 
 
By Heda  Bayron 
  Hong Kong
  25 May 2009
Hong  Kong has asked students in the United  States to defer travel back home if they  have symptoms of the flu. Several cases in Asia of A-H1N1 influenza, the  swine-flu virus responsible for outbreaks in scores of countries worldwide,  have been traced back to the United  States. Authorities have asked the United States  to screen passengers taking international flights to prevent the flu from  further spreading.
  
  The Cathay Pacific flight 831 from New York to  Hong Kong on May 17th carried 300 passengers.  Two of them came down with A-H1N1 influenza virus - an Australian doctor who  headed to Taiwan where he  was diagnosed as the island's first swine-flu case and a 19-year-old student  who became the third case in Hong Kong. 
  
  The same flight, arriving on May 22nd, carried a 20-year-old student sick with  swine flu. On Sunday, a girl who had traveled to the United  States became Hong Kong's  seventh case.
  
  Authorities here are worried about the way the virus is spreading. Several new  cases of swine flu in Asia are people who arrived from the United States -  where more than 65-hundred people have fallen ill. 
  
  A woman in the Philippines  who had traveled to Chicago and 19-year-old student who arrived in Shanghai from New York  were among the latest cases in Asia Monday. 
  
  Hong Kong's health secretary York Chow wrote to U.S. Secretary of Health and  Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, requesting exit screening measures at U.S. airports  for travelers with flu-like symptoms who may spread the virus to other  countries.
  
  Dr. Gabriel Matthew Leung, undersecretary for health, says Hong Kong  representative offices in the United States  have contacted Hong Kong student organizations  and appealed for students to defer travel during the summer break if they are  sick.
  
  "I would reiterate and re-emphasize my appeal to all those who are  thinking of and planning to travel back from their studies especially from  North America to make sure that they do not show any symptoms of influenza and  that they do not have a fever before they board the flight. And of course, they  should go to the doctor immediately if they do, and seek care locally where  they are currently, in North America and make sure that they are fully  recovered before they take the flight," Leung said.
  
  In mainland China,  students returning from overseas were told to avoid meeting relatives and  friends days after arrival.
  
  Dr. Thomas Tsang, head of Hong Kong's Center  for Health Protection, says temperature scanning at the airport, where some  13-thousand passengers pass through daily, is still the city's first line of  defense. 
  
  "I think we cannot exclude from any country, or any place that is  affected. That is why our port measures, we are targeting at every affected  area," he said.
  
  Since the first cases of the flu emerged in Asia,  health authorities have tracked down and quarantined scores of people who flew  on the same flight or stayed in the same hotel as those who had contracted the  virus.  
  
  
Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-05-25-voa20.cfm
 
 

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