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Senior legislator pledges more health co-op with int’l community
BEIJING—A senior legislator
said here on Thursday that China will further strengthen its cooperation
with the World Health Organization (WHO) and other countries on public
health.
Han Qide, vice chairman of the Standing Committee of the National
People’s Congress, China’s top legislative body, made the remarks in a
meeting with delegates to an international symposium on public health
security. Han, a medicine master, said China attached great importance
to the issue of public health security and had taken a series of
measures to strengthen the construction of its public health system,
medical cure system and health science and technology system.
“China is ready to further strengthen cooperation with the WHO and the
governments of other countries, to make active efforts to deal with all
kinds of paroxysmal public health incidents.” Kim Campbell, the former
Canadian Prime Minister, said on behalf of all the delegates that the
symposium was very “timely” and “excellent” as everyone in attendance
was willing to share information and technology with China on public
health.
Some 70 officials, experts and scholars from more than 10 countries were
attending the two-day symposium that opened here on Thursday. The
symposium, “Public Health Security: China and the World”, was jointly
sponsored by the China Institute for International Strategic Studies and
the Michael Eric Bosman Hotung Foundation.
The number of emergent public health incidents in China’s mainland rose
30.43 percent year-on-year in February, according to government
statistics. A report released by China’s Ministry of Health on Friday
said the country reported 6,381 people involved in 60 cases of emergent
public health incidents last month, in which 54 people died.
It reported three major incidents in February, namely three human bird
flu cases in the central Henan Province, southern Guangdong Province and
the southern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Three people died in
these incidents.
The ministry ordered health departments in various regions to closely
monitor the situation of public health incidents, including human bird
flu, plague, pneumonia of unknown reasons, measles, influenza, chicken
pox and mumps.
The symposium, “Public Health Security: China and the World”, was
jointly sponsored by the China Institute for International Strategic
Studies and the Michael Eric Bosman Hotung Foundation.
—Xinhua |