Child Virus Claims Five More in China
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

BEIJING — Five more children have died of hand, foot, and mouth disease in China, bringing the death toll to 39 since late March, the official Xinhua News Agency said yesterday.
A girl died in eastern Anhui province from enterovirus 71, a virus that causes a severe form of the disease, Xinhua said. Anhui is the worst-hit province, and was where the first wave of deaths from the disease were recorded in March.
Another child died on the southern tropical island of Hainan and three in southern Guangdong province, but no further details were available about their cases, Xinhua said.
Most cases of hand, foot, and mouth in China this year have been blamed on enterovirus 71.
Hand, foot, and mouth has sickened 24,934 children in six provinces, Xinhua said. Cases have cropped up from Guangdong province in the south to Jilin province in the northeast, along with major cities such as Beijing and Shanghai.
A visiting U.S. Health and Human Services secretary, Mike Leavitt, said in Shanghai yesterday that America would be willing to help China with the disease.
Hand, foot, and mouth spreads through contact with saliva, feces, fluid secreted from blisters, or mucus from the nose and throat.
There is no vaccine or specific treatment, but most children affected by mild forms of the disease recover quickly without problems after suffering little more than a fever and rash.