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Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Tuesday, January 20, 2004

Chinese doctors to test SARS vaccine on human body

A SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) vaccine has been developed and is entering a preliminary clinical testing period, the Ministry of Science and Technology has confirmed. Some 30 people have already volunteered to be the first test subjects.


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SARS vaccine enters test phase
Chinese doctors have been given permission to begin human testing of a vaccine against severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) soon.

After nine months continual effort, the vaccine passed a State Food and Drug Administration evaluation, said Li Xueyong, vice-minister of science and technology and also deputy director of the national SARS vaccine technical group.

The first phase of clinical study will involve production of a SARS bacterin by killing the bacterium by heating.

Scientists hope that testing the bacterin on volunteers will not cause SARS, but instead work to make the human body immune to the disease.


China approves SARS vaccine experiment
The mover indicated that China had taken the lead in this field, but it would still take time to make the vaccine marketable, said Zheng Youyu, director of the State Food and Drug Administration, who called it a milestone in the country's anti-SARS efforts.

The vaccine was found safe in experiments on animals, including the rhesus monkey, said Zheng. The first phase test aimed to see if it was safe and effective on the human body.

Since last year's outbreak of SARS, Chinese scientists had worked strenuously to find an anti-SARS vaccine, said Li Xueyong, Vice-Minister of Science and Technology. The ministry had mobilized all resources to support the research.

In 2003, more than 8,000 people in 32 nations and regions around the world were infected by SARS and some 900 died of the disease.

On Monday the latest Guangdong SARS patient, a 35-year-old private businessman, was still hospitalized but had a normal temperature for 13 consecutive days.

"None of the people in contact with him has developed a fever or shown other abnormal symptoms,'' he said.

No new SARS cases were reported in the 24 hours from 10 am Sunday to 10 am Monday on the Chinese mainland, according to the ministry's daily SARS report.

So far, China has reported three diagnosed SARS cases this year, all from Guangdong.

The other two cases, a 32-year-old TV producer and a 20-year-old waitress, have been discharged from hospital earlier this month.

Allthree cases appeared to be milder than those in the SARS outbreak last year. Experts with the World Health Organization said the three patients all recovered quickly and had low infection levels.

Across the nation, stricter disease prevention measures are being made during the holidays of Chinese traditional Lunar New Year or Spring Festival, Ministry of Health officials said Monday.

A smooth and efficient epidemic reporting system will continue to be maintained along with the daily SARS monitoring reportduring the festival season, a spokesman said.

Hong Kong reports no new case
In Hong Kong, the region's last SARS patient was discharged from hospital on Sunday night, the medical authority said Monday.

The patient contracted the disease last March and was admitted to Prince of Wales Hospital for treatment. In August, he was transferred to Sha Tin Hospital.

The medical authority said no new cases have been reported in Hong Kong since the last SARS case was confirmed on June 2.

However, in view of the SARS cases in neighbouring Guangdong Province, people are urged to take precautions to prevent any possible SARS resurgence.

Over the past weeks, measures were reinforced in Hong Kong to prevent the return of SARS.

The SARS outbreak last year infected 1,755 people in Hong Kong, killing 299, including eight health care workers.

Altogether more than 8,000 people in 32 nations and regions around the world were infected by SARS last year and some 900 died of the disease.

Meanwhile, as alerts on bird flu from neighbouring countries and regions are stepped up, the State General Administration for Quality Supervision and Inspection and Quarantine issued another urgent statement on Sunday to tighten quarantine checks on poultry and poultry products fromflu affected places including South Korea, Japan, Viet Nam and Taiwan.

The statement called on co-operation and information sharing among departments of quarantine, customs, agriculture, health and industry, and commerce administration in order to keep the diseaseoff the mainland.

The Ningbo Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau has seized a total of 135 kilograms of Japanese chicken meat in the east coast of Zhejiang Province.

The chickenwas found in the kitchen of a Japanese boat anchored in the Ningbo port on Thursday, local media said.

By People's Daily Online


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