chemicals to try to kill the virus, a rumor that
caused many to seal their windows. Workers continue to spray disinfectant everywhere. They have doused streets,
sprayed the wheels of cars and flicked disinfectant in parks. Beyond Beijing, Chinese health officials have collected voluminous data on
SARS in the southern Guangdong province, where the epidemic started last
November. The data have not been shared, even though it could help other
countries, Bekedam said. "China has had the highest number of cases," he said. "It's time that wealth
of information should be shared with the outside. We do believe that China is
sitting on a wealth of information." The WHO on Monday reported that SARS apparently has peaked in Hong Kong,
Singapore and Toronto and has been contained in Vietnam. Initially, China's government withheld information about the epidemic out of
an apparent fear that the truth would frighten the public and scare off foreign
tourists and investors. Why it has continued to withhold information after promising to cooperate was
not clear, according to Bekedam and other WHO experts. One possible explanation is the government's unwieldy bureaucracy. WHO official Alan Schnur said China's top health officials, including newly
appointed Health Minister Wu Yi, have pledged cooperation but that delays have
resulted from "internal management issues." "The statisticians doing the data have not been sharing (the data) with
epidemiologists," he said, suggesting that the crucial information requested by
the WHO has been withheld from China's own health experts. Another possible explanation for the lack of good data is that the government
might still be trying to hide the full scale of the epidemic, despite its
threats to punish any officials who underreport cases. China now officially has had 3,106 SARS cases, according to figures released
Monday. A total of 1,306 patients have been released from hospitals, and 139
have died. Based on anecdotal evidence and conversations with Chinese health officials,
Schnur estimated that about half of the newly reported cases over the past week
have been new, while the others have not been previously reported. That could mean Beijing has a vast number of cases it has decided to disclose
only gradually, perhaps to diminish the magnitude of its initial cover-up. "Maybe there's a lot of backdating, maybe they (the cases reported each day)
are new," Bekedam responded when a reporter asked about the cases.
"Unfortunately, I cannot answer your question." Whatever the true number of SARS cases in Beijing, they appear to be
overwhelming the health care system. The number of hospitals designated to handle SARS patients has more than
doubled recently to 13, and the official Xinhua news agency reported Monday that
three additional hospitals had made preparations to care for SARS patients. State-run media also have reported that a 1,000-bed field hospital is under
construction on the outskirts of the city to care for SARS patients, and that
the Central Military Commission has ordered 1,200 medical staff members from the
army to help with SARS cases in Beijing. The explosion of cases has made travelers from China unwanted guests in many
countries. Taiwan over the weekend announced that it would suspend issuing visas to
people from China, Hong Kong and other SARS-infected areas for two weeks. Foreign travelers who already have visas or Taiwanese returning from SARS-infected
areas will be quarantined for 10 days upon arriving in Taiwan. Violators face up
to two years in prison. Posting date: 4/30/2003 |