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Severe Acute
Respiratory Distress Syndrome
SARS is a newly
recognized disease that emerged in February. The first cases of
SARS are believed to have been in the Guangdong Province in southern
Mainland China in late 2002. From there, the disease spread to Hong
Kong and on to Hanoi, Vietnam in February. Infected travelers then
carried it worldwide; by late March, more than 1,600 cases and 58
deaths in 13 countries were attributed to the disease.
The World Health
Organization (WHO) has coordinated a worldwide investigation into
the cause of SARS.
Laboratories
are investigating two viruses in separate families, the paramyxovirus
and corona virus families, as possible culprits. Identifying the
cause will significantly aid in the development of technology for
diagnosing and treating the disease.
The SARS outbreak
has triggered these advisories:
* U.S. Centers
for Disease Control (CDC) advises against nonessential travel to
Hanoi, Hong Kong, Singapore and Mainland China.
* Health Canada
advises against travel to Singapore, Taiwan, Hanoi, Mainland China
and Hong Kong, and advises that alternate routing be considered
if a traveler is transiting through any of these areas.
* The U.S. Department
of State has suspended all official travel to Vietnam and recommends
that all U.S. citizens in Vietnam depart.
* France advises
deferring travel to Hong Kong and Mainland China, and recommends
reconsidering trips to other affected areas.
* The WHO has
not advised any itinerary changes, but is advising that all air
passengers departing from a country affected by SARS be screened
for symptoms of the disease. Affected areas according to the WHO
include: Singapore; Toronto, Canada; Hong Kong; Taiwan; Beijing,
Guangdong, and Shanxi provinces of China; and Hanoi.
Signs and
Symptoms
Symptoms of
SARS appear two to 10 days after exposure. According to the CDC,
a person does NOT have SARS unless they have all of the following:
* Temperature
greater than 38 C (100.4 F)
* One or more
of the following: cough, shortness of breath, hypoxia, or X-ray
findings of pneumonia
* Traveled within
10 days of the onset of symptoms to an area with documented community
transmission of SARS (as of March 31, these areas include: Hong
Kong, Mainland China, Singapore and Hanoi), OR had close contact
within 10 days of onset of symptoms with a person infected with
SARS.
Transmission
Of the many
thousands of international travelers passing through the affected
countries since Feb. 1, far less than 1 percent has contracted SARS.
However, the
likelihood of infection is relatively high for travelers who come
into close contact with a SARS-infected person. Before respiratory
precautions and infection control procedures were instituted (including
isolation of patients and the use of protective gear by healthcare
workers), 56 percent of healthcare providers who cared for SARS
patients became ill. Similarly, a high percentage of family members
of SARS patients have contracted the disease.
The means of
transmission of SARS has not been fully determined, but infection
appears to require close contact with a SARS-infected person. Officials
at the WHO have stated that close contact within an airplane could
include sitting within two rows of a person who has symptoms of
SARS. Flight attendants are also assumed to be at-risk. To date,
there is no evidence that the ventilation system of the airline
can spread the disease, although hundreds of passengers are now
being monitored to determine whether this is true.

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