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SEVERE ACUTE RESPIRATORY
SYNDROME (SARS) – MULTI-COUNTRY OUTBREAK -
Alert # 1
Below is a World Health Organization (WHO) emergency travel advisory concerning a multi-country outbreak of a Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). Further details can be found on the WHO website www.who.int/csr/don/en/ which WHO plans to update daily throughout this outbreak.
CAREC will also be issuing further alerts on the subject as necessary and relevant.
There is presently no
recommendation to restrict travel to any
destination.
Should you need further information concerning surveillance for SARS please contact:
Dr.
Eldonna Boisson Manager,
Epidemiology Division CAREC Tel: 868-622-2152 or 868-622
4261 ext. 344 Fax: 868-622-1008 or
868-622-2792 E-mail: boissoel@carec.paho.org or carec-epidemiology@carec.paho.org
Should you encounter a
suspected or probable case of SARS and need advice with respect to sample
collection, transport or testing please contact:
Dr. Rosa
Salas Virologist CAREC Tel: 868-622-4261 ext 221 or
248 Fax:
868-622-2792 E-mail: salasros@carec.paho.org
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
World Health Organization issues emergency travel advisory Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) Spreads Worldwide 15 March 2003 | GENEVA -- During the past week, WHO has received reports of more than 150 new suspected cases of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), an atypical pneumonia for which cause has not yet been determined. Reports to date have been received from Canada, China, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Viet Nam. Early today, an ill passenger and companions who travelled from New York, United States, and who landed in Frankfurt, Germany were removed from their flight and taken to hospital isolation.
Due to the spread of SARS to several countries in a short period of time, the World Health Organization today has issued emergency guidance for travellers and airlines.
“This syndrome, SARS, is now a worldwide health threat,” said Dr. Gro Harlem Brundtland, Director General of the World Health Organization. “The world needs to work together to find its cause, cure the sick, and stop its spread.”
There is presently no recommendation for people to restrict travel to any destination. However in response to enquiries from governments, airlines, physicians and travellers, WHO is now offering guidance for travellers, airline crew and airlines. The exact nature of the infection is still under investigation and this guidance is based on the early information available to WHO.
TRAVELLERS
INCLUDING AIRLINE CREW:
All travellers
should be aware of main symptoms and signs of SARS which
include:
High fever
(>38oC)
AND
One or more
respiratory symptoms including cough, shortness of breath, difficulty
breathing
AND one or more
of the following:
Close contact*
with a person who has been diagnosed with SARS
Recent history
of travel to areas reporting cases of SARS.
In the unlikely
event of a traveller experiencing this combination of symptoms they should
seek medical attention and ensure that information about their recent
travel is passed on to the health care staff. Any traveller who develops
these symptoms is advised not to undertake further travel until they have
recovered.
AIRLINES: Should a
passenger or crew member who meets the criteria above travel on a flight,
the aircraft should alert the destination airport. On arrival the sick
passenger should be referred to airport health authorities for assessment
and management. The aircraft passengers and crew should be informed of the
person’s status as a suspect case of SARS. The passengers and crew should
provide all contact details for the subsequent 14 days to the airport
health authorities. There are currently no indications to restrict the
onward travel of healthy passengers, but all passengers and crew should be
advised to seek medical attention if they develop the symptoms highlighted
above. There is currently no indication to provide passengers and crew
with any medication or investigation unless they become
ill.
In the absence
of specific information regarding the nature of the organism causing this
illness, specific measures to be applied to the aircraft cannot be
recommended. As a general precaution the aircraft may be disinfected in
the manner described in the WHO Guide to Hygiene and Sanitation in
Aviation. As more
information has become available, WHO-recommended SARS case definitions
have been revised as follows:
Suspect
Case
A person
presenting after 1 February 2003 with history of :
High fever
(>38oC)
AND
One or more
respiratory symptoms including cough, shortness of breath, difficulty
breathing
AND one or more
of the following:
Close contact*
with a person who has been diagnosed with SARS
Recent history of travel to areas reporting cases of SARS
Probable
Case
A suspect case
with chest x-ray findings of pneumonia or Respiratory Distress
Syndrome
OR
A person with an unexplained respiratory illness resulting in death, with an autopsy examination
demonstrating the pathology of Respiratory Distress Syndrome
without an identifiable cause.
Comments
In addition to
fever and respiratory symptoms, SARS may be associated with other symptoms
including: headache, muscular stiffness, loss of appetite, malaise,
confusion, rash, and diarrhea.
Until more is known about the cause of these outbreaks, WHO recommends that patients with SARS be isolated with barrier nursing techniques and treated as clinically indicated. At the same time, WHO recommends that any suspect cases be reported to national health authorities.
WHO is in close
communication with all national authorities and has also offered
epidemiological, laboratory and clinical support. WHO is working with
national authorities to ensure appropriate investigation, reporting and
containment of these outbreaks.
*Close contact
means having cared for, having lived with, or having had direct contact
with respiratory secretions and body fluids of a person with
SARS.
For more
information contact:
Dick
Thompson |
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Caribbean Epidemiology Centre
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