The World Health Organization, WHO, says it is starting a special fund to combat SARS, primarily in mainland China and Hong Kong
Published:
23 May 2003 y., Friday
World Health Organization officials say they are confident they will be able to raise the money by September from investment banks, media companies and industrial groups.
The head of WHO's Communicable Diseases Program, David Heymann, calls this an exciting new endeavor. He says the Geneva-based World Economic Forum which has close ties with China is taking the lead in contacting business people to contribute to the fund.
Hong Kong still has not managed to get the SARS epidemic under control. But, the World Health Organization says health authorities there are doing a good job in identifying new cases of this fatal disease, in tracing people who have come in contact with SARS carriers and in isolating patients. It says Hong Kong is making good progress and is moving closer toward containing the disease.
China remains the most severely SARS-affected country in the world. But, WHO SARS expert, Jim Kim says he is convinced that the Chinese authorities are taking the epidemic seriously.
Šaltinis:
voanews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The launch of Russian-built living quarters for the $60 billion International Space Station is set for early July, officials said on Thursday.
more »
Two cosmonauts orbiting the Earth in Russia's ageing Mir space station started what was planned to be a 5,5 hour space walk on Friday, a spokesman for mission control said.
more »
A jaw full of ancestral reality from Latvia and Estonia could fill a vital gap in the history of life on earth.
more »
A private company striving to map the human genetic code reported today that it has completed a major step in the project - sequencing the genome.
more »
The world of genetically modified foods - the subject of serious controversy in the West - evokes fears that technology is on a topsy-turvy track to ecological disaster.
more »
Breast Cancer Survivor Responds to McCain Complaints
more »
Maneuver Saves Shuttle Mission.
more »
The worldwide AIDS epidemic has been traced back to a single ancestor virus - the HIV Eve - that emerged perhaps around 1930.
more »
New Zealand Looks To Close Internet Medicines Loophole.
more »
Britain launched a task force to assess the risk of asteroids hitting planet Earth.
more »