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SARS patient 'never ate civet'

A hospital worker washes the sidewalk outside the No. 8 People's Hospital of Guangzhou where a SARS patient is being treated.
A hospital worker washes the sidewalk outside the No. 8 People's Hospital of Guangzhou where a SARS patient is being treated.

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BEIJING, China (Reuters) -- A Chinese television producer who contracted SARS says he's never eaten civet, state media reported.

Thousands of the animals were culled on fears they may carry a form of the virus that can jump to humans.

The only contact with wildlife the patient could recall was with a mouse he threw out of a window, the Xinhua news agency said on Tuesday.

The victim, surnamed Luo, was confirmed as having SARS this week and is due to be released from hospital in the southern province of Guangdong on Thursday.

Chinese health authorities said a gene sample from the 32 year old man resembled that of a coronavirus found in civets, a local delicacy.

China has given a Saturday deadline for the slaughter of about 10,000 civets as it tries to avert a SARS outbreak.

"Still unaware of the cause of his catching SARS, environmentalist Luo said he had never touched or eaten civet in his life and recalled only having thrown a baby mouse out of the window by hand," Xinhua said.

Luo, 32, complained of a headache and fever on December 16 and was admitted to an isolation ward at the No. 1 Hospital of Zhongshan University on December 20.

Initially diagnosed as having pneumonia, he was transferred to the No. 8 People's Hospital on December 24.

"The disease is not that fearful," Luo said in a telephone interview with the news agency from the Guangdong capital, Guangzhou, on Tuesday.

"It was quite a shock to realize that I might have contracted SARS, when I was sent to the isolation ward," said Luo.

Tang Xiaoping, president of the No. 8 People's Hospital, said Luo had met the three standards set for a SARS patient to be discharged -- disappearance of shadows on the lungs, loss of accompanying symptoms and no fever for more than a week.

"My appetite is very good now, and I can almost take all the food provided by the hospital," said Luo.

Luo had been living alone in Guangzhou and had not told his family about his illness, Xinhua said.



Copyright 2004 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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