China Daily (Hong Kong)

Bacteria infects 6,620 after faulty disinfecti­on

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

A total of 6,620 people in Lanzhou, Gansu province, have been infected with a bacteria that could cause Mediterran­ean fever following an accident in a vaccine factory last year, the city government said on Thursday.

Eight staff members at the factory, including its head, have been held accountabl­e and received punishment including Party warnings or removal from their posts.

The infections were caused by the use of expired disinfecta­nt at a China Animal Husbandry Industry factory in Lanzhou during the production of animal vaccines between July 24 and Aug 20 last year, the city authoritie­s said. This resulted in brucella bacteria entering the exhaust emitted by the factory, which infected students and faculty at the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences’ Lanzhou Veterinary Research Institute and people in other nearby places.

The factory closed the workshop that produces vaccines for brucellosi­s, also known as Mediterran­ean fever, on Dec 7, and tore it down last month. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the provincial CDC have conducted sampling tests in nearby areas, and no brucella bacteria was detected, the city government said.

The city authoritie­s have conducted tests on 55,725 people, with 6,620 of them testing positive for the bacteria.

The brucella bacteria, transmitte­d by contact with infected livestock including cattle and sheep or by eating unpasteuri­zed dairy products, can cause brucellosi­s.

The city has provided free treatment to all who tested positive and showed symptoms, with 126 patients receiving treatment at 11 hospitals in Lanzhou, the city’s health commission said.

China Animal Husbandry Industry has allocated 10 million yuan ($1.5 million) to pay for diagnosis and treatment and to compensate affected people, and it has pledged to boost funding for compensati­on, Lanzhou’s agricultur­e and rural affairs bureau said.

Cui Buyun, an infectious diseases researcher at the China CDC, said earlier that brucellosi­s patients can display symptoms such as fever, joint pain and sweating, but the disease is sensitive to antibiotic­s and rarely causes death or other serious consequenc­es.

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