The Department of Health (DOH) yesterday confirmed that two China Airlines (CAL) flight attendants, a man and a woman, might have severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
DOH deputy director-general Lee Lung-teng (
Colleagues serving on the same flights have also been put under domestic quarantine, Lee said.
PHOTO: CNA
According to Lee, the stewardess was onboard CAL flight CI018 from Tokyo to Hawaii on March 31, took flight CI017 back to Tokyo on April 1 and took flight CI017 back to Taipei on April 3.
Lee said the woman began to have fever on March 31 but was not admitted to a hospital.
On April 1, she fell very ill on the way from Hawaii to Tokyo. She was sent to a hospital after landing in Tokyo but the local hospital did not diagnose her as having SARS, according to Lee.
"The airline flew her from Tokyo back to Taipei on April 3, placing her in the first-class cabin," Lee said.
The airline has stressed the stewardess was under complete quarantine during the trip and that there were no other passengers in the first-class cabin, Lee said.
Nevertheless, Lee said the health authorities in Taoyuan are investigating whether the airline violated the Communicable Disease Prevention Law (傳染病防治法) by placing a person suspected of having SARS on its flight.
Minister of Transportation and Communications Lin Ling-san (
The Chang-Gung Memorial Hospital in Taipei, where the woman is hospitalized, has told the DOH that she does not have SARS.
The hospital said another virus caused her illness and that her disease is not infectious.
However, Lee said the department's SARS specialist team has ruled that the woman is a SARS case because she matched all the World Health Organization's (WHO) definitions of SARS.
Meanwhile, the CAL steward said he might have been infected by a passenger on flight CI628 from Hong Kong to Kaohsiung, according to Lee
"The steward, surnamed Cheng, said the passenger asked him for a face mask during the trip," Lee said.
According to Lee, Cheng returned to Taiwan from Thailand on April 2 and fell ill on April 4.
Lee said anyone, including foreigners, who continue to roam freely or travel while knowing they have been infected with SARS, would be breaking the law
Stepping up its efforts to halt the spread of the disease, the DOH announced yesterday that everyone entering the country via CKS International Airport would have their temperature checked.
The new measure took effect yesterday afternoon.
"Anyone found to have symptoms of SARS will be immediately sent to a local hospital and quarantined," Lee said.
Travel agencies in Taiwan are working to secure alternative flights for travelers bound for New Zealand for the Lunar New Year holiday, as Air New Zealand workers are set to strike next week. The airline said that it has confirmed that the planned industrial action by its international wide-body cabin crew would go ahead on Thursday and Friday next week. While the Auckland-based carrier pledged to take reasonable measures to mitigate the impact of the workers’ strike, an Air New Zealand flight arriving at Taipei from Auckland on Thursday and another flight departing from Taipei for Auckland on Saturday would have to
The Taipei City Government yesterday confirmed that it has negotiated a royalties of NT$12.2 billion (US$380 million) with artificial intelligence (AI) chip giant Nvidia Corp, with the earliest possible signing date set for Wednesday next week. The city has been preparing for Nvidia to build its Taiwan headquarters in Beitou-Shilin Technology Park since last year, and the project has now entered its final stage before the contract is signed. Taipei Mayor Chiang Wan-an (蔣萬安) said the city government has completed the royalty price negotiations and would now push through the remaining procedures to sign the contract before
Taipei Zoo welcomes the Lunar New Year this year through its efforts to protect an endangered species of horse native to central Asia that was once fully extinct outside of captivity. The festival ushering in the Year of the Horse would draw attention to the zoo’s four specimens of Przewalski’s horse, named for a Russian geographer who first encountered them in the late 19th century across the steppes of western Mongolia. “Visitors will look at the horses and think that since this is the Year of the Horse: ‘I want to get to know horses,’” said zookeeper Chen Yun-chieh, who has been
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday said the name of the Taiwanese Representative Office in Lithuania was agreed by both sides, after Lithuania’s prime minister described a 2021 decision to let Taiwan set up a de facto embassy in Vilnius as a “mistake.” Lithuanian Prime Minister Inga Ruginiene, who entered office in September last year, told the Baltic News Service on Tuesday that Lithuania had begun taking “small first steps” aimed at restoring ties with Beijing. The ministry in a statement said that Taiwan and Lithuania are important partners that share the values of freedom and democracy. Since the establishment of the