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China says has third suspected
SARS case
Beijing -
China confirmed a possible third SARS case on Monday, a 35-year-old
man isolated in hospital after showing symptoms of the respiratory
disease, and the World Health Organization sought clarification on a
possible fourth.
The man was labeled a suspected case
on Monday, Xinhua news agency quoted a health official in the southern
province of Guangdong as saying. He had earlier been under observation
as a possible case.
Last week, China confirmed its first
case of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome since a world outbreak was
declared over in July. He has since recovered.
A waitress is also in hospital
suspected of having the deadly flu-like disease, which experts suspect
has jumped from animals to humans. All three patients were in the
Guangdong capital, Guangzhou, when they fell ill.
The 35-year-old man was described by
a local official as a "self-employed investor" and Xinhua said he had
apparently had no contact with SARS patients or animals that might
carry the virus.
He was taken to the No. 8 People's
Hospital, one of three hospitals in Guangzhou designated for SARS
treatment.
Experts distinguish between a person
being observed for SARS symptoms and a suspected case. Designation as
a suspected case depends on observation, various tests, which could
take several days, and consultation between local medical authorities
and the Health Ministry, the World Health Organization (WHO) said.
The virus first emerged in Guangdong
in late 2002 and went on to infect more than 8,000 people in nearly 30
countries, killing about 800.
The WHO also said it was asking the
Health Ministry and local authorities about rumors of a possible
fourth SARS case under observation in the boomtown of Shenzhen, near
Hong Kong.
"We will look for more
clarification," spokesman Bob Dietz said.
A spokeswoman for Shenzhen's health
department said he had not heard of a possible fourth case. "We do not
know of any SARS-related case in Shenzhen," she said.
China confirmed its first case of
SARS, a 32-year-old television producer named Luo, on Monday last
week.
Luo
has since been discharged from hospital but health officials said a
gene sample from him matched that of a coronavirus found in civet
cats, a weasel-like animal eaten as a delicacy in southern China and
sold in crowded markets.
Luo
insisted that he had had no contact with civets but authorities
ordered a cull of the animals in hope of averting an outbreak.
-- Reuters
Brudirect.com
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