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China urges vigilance over swine flu

Swine flu fears send CDC.gov traffic soaring
Traffic to the website of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention soared in April as Americans searched the Internet for information about swine flu, research firm comScore said Thursday. ComScore said the number of unique US visitors to CDC.gov rose by 142 percent in April compared with the previous month to 5.7 million. "When news of the swine flu pandemic erupted, many Americans turned to the Internet as their primary source of information for how to keep themselves and their families safe," said Jack Flanagan, executive vice president of comScore Media Metrix. ComScore said social network sites such as Facebook and MySpace saw a record number of visitors in April and hot micro-blogging service Twitter continued its remarkable growth. The number of unique visitors to Twitter increased by 83 percent in April compared with the previous month to 17 million, comScore said. Overall, the social networking category grew 12 percent to nearly 140 million visitors in April, the digital research firm said. It said MySpace led the category with 71 million visitors, followed by Facebook with 67.5 million visitors, an increase of 10 percent from the previous month. Twitter was next. ComScore said sites operated by Google were the most visited properties in April with more than 155 million visitors, followed by Yahoo! sites with 149 million visitors and Microsoft sites with 126.5 million visitor.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 14, 2009
China hunted for train passengers Thursday who travelled with a man confirmed as the mainland's second swine flu patient, as state media urged citizens to be more responsible to help prevent an epidemic.

The health ministry confirmed Wednesday that a 19-year-old student recently arrived from Canada had been diagnosed with the A(H1N1) virus in east China's Shandong province, where he had travelled by train after flying into Beijing.

The news came just days after a 30-year-old man was confirmed as mainland China's first case, after arriving in the southwestern city of Chengdu from the United States via Tokyo and the Chinese capital.

Two cases of swine flu, which has killed more than 60 people worldwide, have also been confirmed in the semi-autonomous southern Chinese city of Hong Kong.

The 19-year-old student, identified only by his surname Lu, apparently started feeling ill on Sunday -- two days after landing in Beijing -- but still boarded a train to Shandong on Monday with a fever, sore throat and headache.

Authorities urged those who travelled near the man on either the Air Canada flight to Beijing or the train to the Shandong provincial capital of Jinan to come forward.

The provincial health department said that so far, 29 of 46 people who travelled in the man's train carriage and stewards had been located.

Officials were also still searching for 28 people who travelled on separate flights to Beijing from Tokyo and Canada with the swine flu sufferers, according to the health ministry.

State media called on citizens to be vigilant, urging them to report any suspicious symptoms and follow official quarantine procedures.

"To be responsible for others is to be responsible for oneself," the official English-language China Daily said in an editorial.

"If no one cares about his or her obligation to follow the rules in the interest of others and society as a whole, we cannot expect that anyone will be safe from an epidemic like this."

The newspaper said the first flu patient reportedly had symptoms but did not report these to Beijing's health department.

"Had both reported their cases immediately after they had experienced the symptoms, the chances of other people being vulnerable to infection would have been vastly less," it said.

Health authorities in Shandong also came under fire for letting Lu's fellow carriage passengers go when they arrived at the station, despite being on-site to take Lu to hospital after he called them on the way to report his symptoms.

"If the Jinan disease control department... had started prevention and control measures on the train... it would have reduced the possibility of passive (disease contraction)," the Beijing News said in a comment piece.

"Individuals and government departments alike should hold strong social responsibility for people and themselves, immediately report, and immediately adopt quarantine measures to control the epidemic as much as possible."

The two swine flu sufferers were in a stable condition.

Nearly 6,500 cases of A(H1N1) flu have been confirmed in 33 countries, according to the World Health Organization.

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Flu shows China still finding its feet on health threats: experts
Beijing (AFP) May 14, 2009
Six years after its sluggish response to SARS, China has been criticised for overreacting to swine flu, showing it has not yet found the right prescription for dealing with a health crisis, experts said. With memories of the Severe Acute Respiratory Disease outbreak still fresh, China reacted quickly and aggressively to prevent swine flu, or the A(H1N1) virus, from reaching its soil. ... read more







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