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(CN) China sets strict rules on rabies-related dog killing

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China sets strict rules on rabies-related dog killing

www.chinaview.cn

2007-11-12

 

BEIJING, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- A spokesman for China's Ministry of Health

(MOH) said here on Monday that government authorities would be prudent in

issuing orders to kill dogs in a rabies epidemic.

 

" When medical experts judge that an epidemic has become very severe and

constitutes a threat to many people, killing dogs is an important measure to

safeguard health and contain the epidemic, " said spokesman Mao Qun'an.

 

" But this measure should be adopted in a prudent way, " he said at a regular

press conference, noting the killing mainly targeted sick dogs and stray dogs.

 

He said raising pets in line with the law is a citizen's right, but dog

owners should take steps to prevent rabies to protect their own health and that

of their neighbors.

 

Mao was commenting on media reports that some local governments had

slaughtered dogs after rabies cases were found.

 

MOH statistics show that from January to October, 2,717 rabies cases were

reported on the Chinese mainland, up 2.41 percent in the same period a year

earlier.

 

Areas severely affected by rabies included Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region

and Guizhou, Sichuan, Hunan and Guangdong provinces, Mao said.

 

" Most rabies cases were found in rural areas, " he said, identifying that the

Bijie area in northwest Guizhou province, Guigang in southeast Guangxi Zhuang

Autonomous Region and Nanchong in northeast Sichuan province were the top three

prefectural-level cities affected by the disease.

 

Mao said the occurrence of rabies was rising in China, particularly since

2000. Between 2004 to 2006, rabies had claimed 8,403 lives in the country,

accounting for 30.1 percent of the total deaths from infectious diseases in the

same time period.

 

He said rabies was found in 910 counties in 23 provinces in 2007compared to

98 counties in 1996.

 

With more dogs being raised in China, many have not been vaccinated leading

to the rabies increase. Some people had also refused to be vaccinated after they

were bitten by dogs leading to a natural increase in rabies occurrences. Such

problems were particularly serious in rural areas.

 

Mao said the MOH would pay more attention to the prevention and control of

rabies in rural areas in the coming years and ensure rabies vaccines were fully

supplied in such areas.

 

Rabies is an acute viral infection that is nearly always fatal if left

untreated. It can be transmitted by the bite of an infected animal, usually a

dog. It kills about 50,000 people around the world annually.

 

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-11/12/content_7058655.htm

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