Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

SARS may spread by air
CALGARY SUN ^ | Sunday, March 30, 2003 | MICHAEL WOOD

Posted on 03/30/2003 2:46:32 PM PST by TightSqueeze

Sunday, March 30, 2003

SARS may spread by air

Province's health minister urges Albertans to watch for symptoms

By MICHAEL WOOD, CALGARY SUN


 Fears of a global health nightmare intensified yesterday amid concerns expressed by U.S. officials that the deadly new SARS contagion may be airborne.

Dr. Julie Gerberding, head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, said the major mode of transmission still is through droplets, which spread when an infected person coughs or sneezes.

"But we are concerned about the possibility of airborne transmission across broader areas and also the possibility that objects that become contaminated in the environment could serve as modes of spread," Gerberding said.

New information from Hong Kong stated many of that city's new cases of SARS came from a single apartment complex where someone in contact with another patient apparently spread the illness.

The news prompted pleas of vigilance and caution from Alberta's Minister of Health and Wellness Gary Mar, who called the situation "very serious" and pledged to enact "whatever is necessary" to ensure Albertans are protected.

"This is not an issue we have to say is subject to budget consideration," Mar told the Sun.

No known cause has been firmly identified, and one leading possibility, identified by CDC officials last week, is worrisome at best.

"The CDC indicated they believe it's of a family of virus called coronavirus, the same family of the common cold," Mar said.

"We all know there is no cure for the common cold."

None of the anti-viral drugs and other treatments tested by the CDC have proved effective against the pneumonia-like illness.

Mar urged Albertans to be cautious, mindful of the symptoms, and to frequently wash their hands with soap and water.

If someone suspects they may have come in contact with someone afflicted with SARS, call ahead to a doctor, clinic or hospital before seeking medical attention, thus ensuring proper containment procedures are followed to prevent further spread.

Thousands of people, many of them health workers, are under quarantine in Winnipeg and across Ontario, where staff and patients at a second Toronto hospital closed by the outbreak began a 10-day quarantine after four possible cases were identified.

In another development, health officials around the globe were mourning the latest victim of SARS -- 46-year-old Dr. Carlo Urbani, the WHO practitioner who identified the outbreak of SARS in a U.S. businessman before contracting the disease himself.

FACTS ABOUT PNEUMONIA-LIKE ILLNESS

* SARS stands for severe acute respiratory syndrome

* The illness is thought to have originated in China, with the first cases reported last November.

* Symptoms of SARS include fever above 38C, shortness of breath and cough.

* The chance of recovery is higher than 90% if patients seek treatment early.

* There is no known cause or cure.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: health; sars
...and also the possibility that objects that become contaminated in the environment could serve as modes of spread...

This is the first time that 'objects' other than people have been listed as modes of transmission, do we now have to be careful when making purchases?
If it is possible to get sick from touching things then this might be the beginning of the next economic recession.

1 posted on 03/30/2003 2:46:32 PM PST by TightSqueeze
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: TightSqueeze
"This is not an issue we have to say is subject to budget consideration," Mar told the Sun

Now I am worried.

2 posted on 03/30/2003 3:32:42 PM PST by CathyRyan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: TightSqueeze
those long flights on aircraft breathing the same air?.....YUCK!
3 posted on 03/30/2003 3:33:04 PM PST by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: TightSqueeze
Mystery Illness Continues to Spread

By TOM COHEN
Associated Press Writer

March 30. 2003 6:05PM


Patients leave the SARS clinic at Women's College Hospital in Toronto, Sunday, March 30, 2003. Health officials closed a second Toronto-area hospital, York Central Hospital, to new patients and asked hundreds of its employees to quarantine themselves as a deadly flu-like illness continued to spread worldwide. (AP Photo/Frank Gunn)

A mystery illness with no known treatment continued to spread through Asia and Canada on Sunday, killing three more people and infecting many others as officials warned it may be more contagious than originally thought.

Hong Kong health officials said 60 more people had fallen ill with a deadly flu-like disease, more than half of them in one apartment complex, pushing the number of infections worldwide past 1,600.

Singapore's health minister, Lim Hng Kiang, said the disease may spread more easily than first believed, with some people found to be more infectious than others. Labeled as "super infectors," they can infect as many as 40 others, he said.

"We run the risk of a huge new cluster of infected people, which could start a chain reaction," Lim told a news conference.

The World Health Organization said severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, has killed at least 54 people worldwide, with the majority of cases in Hong Kong and China. That figure does not include three more deaths reported Sunday, one each in Hong Kong, Toronto and Singapore.

The International Ice Hockey Federation canceled the women's world championships scheduled to begin Thursday in Beijing.

Authorities have declared a health emergency in Toronto, located 50 miles from the U.S. border. U.S. health officials have reported 62 cases in the United States.

So far, four people have died from the illness in Toronto, the latest was reported sunday. In addition, about 100 probable or suspect cases have been reported. Officials have closed two hospitals to new patients, and hundreds of people have been quarantined in their homes.

Another possible case turned up in New Brunswick on Canada's east coast, officials said Sunday, meaning the illness that originated in Asia may now reach across Canada. The New Brunswick case involves a school principal who recently traveled to China.

Other suspected cases are in Ottawa; Winnipeg, Manitoba; and on the west coast in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The United States and Canada have advised people to avoid travel to afflicted areas in Asia, and the World Health Organization recommended that international travelers from Toronto and several Asian cities get screened for symptoms.

Singapore said it would station nurses at its airport to examine all travelers arriving from infected areas, while Canada planned to screen those traveling abroad from Toronto, although no system was in place Sunday.

Most of the Toronto-area cases are health care workers at Scarborough Grace Hospital and York Central Hospital who became infected while treating initial victims, all of whom had traveled in Asia or had close contact with other victims.

The disease has caused a run on surgical masks in the city and slowed business by as much as 70 percent at Pacific Mall, a Chinese shopping mall in Toronto's northern suburbs.

Kevin Wong, a worker at a video store in the mall, said the public reaction seemed excessive, but was understandable. Some merchants also were taking precautions, wearing protective masks even though no cases have been linked to the mall.

"People are still coming to work but they're coming in later and leaving early," he said. "They don't want to waste their time when there's no one here."

U.S. health officials said Saturday that none of the antiviral drugs and other treatment they have tested are effective against SARS.

In Hong Kong where 13 people have died, Christians and Taoists held special services Sunday to pray for an end to the epidemic.

Most of the new cases reported Sunday came from Hong Kong's Amoy Gardens apartment complex, where a victim recently spread the disease, according to a Health Department statement.

Some frightened residents have moved out and medical teams have gone through the apartments to check for SARS - while some minibus drivers won't even stop there anymore.

In canceling the women's hockey world championships, the international federation said the spread of the illness to Beijing from southern China put the players at risk.

Players for Canada, the defending champion, were disappointed but understood.

"You could lose your life going there and just being in contact with somebody," forward Danielle Goyette said. "Life is more important than hockey right now."
A mystery illness with no known treatment continued to spread through Asia and Canada on Sunday, killing three more people and infecting many others as officials warned it may be more contagious than originally thought.

Hong Kong health officials said 60 more people had fallen ill with a deadly flu-like disease, more than half of them in one apartment complex, pushing the number of infections worldwide past 1,600.

Singapore's health minister, Lim Hng Kiang, said the disease may spread more easily than first believed, with some people found to be more infectious than others. Labeled as "super infectors," they can infect as many as 40 others, he said.

"We run the risk of a huge new cluster of infected people, which could start a chain reaction," Lim told a news conference.

The World Health Organization said severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, has killed at least 54 people worldwide, with the majority of cases in Hong Kong and China. That figure does not include three more deaths reported Sunday, one each in Hong Kong, Toronto and Singapore.

The International Ice Hockey Federation canceled the women's world championships scheduled to begin Thursday in Beijing.

Authorities have declared a health emergency in Toronto, located 50 miles from the U.S. border. U.S. health officials have reported 62 cases in the United States.

So far, four people have died from the illness in Toronto, the latest was reported sunday. In addition, about 100 probable or suspect cases have been reported. Officials have closed two hospitals to new patients, and hundreds of people have been quarantined in their homes.

Another possible case turned up in New Brunswick on Canada's east coast, officials said Sunday, meaning the illness that originated in Asia may now reach across Canada. The New Brunswick case involves a school principal who recently traveled to China.

Other suspected cases are in Ottawa; Winnipeg, Manitoba; and on the west coast in Vancouver, British Columbia.

The United States and Canada have advised people to avoid travel to afflicted areas in Asia, and the World Health Organization recommended that international travelers from Toronto and several Asian cities get screened for symptoms.

Singapore said it would station nurses at its airport to examine all travelers arriving from infected areas, while Canada planned to screen those traveling abroad from Toronto, although no system was in place Sunday.

Most of the Toronto-area cases are health care workers at Scarborough Grace Hospital and York Central Hospital who became infected while treating initial victims, all of whom had traveled in Asia or had close contact with other victims.

The disease has caused a run on surgical masks in the city and slowed business by as much as 70 percent at Pacific Mall, a Chinese shopping mall in Toronto's northern suburbs.

Kevin Wong, a worker at a video store in the mall, said the public reaction seemed excessive, but was understandable. Some merchants also were taking precautions, wearing protective masks even though no cases have been linked to the mall.

"People are still coming to work but they're coming in later and leaving early," he said. "They don't want to waste their time when there's no one here."

U.S. health officials said Saturday that none of the antiviral drugs and other treatment they have tested are effective against SARS.

In Hong Kong where 13 people have died, Christians and Taoists held special services Sunday to pray for an end to the epidemic.

Most of the new cases reported Sunday came from Hong Kong's Amoy Gardens apartment complex, where a victim recently spread the disease, according to a Health Department statement.

Some frightened residents have moved out and medical teams have gone through the apartments to check for SARS - while some minibus drivers won't even stop there anymore.

In canceling the women's hockey world championships, the international federation said the spread of the illness to Beijing from southern China put the players at risk.

Players for Canada, the defending champion, were disappointed but understood.

"You could lose your life going there and just being in contact with somebody," forward Danielle Goyette said. "Life is more important than hockey right now."

4 posted on 03/30/2003 3:35:43 PM PST by Dog Gone
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: TightSqueeze
The chance of recovery is higher than 90% if patients seek treatment early.

What treatment? The article says that so far, nothing works. And a 90% recovery rate translates into a 10% non-recovery rate, which is a lot worse than the 4% that has been mentioned by other health authorities.

5 posted on 03/30/2003 4:29:30 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Cicero
When pressed for information, answers do get a bit murky.
The thing that worries me is not so much that most people are dying, it is that most people are still sick and not recovering.
6 posted on 03/30/2003 4:40:59 PM PST by TightSqueeze (From the Department of Homeland Security, sponsors of Liberty-Lite, Less Freedom! / Red Tape!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson