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  • Eugene Hoshiko / AP Photo

    A dove rests on a tree near a Chinese sign read as "China" at a park on Monday, April 1, 2013 in Shanghai, China. Two Shanghai men have died from a lesser-known type of bird flu in the first known human deaths from the strain, and Chinese authorities said Sunday it wasn't clear how they were infected but there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission.

  • AP

    A vendor waits for customers near chicken cages at a market in Fuyang city, in central China's Anhui province, Sunday, March 31, 2013. Two Shanghai men have died from a lesser-known type of bird flu in the first known human deaths from the strain, and Chinese authorities said Sunday that it wasn't clear how they were infected, but that there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission. A third person, a woman in the nearby province of Anhui, also contracted the H7N9 strain of bird flu and was in critical condition, China's National Health and Family Planning Commission said in a report on its website. (AP Photo) CHINA OUT

  • Alexander F. Yuan / AP Photo

    World Health Organization’s China representative Michael O'Leary attends a press conference in Beijing Monday, April 1, 2013. Health officials said they still don’t understand how a lesser-known bird flu virus was able to kill two men and seriously sicken a woman in China, but that it’s unlikely that it can spread easily among humans.

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Shanghai raises flu response with emergency plan

Published: Monday, Apr. 1, 2013 - 4:40 am
Last Modified: Tuesday, Apr. 2, 2013 - 3:20 am

China's financial capital, Shanghai, on Tuesday activated an emergency response plan following the recent deaths of two men from a lesser-known strain of bird flu.

The Shanghai city government said on its official microblog that it would launch the contingency plan. It did not immediately provide details but in general such plans call for more stringent monitoring of suspect cases.

China's health agency says specialists are investigating how the H7N9 bird flu virus, which previously was not known to infect humans, killed two men in Shanghai and seriously sickened a woman in another Chinese city.

Unverified reports on Chinese microblogs Tuesday say there's a fourth case of H7N9 in the eastern city of Nanjing. Authorities say either they did not know about it or are declining to comment.

Health authorities in Beijing also upped the capital's state of readiness, ordering hospitals to monitor for cases of bird flu and pneumonia without clear causes, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

The announcements, as lacking in details as they are, show that the government is mildly more transparent in handling health crises than it was a decade ago during the SARS pneumonia epidemic. Then, as rumors circulated for weeks of an outbreak of an unidentified disease in southern Guangdong province, government silence allowed the virus to spread to many parts of China and to two dozen other countries.

Read more articles by GILLIAN WONG



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