China Info Travel

WHO Cautious on New 'SARS Case'

 | Home | China Travel |China Hotels | Silk Road | Yangtze River | China Cities |
China Hotels Reservation:
China Hotels
China Hotels Reservation
Silk Road
Silkroad
Silkroad Gansu
Silkroad Ningxia
Silkroad Qinghai
Silkroad Shaanxi
Silkroad Xinjiang
Yangtze River
Yangtzeriver
Yangtzeriver Dam
Yangtzeriver Qutang
Yangtzeriver Wu
Yangtzeriver Xiling
Yangtzeriver Yichang
China Cities
Beijing
Chengde
Chengdu
Chongqing
Dali
Dalian
Datong
Guangzhou
Guilin
Guiyang
Hangzhou
Harbin
Huangshan
Jinan
Kunming
Lhasa
Lijiang
Luoyang
Nanjing
Panda
Qingdao
Sanya
Shanghai
Shenzhen
Suzhou
Tianjin
Urumqi
Wuhan
Wuxi
Xiamen
Xian
China Travel
China Airport
China Airport Hotels
China Asia Travel
China Beijing Tour
China Cities Tour
China Festival Travel
China Great Wall
China Holiday
China Hot Destinations
China Industry
China International Hotels
China Province Tour
China Province Travel
China Reservations
China Star level Hotels
China Tourism
China Tourism Festival
china travel
China Travel News
China Trips
Chinese Hotels
Chinese Tourism
Chinese Tours
Chinese Travel
Chinese Travelers
Sino Travel
Tourism China Hotels
Tourism China Travel
WHO Cautious on New 'SARS Case'

The World Health Organization says a Singapore man who has tested positive for the SARS virus remains a "suspected case" and is not yet being treated as signaling a return of the virus.

"At this stage, we are treating it as a suspected case -- a perplexing case -- but we're not treating it as probable SARS," said Peter Cordingley, the WHO's regional head of public information based in the Philippines.

The patient's fever had recently eased, he added, saying the WHO was awaiting the results of further tests expected to be released Tuesday afternoon Singapore time.

Further samples were being sent overseas for "double-checking", Cordingley said.

He said authorities had already traced people who had had recent contact with the man concerned and none was sick.

Singapore last reported a case of SARS in early May and on July 5 the WHO declared the virus outbreak contained around the world.

Despite that, scientists say they know little about the disease and have warned that it could make a return.

The outbreak of the disease killed more than 800 people and sickened about 8,000 around the world earlier this year.

The disease had a huge impact on tourism and travel, especially in East Asia with fears over the outbreak leading many tourists and business travelers avoiding visits to the area.

In Singapore -- one of the worst affected areas after Chinese mainland, Taiwan and Hong Kong -- the virus killed 33 people and put more than 300 in hospital.

Monday's announcement of a possible new case kick-started emergency isolation procedures at Singapore General Hospital where the patient, who has not been named, first sought treatment.

Three wards have been closed to the public at what is the city's largest public hospital.

Visitors were required to wear facemasks and screened for fever upon entering the hospital.

According to Singapore's Straits Times newspaper the man in question, a Singaporean citizen, worked in a virology laboratory and has not traveled to Chinese mainland or Hong Kong recently.

He has since been placed in isolation at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore's dedicated SARS facility.

 

 

| Home | China Travel | China Cities | China Hotels |
China Info Travel copyright © 2001 - 2005 Web Tours International - contact info