Author: Feng, Dan; De Vlas, Sake J.; Fang, Liâ€Qun; Han, Xiaoâ€Na; Zhao, Wenâ€Juan; Sheng, Shen; Yang, Hong; Jia, Zhongâ€Wei; Richardus, Jan Hendrik; Cao, Wuâ€Chun
                    Title: The SARS epidemic in mainland China: bringing together all epidemiological data  Cord-id: 12qujq0l  Document date: 2009_6_5
                    ID: 12qujq0l
                    
                    Snippet: Objective To document and verify the number of cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) during the 2002–2003 epidemic in mainland China. Method All existing Chinese SARS data sources were integrated in one final database. This involved removing nonâ€probable and duplicate cases, adding cases at the final stage of the outbreak, and collecting missing information. Results The resulting database contains a total of 5327 probable SARS cases, of whom 343 died, giving a case fatality ratio
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: Objective To document and verify the number of cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) during the 2002–2003 epidemic in mainland China. Method All existing Chinese SARS data sources were integrated in one final database. This involved removing nonâ€probable and duplicate cases, adding cases at the final stage of the outbreak, and collecting missing information. Results The resulting database contains a total of 5327 probable SARS cases, of whom 343 died, giving a case fatality ratio (CFR) of 6.4%. While the total number of cases happens to be equal to the original official reports, there are 5 cases overall which did not result in death. When compared with Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China, China Taiwan, and Singapore, the SARS epidemic in mainland China resulted in a considerably lower CFR, involved relatively younger cases and included fewer health care workers. Conclusions To optimise future data collection during largeâ€scale outbreaks of emerging or reâ€emerging infectious disease, China must further improve the infectious diseases reporting system, enhance collaboration between all levels of disease control, health departments, hospitals and institutes nationally and globally, and train specialized staff working at county centres of disease control.
 
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