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Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) May Have
Originated in Hong Kong
Excerpt
By Jean Patman,
HealthScoutNews
A simple sneeze may have set off a worldwide
epidemic.
Health investigators probing the
spread of the mysterious global respiratory illness called SARS
appear to now know the exact spot that brought at least seven
people to a deadly confluence in a Hong Kong hotel on Feb. 21.
They were all waiting for an elevator
on the ninth floor of the Metropole Hotel in the Kowloon peninsula.
Those at the elevator that afternoon,
news reports say, included:
- The person whose sickness appears
to have spread severe acute respiratory syndrome to 11 countries,
killing 15 and infecting more than 650.
He was a 64-year-old medical
professor from the Chinese mainland province of Guangdong.
The province, adjacent to Hong Kong, is the site of a respiratory
illness that has infected more than 300 people and killed
five since last November.
The professor, a physician,
had checked in to the Metropole on Feb. 22 to attend a relative's
wedding reception even though he had been feeling ill for
a week before he left the mainland, the Toronto Globe and
Mail reports.
The next day, feeling worse,
the professor checked out of the hotel and went into a Hong
Kong hospital. He died there March 4.
"We think he must have
been coughing and sneezing while he was waiting for that lift,"
John Tam, chief information officer of the Hong Kong Economic
and Trade Office told the Globe "and that's when
he infected the other guests."
Hong Kong's top health official
also said that the infectious agent apparently travelled through
respiratory droplets in the elevator waiting area, and it
proved to be "very, very infectious."
- An 48-year-old American businessman
based in Shanghai.
From Hong Kong, the businessman
flew to Vietnam and was hospitalized in Hanoi almost as soon
as he stepped off the plane. He then requested to be returned
to Hong Kong, where he was hospitalized again. He died there
March 13. In Hanoi, a French doctor and nurse who treated
him at the Hanoi French Hospital died this week.
"His name was Johnny Chen,"
s Hoang Thuy Long, director of Vietnam's National Institute
of Hygiene and Epidemics told the Associated Press.
"When Mr. Johnny Chen came to Vietnam, he was actually
in an incubation period."
Vietnam now has 62 suspected
cases of SARS.
- A 78-year-old Toronto woman and
her husband.
She and her husband were checking
out of the Metropole that afternoon. The couple then spent
the night with their son in Hong Kong, before returning to
Canada Feb. 23. The woman died of SARS on March 5. Her son
died March 13. Her husband, daughter and another son are in
intensive care in Toronto, and her five-month-old grandchild
is being monitored at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children.
Another Canadian, a 55-year-old
British Columbia man, also stayed at the hotel with his wife
between Feb. 20 and Feb. 24. He is in critical condition in
Vancouver.
Canada now has 9 suspected
cases.
Other hotel guests on the same
floor while the professor were there include three women from
Singapore, who all became ill after they returned home.
Singapore now has 39 suspected
cases.
At least 34 of those infected
in Singapore had been in contact with the three women, according
to Singapore's Health Ministry, which on Saturday was preparing
to empty out one hospital to deal only with SARS cases..
Also at the hotel while the
professor was there was a Hong Kong man who visited a friend
on the ninth floor. He became the Hong Kong "index patient"
who spread the disease to the Prince of Wales Hospital.
Hong Kong now has 203 suspected
cases.
Hong Kong also has four deaths,
in addition to the American businessman and the Chinese professor.
The latest fatality is a relative of the professor.
Confirmation that the professor
had been at the Metropole sent health officials on the road
to Beijing to examine more closely the outbreak in Guangdong.
The World Health Organization
said Friday a team of five people was headed to China for
five days beginning Sunday. And the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention also said Friday it too would help.
More information
The U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention and the World
Health Organization have updates and information on SARS.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
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Prevention Resources".
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