The Day

World Health Organizati­on monitors China’s curious pneumonia outbreak

- By JASON GALE

A mysterious lung infection in the central Chinese city of Wuhan is being monitored by the World Health Organizati­on, which said it’s in communicat­ion with its counterpar­ts in China, where an investigat­ion is underway to determine the cause.

The United Nations agency activated its incident-management system at the country, regional and global level and is standing ready to launch a broader response if it’s needed, the WHO’s regional office in Manila said in Twitter posts Saturday.

As of Friday, 44 people had been diagnosed with pneumonia, the cause of which is unknown, the Wuhan Municipal

Health Commission said in a statement. That’s up from 27 three days earlier. Eleven people are in serious condition. Some of the infected worked at a fresh seafood and produce market in the city.

“China has extensive capacity to respond to public health events and is responding proactivel­y and rapidly to the current incident in Wuhan — isolating patients, tracing close contacts, cleaning up the market, and searching for the cause and for additional cases,” the WHO said.

Pathogen studies have ruled out more common respirator­y diseases, including influenza, avian flu and adenovirus, Wuhan health authoritie­s said. All the patients are being treated under quarantine, according to the commission.

Government­s in the region have started to take precaution­s to prevent any possible spread of the infections. Singapore’s Ministry of Health said temperatur­e screening will be implemente­d at Changi Airport for all travelers arriving from Wuhan. In Hong Kong, officials have classified the response level as “serious” — the second-highest scale of action in its three-tier system — with public hospitals reporting eight patients, aged from 4 to 50, who have been to the Chinese city and show symptoms for pneumonia.

The Wuhan seafood market, which has since been closed, also sold birds, pheasants and snakes, along with organs of rabbits and other wildlife, the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy said Thursday, citing media reports.

That’s triggered concern about the potential jump of an unknown virus to humans — reminiscen­t of Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome, or SARS, which killed almost 800 people about 17 years ago. The Wuhan Institute of Virology didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment on the infectious source.

It’s not known whether a SARS-like “coronaviru­s” has been identified, although there have been “numerous unsubstant­iated reports mentioning a novel coronaviru­s that is SARS-like,” the Internatio­nal Society for Infectious Diseases’

ProMED-mail program said in an email Friday.

Several people were arrested for circulatin­g fake news online about the viral spread of pneumonia, provincial authoritie­s said, adding that rumors on social media alleging that there had been an outbreak of SARS are untrue, and no person-to-person transmissi­on has been found so far.

Singapore has asked doctors to look out for suspected cases of pneumonia among people who have recently returned from Wuhan.

“Suspect cases with fever and acute respirator­y illness or pneumonia and with travel history to Wuhan within 14 days before onset of symptoms will be isolated as a precaution­ary measure to prevent transmissi­on,” the city-state’s Ministry of Health said in a Facebook post.

Hong Kong authoritie­s said thermal-imaging systems will be deployed as part of increased fever surveillan­ce at boundary check points. In Taiwan, the government has also implemente­d measures to prevent the spread of infections, its Centers for Disease Control said Tuesday.

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