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WHO
Lifts SARS Travel Ban to Toronto
Excerpt
By Clare
Nullis,
AP
GENEVA - Following pressure from
the Canadian government, the World Health Organization on Tuesday
lifted its warning against nonessential travel to Toronto, saying
it was satisfied with local measures to stop the spread of the
deadly SARS virus.
The lifting of the warning takes
effect Wednesday, WHO said, adding that it still considered Toronto
an "affected area."
WHO continues to advise against
all nonessential travel to Hong Kong, the Chinese capital Beijing
and the Chinese provinces of Guangdong and Shanxi.
The decision came after WHO Director-General
Gro Harlem Brundtland met with a senior Canadian delegation, which
stressed that no new cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome
were reported among the community at large for the past 20 days.
That is double the length of the incubation period.
Tony Clement, health minister for
Ontario province, where Toronto is located, earlier described
his delegation as "anticipating and hopeful" following "a great
exchange of information" at an hour-long meeting with Brundtland.
WHO on Monday said Canada appeared
over the worst of the SARS outbreak that has claimed 21 lives
out of more than 140 reported cases in the country.
Most of the cases have been in
Toronto hospitals, and health authorities have used quarantine
and close monitoring and tracking to try to contain the illness.
Canadian officials were outraged
when WHO on Wednesday advised against non-urgent travel to Toronto,
ranking it alongside Beijing and other hard hit parts of China
and Hong Kong. At the time, WHO said the travel advice would remain
valid for at least three weeks double the maximum incubation
period for SARS.
The WHO warning caused an immediate
drop in the number of tourists as conferences, concerts and other
events were canceled.
Major League Baseball officials
advised caution when players visit Toronto, telling teams to avoid
crowds, hospitals and public transportation, and use their own
pens to sign autographs.
A Toronto Dominion Bank report
estimated the costs of the SARS outbreak to the Canadian economy
could top $1.5 billion.
Mike Ryan, head of WHO's Global
Outbreak Alert and Response Network, defended the original decision
to issue the travel warning against Toronto.
"WHO has to take decisions for
global public health in 191 member states, not just for one,"
he said. "The travel restriction is not meant to be a criticism
of Canada," he said, praising the "excellent response" of authorities
there.
A small WHO team is expected to
arrive in Toronto on Wednesday to attend an international conference
on the disease and see how the city is trying to contain the disease.
"We welcome them with open arms.
We want them to see on the ground exactly how our containment
efforts are going and why the success is happening, and I believe
that will be a positive development," Clement said.
Health officials are stationed
at Canada's major airports to watch for symptoms of SARS among
passengers arriving from SARS hotspots in Asia, where the illness
originated. All international travelers are supposed to receive
information cards on SARS with instructions on what to do if symptoms
emerge.
However, there has been no screening
of those leaving Toronto, the epicenter of the biggest SARS outbreak
outside Asia. Federal Health Minister Anne McLellan said Monday
the government was looking at a variety of measures, including
infrared technology that can detect fever among passengers.
"This is not something we can tolerate
in our society," Clement said. "This is something we want to see
beaten."
Reference
Source 102
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