
China tackles chikungunya virus outbreak with wide range of measures as thousands fall ill
TAIPEI, Taiwan — An outbreak of the chikungunya virus in China has prompted authorities to take preventive measures from mosquito nets and clouds of disinfectant, threatening fines for people who fail to disperse standing water, and even deploying drones to hunt down insect breeding grounds.
Article content
More than 7,000 cases of the disease have been reported as of Wednesday, focused largely on the manufacturing hub of Foshan near Hong Kong. Numbers of new cases appear to be dropping slowly, according to authorities.
Article content
Article content
Article content
Chikungunya is spread by mosquitoes and causes fever and joint pain, similar to dengue fever, with the young, older people and those with pre-existing medical conditions most at risk.
Article content
Article content
Chinese state television has shown workers spraying clouds of disinfectant around city streets, residential areas, construction sites and other areas where people may come into contact with virus-bearing mosquitos that are born in standing water.
Article content
Workers sprayed some places before entering office buildings, a throwback to China's controversial hardline tactics used to battle the COVID-19 virus.
Article content
People who do not empty bottles, flower pots or other outdoor receptacles can be subject to fines of up to 10,000 yuan ($US1,400) and have their electricity cut off.
Article content
The U.S. has issued a travel advisory telling citizens not to visit China's Guangdong province, the location of Donguan and several other business hubs, along with countries such as Bolivia and island nations in the Indian Ocean. Brazil is among the other countries hit hard by the virus.
Article content
Article content
The crisis in China has been worsened by heavy rains and high temperatures, which are generally common in tropical areas but came on unusually strong this year.
Article content
Article content
China has become adept at coercive measures that many nations consider over-the-top since the deadly 2003 SARS outbreak. This time, patients are being forced to stay in hospital in Foshan for a minimum of one week, and authorities briefly enforced a two-week home quarantine, which was dropped since the disease cannot be transmitted between people.
Article content
Reports also have emerged of attempts to stop the virus spread with fish that eat mosquito larvae, and even larger mosquitos to eat the insects carrying the virus.
Article content
Meetings have been held and protocols adopted at the national level in a sign of China's determination to eliminate the outbreak and avoid public and international criticism.
Article content

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Edmonton Journal
10 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Opinion: 'New approach' to COVID shots puts Albertans at risk
Article content On June 13, the minister of Primary and Preventative Health Services, Adriana LaGrange, announced 'a new approach to COVID-19 immunizations' to reduce vaccine wastage and 'better align supply with demand … while continuing to protect those at highest risk.' Article content This rationale is a red herring. The 'new approach' drastically limits Albertans' access to the lifesaving COVID vaccine. Wastage? No provincially funded vaccine has been wasted. The COVID vaccine was provided by the federal government for the past four years; 2025 is the first time provinces must order and pay for it. Article content Article content Article content Under the 'new approach,' 240,000 fewer doses of vaccine have been ordered than were given last year. It also limits the venues for vaccine delivery to 13 per cent of the sites that were accessible last year, and drastically restricts who can receive free vaccine. Article content Albertans must register with the vaccine-booking system in advance if they wish to 'register intent' to receive a COVID shot. If more people register than the number of doses ordered, the minister has not provided assurance that the province can acquire more vaccine in time. Article content Pharmacists, who gave 87 per cent of COVID shots last year, have been removed from delivery options. COVID vaccine will be delivered entirely by public health clinics. This decision makes no sense; it instead creates unfair barriers to those who work shifts, lack transportation, or are unable to get to vaccine-delivery locations. Article content Article content The 'new approach' will limit who will receive COVID vaccine free of charge, requiring other Albertans to pay a yet-to-be determined fee. Alberta is the only Canadian jurisdiction that will make its citizens pay for the vaccine. The National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) recommends that everyone over the age of 65, health-care workers, pregnant women, and Indigenous people (including Métis) receive the COVID vaccine. Article content Cost is a barrier to many Albertans — particularly low-income families, community-dwelling seniors, and members of racialized and other equity-denied communities. Scientific research and evaluation have shown a clear cost-benefit to immunization of those groups included in the NACI recommendations. Their evidence is that the social and economic benefits of protecting these groups outweigh the costs. Article content The 'new approach' proposes to implement the campaign in four phases, beginning with seniors in group settings like nursing homes, then people compromised with some medical conditions, then all seniors, followed by all other Albertans. Alarmingly, health-care workers will not receive free COVID vaccine and are in the last group to be immunized, if vaccine is still available. Article content This 'new approach' is either a massive failure to plan or an actual plan to fail. Public health experts and common sense indicate that if you want to protect people from a killer disease for which there is a safe and effective vaccine, you should make the vaccine available, easily accessible, and affordable. The 'new approach' weaponizes a policy to do the exact opposite. Article content This 'new approach' creates obstacles to immunization against a serious vaccine-preventable disease that caused over 380 deaths last year — and unfairly disadvantages Albertans who would receive COVID shots free of charge anywhere else in the country. Article content Article content COVID vaccines, including the new non-mRNA product Novavax, are safe and effective and decrease the burden of illness and death for individuals and communities. Albertans, as with all other Canadians, deserve a fair chance to receive COVID vaccine if they want it. Article content Minister LaGrange must commit to follow national Canadian guidelines for free and timely access to COVID vaccine for all Albertans. Will the minister assure Albertans that there will be vaccine available to every Albertan who wants it? Following the 'new approach' will show that, compared to the rest of Canada, the 'Alberta Disadvantage' is real and possibly fatal. Article content Jeffrey Johnson, PhD, professor and former dean, School of Public Health, University of Alberta. Article content Dawn Friesen, MN, assistant deputy minister of Public Health and Compliance (retired). Article content Dr. Tehseen Lahda, pediatric specialist. Article content Dr. Paul Parks, emergency physician, past-president of the Alberta Medical Association. Article content John Church, PhD, professor emeritus, Department of Political Science, University of Alberta. Article content Kathleen Ness, assistant deputy minister of Health Service Delivery (retired), adjunct professor, School of Public Health, University of Alberta. Article content

Montreal Gazette
14 hours ago
- Montreal Gazette
Opinion: ‘Climate change has infiltrated my medical practice. I have no choice but to respond'
As a physician, I'm alarmed that there has been little in the way of substantive input from senior authorities in Canada, and particularly in Quebec, about climate-related health risks. Since the start of summer, I've given more than 20 interviews about the health risks caused by extreme heat and wildfire smoke, both symptoms of the climate crisis. During the weekend of July 26-27, Environment Canada issued dual heat and air-quality warnings for the Montreal area and a large part of Quebec, and I was once again asked to speak to the media. I found myself wondering, where are our government leaders? I regularly address the media about these topics. I believe it's essential to clearly identify and raise awareness about the health impacts of the climate change crisis, which are still far too often overlooked in public discourse. I also wrote a book on the subject. Why do I do this? Because of duty. Climate change has infiltrated my medical practice. I have no choice but to respond. Late last month, while I was on call at a Montreal hospital, two elderly patients were admitted with heat-related complications. Paramedics had rescued them from apartments where the indoor temperature hovered around 30 Celsius — true ovens. I've long been used to reviewing treatment plans for patients with lung disease during cold and flu season. But now, I also have to do it during the summer because of wildfire smoke. I hesitate to draw comparisons with the COVID-19 pandemic because these are very different crises. However, one thing stands out. Beginning in spring 2020 and for weeks, there were daily official media briefings, often featuring Quebec's premier, health minister and director of public health. Yet, when extreme weather rolls through our summers, the response is nothing like that. Where are government officials while our lungs are choking on wildfire smoke? Why aren't they addressing the estimated 470 people who die from heat each summer in Quebec? Radio silence. During the height of the pandemic, they showed up every day to explain what was happening, what steps to take and what services were available. We got more than a social media infographic. Yet, the silence surrounding climate-related health risks sends a message that these issues aren't important, that they don't count and that they're inevitable. Nothing could be further from the truth. In politics, accountability can take many forms, but leadership, public presence and clear recognition of the problem are good places to start. Addressing the media and, through them, the public is part of the job. When it comes to climate-driven health challenges, it's time for more robust ministerial responsibility. Even during the summer vacation period. The science is crystal clear: Environment Canada's increasingly frequent warnings are a direct result of our collective failure to take meaningful climate action, of our continued dependence on fossil fuels, and of premiers who still support the building of pipelines. In the face of all this, we must break the silence. Every level of government must connect the dots between climate and health in public statements and in policy. We need political recognition that meets the scale of the crisis, just as the International Court of Justice recently affirmed. Only then can we make better collective choices to protect everyone's health.


Winnipeg Free Press
18 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Child and youth care specialists can make schools safer, association says
The Child and Youth Care Workers' Association of Manitoba is calling on public schools to hire more of its members to prevent student outbursts and related staff injuries. Not unlike social workers, the professionals — many of whom have a certificate or diploma from Red River College Polytechnic — are trained in child development, relationship-building and crisis intervention. Chelsea Champagne said she and her colleagues' skill sets are well-suited for 21st-century schools, but they have long been overlooked by the education sector. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Child and Youth Care Workers' Association of Manitoba president Chelsea Champagne says her association's members could help 'create more safe space' in Manitoba schools. 'I see so much positive potential for change,' said Champagne, president of the association that advocates for roughly 2,000 child and youth care workers and support staff in Winnipeg. 'We could create more safe space in schools and we're ready to be there.' The workforce is primarily spread out across community health-care settings, group homes and juvenile corrections facilities. Champagne said practitioners build 'therapeutic relationships' with youths and their families. In doing so, they learn about what triggers behavioural challenges and build individualized plans accordingly, she said. School staff made 844 more time-loss injury claims — a 332 per cent spike — to the Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba last year compared to a decade ago. An April survey of local educational assistants found seven in 10 had experienced violence on the job. Half of those respondents indicated they were subjected to it weekly, if not daily, as per the findings released by the Canadian Union of Public Employees Manitoba. Also during the spring, a Brandon-based resource teacher was conducting a similar study for her PhD; Julie Braaksma's early findings suggest student-on-teacher violence is taking place across the province and it often goes under-reported. Alan Campbell, president of the Manitoba School Boards Association, said trustees are both well aware of these safety concerns and realistic that they are unlikely to disappear anytime soon. Student mental-health struggles, stressful household dynamics and unmet educational needs are all 'manifesting in the form of violence,' Campbell said, noting the COVID-19 pandemic worsened matters although such issues predate 2020. 'There is a heightened need and expectation on the part of communities that schools are better equipped to support students, no matter how they, themselves, are equipped to come to school and to learn,' he said. The veteran trustee said school boards are paying closer attention to the size and makeup of their clinician teams. While some boards have added child and youth care workers to their staffing complements, budget constraints continue to prove challenging, he said. Winnipeg's River East Transcona School Division was an outlier in 2007 when it began hiring the specialists. Jón Olafson, assistant superintendent of student services, said they've since become 'an integral part' of RETSD, visiting early, middle and senior years schools to help implement student-specific plans. Nearby Louis Riel School Division established the first of its now-seven child and youth care worker positions in 2021. Administrators in the Pembina Trails School Division followed suit this year. Their roster of the staffers is slated to double, to two, in 2025-26. Champagne applauded the leaders who've embraced the professionals as the experts they are in how childhood trauma and unmet needs impact behaviours. Weekday Mornings A quick glance at the news for the upcoming day. What makes these practitioners different from their school social worker and psychologist colleagues is their training in real-time crisis support, she said. Champagne noted that child and youth care practitioners regularly work with the same students so they can get to know them on a personal level, help them build positive habits and prevent outbursts. 'We're not there to be EAs or TAs (teaching assistants). We're not there to teach kids. We're there to help them manage their social, emotional, behavioural needs,' she added. RRC Polytech has issued 380 diplomas since launching its two-year child and youth care program — which began as a certificate program in 1995 — about 18 years ago. Maggie MacintoshEducation reporter Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie. Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative. Every piece of reporting Maggie produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.