Other Pages
------------------------
Main Menu
Home Up Shared Left Border Car Crash New Car MG Zs+120 MG crash Auto Sport Shows Sports Cars Show 2001 Motorshow 2002 Supercar Experience Matt's Parking Air Show Franks BBQ Phill Marshall Alton Towers Foot and mouth America under attack James Wedding Ice Age Film Gill Scott Heron Robbie 2001 Eye Eye Sony J70e phone RISK ! Holly & Jessica Club Tickets Radar detactor New Year 2002 Snow shuttle disaster War on Iraq SARS Engine Seized Friday Night Club Pamela Go APE Active Systems Parking Ticket The Cragg Bouncers Cameron Motor Show 2004 Shagg Doo Lawrence Wedding Touring Car 2005 Touring Cars 04 Steve & Dawn
------------------------
Visitors so far
------------------------
| |
26 Apr 2003 15:30 BST
Check out these links for the latest
This on I found when doing a search on Google !! (Small
Arms for Retail Security)

SARS More Deadly Than First Thought, Expert Says
LONDON (Reuters) - The SARS virus which has triggered panic across the world could be more deadly but less contagious than previously thought, a leading medical expert said on Saturday.
Professor Roy Anderson, an authority on infectious diseases at Imperial College London, said he feared the virus -- Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome -- was killing around 10 percent of those infected.
Anderson's findings, to be published next week in a medical journal, are based on figures from the World Health Organization (WHO) but arrive at slightly different conclusions.
"If one looks carefully at the WHO figures on mortality and recovery rates, it is running, unfortunately, at 10 percent," Anderson told BBC Radio.
The WHO has said the syndrome, which spreads via coughs and sneezes but can also be transmitted by touching contaminated objects, has a death rate of around six percent.
Anderson said his study of around 1,400 SARS victims from Hong Kong suggested the virus was more difficult to pass from one person to another than had been feared.
"This is not a highly transmissible infection," he said. "It's been effectively contained in most of the developed countries in the world with a very limited number of cases, Britain being a good example."
SARS has killed at least 289 people worldwide and infected around five thousand since it emerged in southern China late last year. It has no known cure and has been carried to more than 20 countries by air travelers.
The disease has caused widespread alarm in mainland China and Hong Kong.
China recorded seven new deaths on Saturday, taking the toll reported to 122, with around three thousand cases, while Hong Kong raised its fatality count by six to 121, with 1,527 cases.
|