Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Friday, April 25, 2003
Chinese Mainland Reports 2,422 SARS Cases
The Ministry of Health said Thursday a total of 2,422 confirmed SARS cases had been reported on the Chinese mainland by 8 p.m., April 23. Altogether 110 SARS patients had died while 1,254 others had been discharged from hospital upon recovery. (Regional Details)
The Ministry of Health said Thursday afternoon a total of 2,422 confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) cases had been reported on the Chinese mainland by 8 p.m., April 23.
Altogether 110 SARS patients had died while 1,254 others had been discharged from hospital upon recovery, according to the information office of the ministry.
The total number of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) cases in Beijing reached 774 by 8:00 p.m. of April 23, the Ministry of Health said Thursday.
Of the total SARS patients in the Chinese capital, 64 had been discharged from hospital upon recovery and 39 had died, the information office of the ministry said.
In the 24 hours ending 8:00 p.m. of April 23, Beijing reported 89 new SARS cases and four deaths.
The information office also said eight SARS cases in the city have been expelled from the total number in the course of medical treatment.
Chinese provinces with SARS patients are working hard to control and prevent the spread of the epidemic, while central government authorities created a task force Wednesday to oversee the national fight against the virus.
On Wednesday, Liu Zhenhua, governor of Shanxi province, told a provincial meeting that Vice-Governor of Shanxi province Wang Xin has been granted special decision-making powers and discretionary rights to use financial resources in the fight against the virus.
The move will enable the province to respond quickly to developments related to the virus, said the governor.
Pharmaceutical products, medical facilities and protective medical products purchased from around the Chinese mainland have been delivered to hospitals.
Tian Chengping, secretary of the Shanxi Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China, has called on leading officials at provincial and prefectural levels to give top priority to the control and prevention of the virus given that the province ranks third in the number of SARS victims.
In north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Lian Ji, vice-chairman of the regional government, called on all sectors of society to express their love to SARS patients and their family members in order to boost their morale.
Officials have called on medical workers and others to show greater understanding and compassion for SARS patients, who, isolated and depressed, tend to lose their tempers with medical workers.
In Fujian province, east China, the provincial government has allocated 5 million yuan (about 600,000 US dollars) in special funding for the purchase of artificial respirators and other medical equipment for 19 hospitals designated to provide medical services for SARS patients.
The first batch of 46 vehicles, specifically purchased for the transport of SARS patients, has been delivered to 46 counties or districts in Fujian, and transportation departments and companies have disinfected public transportation systems.
In southwest China's Yunnan province, the provincial government has allocated about 3 million yuan in special funding for SARS control and prevention programs.
With no confirmed SARS cases, Yunnan has formulated emergency plans for potential SARS cases, and local hospitals and other medical institutions have been ordered to report every confirmed or suspected case to the relevant governmental department.
Beijing, the capital, is offering financial support and preventive aids to thousands of its disadvantaged residents as part of its most recent efforts to control and prevent SARS.
At a meeting chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao, the State Council, China's cabinet, decided Wednesday to create a national task force to combat SARS, and a national fund of two billion yuan (243 million US dollars) was established for the prevention and control of the disease.