China's Inner Mongolia reports fresh bubonic plague
case
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[November 18, 2019]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's Inner Mongolia
reported a fresh, confirmed case of bubonic plague on Sunday, despite an
earlier declaration by the country's health officials that the risk of
an outbreak was minimal.
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The health commission of the autonomous region said a 55-year-old
man was diagnosed with the disease after he ate wild rabbit meat on
Nov. 5.
Bubonic plague is the most common form of plague globally and can
advance and spread to the lungs, which is more severe type called
pneumonic plague, according to the World Health Organization.
The Inner Mongolia case follows two that were confirmed earlier this
month in Beijing. In both cases, the two patients from Inner
Mongolia were quarantined at a facility in the capital after being
diagnosed with pneumonic plague, health authorities said at the
time.
The Inner Mongolia health commission said it found no evidence so
far to link the most recent case to the earlier two cases in
Beijing.
The patient in Inner Mongolia is now isolated and treated at a
hospital in Ulanqab, the health commission said.
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A total of 28 people who had close contact with the patient are now
isolated and under observation, and the commission said there are no
abnormal symptoms found in them.
Outbreaks in China have been rare, but large parts of the
northwestern city of Yumen were sealed off in 2014 after a
38-year-old resident died of bubonic plague, known as “Black Death”
in the Middle Ages and caused by the same bacterium as the pneumonic
variant.
Rodent populations have risen in Inner Mongolia after persistent
droughts, worsened by climate change. An area the size of the
Netherlands was hit by a "rat plague" last summer, causing damages
of 600 million yuan ($86 million), Xinhua said.
(Reporting By Zhang Min and Norihiko Shirouzu; Editing by Sam
Holmes)
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