http://observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,896618,00.html

The friendly staff at the Hualian supermarket in a quiet residential area of
Shanghai shake their heads: 'There's no vinegar here - it's been completely
sold out because of the danger.'
Millions of Chinese are stockpiling vinegar as a supposed disinfectant
against a mystery pneumonia virus in southern China. The panic has even
reached Shanghai, a day's train journey from its source in Guangdong
province

More than 300 people were reportedly affected by the unidentified bug which
first appeared in November: five have died. Although no new cases have been
reported for several days, there is alarm.

Hundreds of tons of antibiotics and other medicines to tackle respiratory
infection are being rushed to Guangdong, but vinegar is still in high
demand. Many believe that if a pan of vinegar is boiled until it evaporates,
the steam will be an effective disinfectant against disease. Four extra
deaths were reported last week as a result of the vinegar being boiled over
coal-burning stoves which gave off lethal fumes.

Two were in Foshan, where a pan was left boiling overnight, killing an
18-year-old girl and a seven-year-old boy. Their mother is critically ill.

Herbal medicines and face-masks have become unobtainable in and around the
provincial capital of Guangzhou.

Early in the week city officials took to radio and television to try to
quell the panic. People should 'ignore rumours and trust the government to
contain the spread of the virus', said Vice-Mayor Chen Chuanyu.

Health bureau chief Huang Jiongli advised the young and elderly to stay away
from crowds. But many ordinary people agree with the Guangzhou-based Nanfang
Weekend - one of China's most popular newspapers - that it is wrong to
criticise them for spreading rumours.

The reason why scare stories spread, says the newspaper in an outspoken
editorial, was because of 'a lack of authoritative information'. It blames
the government and media for failing to act sooner. The panic was given a
further boost by growing fears of war in Iraq.

On Thursday one supermarket was invaded by customers grabbing supplies off
the shelves with shouts of 'the war is coming'.

A Guangdong official has appealed to the public not to stockpile rice,
edible oil and salt and insisted that the province's rice reserves were
'capable of supporting local residents for more than six months'. Prices of
these commodities rose several times on Wednesday: a bag of salt, which
usually costs one yuan (8p), was being sold for eight times that. Official
inspection teams have been sent to check prices in the markets. The scare
has also focused attention on the widespread scandal of over-priced
medicines in a system where the profit motive has long ago replaced earlier
ideals of socialist healthcare.

Last week a press conference in Beijing was called to announce measures to
correct this 'unhealthy tendency'. Ten hospitals nationwide were 'named and
shamed' for selling medicines above the fixed ceiling.

National health officials say that laboratory tests are being carried out
urgently in Beijing to identify the cause of the outbreak, but it is
believed to be a form of viral pneumonia because many doctors and nurses
caught it from hospital patients. However, the authorities appear to have
acted slowly, ignoring the rumours which were given an extra spin by urban
China's new technology boom. Stories of a raging epidemic spread quickly in
internet chat-rooms and through short messages on mobile phones.

Respiratory diseases are common in the spring, when southern China is
subject to rapid temperature changes, said Guangdong officials.

Guangzhou railway station, which is packed with returning holidaymakers and
migrant workers at the end of the Chinese New Year period, is being
disinfected daily. The region has been associated with several serious flu
outbreaks in recent decades. In 1968-69 an epidemic of 'Hong Kong flu'
spread to the West, causing thousands of deaths.



xponent
Achoo! Maru
rob
________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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