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confident of controlling pig disease
Beijing
China confident of controlling
pig disease
More cases of the pig-borne streptococcus
suis infection were reported over the
weekend, but officials continue to insist
they are becoming better prepared and
more experienced in controlling the outbreak.
Over the weekend, more human infection
cases of the bacteria were identified
in Hong Kong, Guangdong, and two more
cities in Sichuan. By noon on Saturday,
the death toll had reached 34, according
to the Ministry of Health.
By noon Sunday, 181 human cases had been
reported in nine regions of Sichuan, 18
more than last Friday.
Thanks to the prompt reporting of the
disease and experience gained by doctors,
increasingly few people are dying from
the disease, the ministry said.
On Sunday, no deaths were reported in
Sichuan, and 17 patients have now been
released from hospital.
The ministry has not released the names
of the two new regions of Sichuan where
new human cases were found over the weekend.
Places known to harbour the disease include
Ziyang, Neijiang and province capital
Chengdu.
A human case of the infection was identified
in Chao'an County of Guangdong Province,
on July 27.
The patient was released from hospital
over the weekend, China News Service reported.
In Hong Kong, the health authority also
reported one human case, which takes the
total number of cases in the region to
11 since May, 2004.
The patient, an 84-year-old man, was
hospitalized on June 16, he is in a stable
condition.
He had not travelled outside the region
or been to pig farm for a long time before
he became ill, Xinhua News Agency reported.
A large quantity of vaccine, enough for
350,000 pigs, was sent to Chengdu Sunday
afternoon from South China's Guangdong
Province.
The producer of the vaccine, the Guangdong
Yongshun Biology Pharmaceutical Factory,
said it will produce enough vaccine for
10 million pigs in the coming days.
The Ministry of Health held a national
television and telephone meeting over
the weekend asking branches to be on alert
for the bacteria.
The livestock trade in Sichuan has been
hit hard by the outbreak.
In Ziyang, where human cases were first
reported, people have turned away from
pork, preferring poultry and beef instead.
"I know the pork in markets now
is safe, but I just followed others and
didn't buy it," one unidentified
shopper said Sunday.
"It's hard to estimate the economic
losses," said An Weining, director
of the local animal husbandry department.
Authorities are also exploring ways to
curb the deep-rooted practice small-scale
farmers have of butchering and eating
animals which are the victims of disease.
Experts say butchering and eating infected
pork is the only way for humans to catch
the disease.
"We might educate youngsters at
school and get them to pass on the information
to their families," the Party Secretary
of Ziyang Zhong Mian said last week.
According to An, his department will
make the inoculation of pigs against the
disease compulsory in addition to the
two existing compulsory vaccinations against
pig-borne bacteria and foot-and-mouth
disease.
According to the two officials, however,
no compensation will be granted to farmers
who now face difficulties selling their
animals.
Zhong said the government could not compensate
farmers if their animals die from disease.
The government cannot afford the expenses,
Zhong said, adding that normally 50,000
of around 5 million pigs raised in Ziyang
die from disease every year.
"If the government compensates farmers
1,000 yuan (US$120) for each dead animal,
it will be a huge expenditure every year,"
Zhong said.
In Sichuan, which is known for animal
husbandry, most farmers earn at least
part of their income from raising pigs.
For Wang Xingcheng, a farmer infected
with the disease, two-thirds of his family's
income came from raising pigs, his daughter
said.
Low-income families, who pay a lot for
piglets, animal inoculations and feed,
suffer a huge loss if they are not compensated
for being unable to sell or eat their
sick animals.
According to An, farmers in Ziyang sell
around three-fifths of their home-raised
pigs for private slaughter or to small
or medium-sized food companies, who then
trade the meat to markets. "One-fifth
are killed and consumed by farmers themselves,"
An said, adding that another portion was
sold to large companies engaged in meat
export.
Source: China Daily
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