TOKYO (AP) — A scientist
who helped to discover the Ebola virus says he is concerned that the
disease could spread to China given the large numbers of Chinese workers
traveling to and from Africa.
Peter Piot,
who is director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,
said Thursday it's not "rocket science" that with many exchanges between
the two regions the disease could spread.
"The
concern I have is that I don't think you can really stop people from
traveling. These patients will show up in any country in the world, but
China is quite vulnerable," Piot said.
"The
issue is: What is the quality, the standard of infection control? In
public hospitals in China, the ones that I've visited, the level of
infection control is very poor," he said.
More
than 8,600 people have entered China's southern Guangdong province from
Ebola-affected areas since August, and there are dozens of flights a
month. All arriving from those areas are monitored for three weeks after
they enter China and are to be immediately quarantined if they run a
fever, according to Health Ministry guidelines.
Piot
said China's controls for infectious diseases have improved and
authorities have become more open about public health risks since severe
acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, broke out in southern China in
2002. SARS infected about 8,000 people worldwide, killing nearly 800.
China
is also stepping up aid, providing $86 million, to the three West
African countries at the heart of the crisis and has sent nearly 200
medical staff.
Piot is a
board member of the Global Health Innovative Technology fund, a
collaboration supported by the Japanese government, Japanese
pharmaceutical companies and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
that funds research into treatments for malaria, tuberculosis, dengue
and other so-called neglected tropical diseases. Piot said that despite
the urgency of the crisis, it was crucial that funds going to those
efforts not be diverted to work on Ebola.
Japan has pledged $40 million so far to help combat the Ebola outbreak, but Piot said more is needed.
"I
appeal to Japan to contribute from their very rich tradition, in all
senses of the word of humanitarian assistance," he said. "When there is a
humanitarian crisis, there is always money, and rightly so. Ebola is in
that category."
http://news.yahoo.com/ebola-expert-says-china-risk-seeks-japan-aid-071807002.html
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