Flu De Lee

Travel To China, H1N1 - Info for your China vacations
This article is about the H1N1 and China travel. You can find some useful information in it if you are planning your China vacations now.
The A(H1N1) quarantine policy (from several big Chinese web sites) in China:
1. If you don’t have a fever when getting off the plane in the airports of China, you don’t need to worry about quarantine policy of China at all. If you do have a fever, you will need to do a medical examination in the city where you enter China. This is to make sure that you don’t get the A(H1N1) flu.( more info about “Travel To China, H1N1,China vacations” at Travel2ChinaInfo Dot COM )
2. If there is some people having a fever in your plane to China and your seat is very close to him/her (less than 3 meters away), you will need to do the medical examination in the hospital when this people is confirmed as a A(H1N1) flu patient. The Chinese Malaria Control Center will contact you when they find some confirmed A(H1N1) cases in the plane you take. If you sit far away from the A(H1N1) patient (more than 3 meters away) in the plane, you don’t need to worry about this issue at all. No one is going to ask you to do a medical examination even when there is some confirmed A(H1N1) cases in your plane to China.
3. Some people did the quarantine for a week in Beijing and Jiangshu when they got to China. They only did this voluntarily. One one is going to ask you to do this. But in my point of view, this can be good both for your family and your friends. You don’t wanna your close people to be threatened by the A(H1N1) flu too, right? ( more info about “Travel To China, H1N1,China vacations” at Travel2ChinaInfo Dot COM )
Some personal experience when people arrived at the airports of Beijing,Shanghai or Hongkong:
1. My parents traveled to China last Monday. All they got in the Beijing Capital Airport is to go through a Temperature Monitoring Device. That’s it. When they stayed in the hotel, the Malaria Control Center didn’t contact them. Now there are more than 200 A(H1N1) cases in China and the Chinese people don’t pay so much attention to this flu as they used to be. (I think it is very natural for the Chinese people to be very nervous about this A(H1N1) flu. The SARS was such a disaster here in the year of 2003. )
2. I flied to China last week and I am in China now. I am not very familar with the A(H1N1) quarantine policy in China. I will only talk about my personal experience here. I entered China in the Shanghai Pudong Airport. In the plane, the airhostesses helped us to do the body temperature check once. When we arrived at Shanghai, some “astronauts” checked our body temperature again. When I left the U.S., my body temperature was about 37 Centigrade. (because I was sleeping poorly these days) But they didn’t find me out. Maybe I was not having a fever when they checked my body temperature in the airport. I then transfered to another plane. No one contacted me about the A(H1N1) flu issue any more. I can do whatever I like in China. By the way, I left my address in China and phone number in the Shanghai Pudong Airport of course.
3. I visited Hong Kong last week. All I did is to fill out some forms. No body temperature check at all. When I arrived at Shenzhen, some people asked me to go through the Temperature Monitoring Device and fill out some other forms. ( more info about “Travel To China, H1N1,China vacations” at Travel2ChinaInfo Dot COM )
By 06/13/2009, there are 293 A(H1N1) flu cases in China. ( Beijing: 38, Guangdong: 37, Fujian: 25, Shanghai: 17, Sicuan: 15, Hubei: 9, Zhejiang: 6, Tianjin: 4, Shandong: 3, Hunan: 2, Henan: 1, Jiangsu: 1, Shanxi: 1, Liaoning: 1, Guizhou: 1, Jiangxi: 1, Hainan: 3, Hongkong: 84, Taiwan: 44 )
By Shane Lee. Date: 06/14/2009.
Copyright belongs to Travel2ChinaInfo Dot COM . You can find more information about China vacations, China airfare, Beijing airfare and Shanghai airfare from our web site.
NOTE: Permission is granted by the copyright owner to disseminate this article in whole or in part provided credit is given to the author (with a link to the article’s source URL Travel2ChinaInfo Dot COM ) and this NOTE is not removed.
About the Author
About the author:Shane Lee.More flights,airfares info at:Cheapest airfare for North Carolina to LAX.And:Airfares RDU Boston.And:Flights from Boston to Nantucket.
Fleur de Lee Video
|
|
The Dukes of Hazzard (Unrated Widescreen Edition) $1.73 The good ol’ boys are back for some Southern-fried fun in this big-screen adaptation of the popular ’80s TV show. Modern-day Robin Hoods Bo (Seann William Scott) and Luke (Johnny Knoxville) Duke come up against the scheming Boss Hogg (Burt Reynolds), who plans to buy up all the land in Hazzard County to build a strip mine. Co-stars Jessica Simpson as barely dressed cousin Daisy and Willie Nelson a… |
|
|
Red Dwarf: Series I $11.99 Notoriously, and entirely appropriately, the original outline for Doug Naylor and Rob Grant’s comedy sci-fi series Red Dwarf was sketched on the back of a beer mat. When it finally appeared on British television in 1988, the show had clearly stayed true to its roots, mixing jokes about excessive curry consumption with affectionate parodies of classic sci-fi. Indeed, one of the show’s most endearin… |
|
|
The Jakarta Pandemic $3.99 In the late fall of 2013, a lethal pandemic virus emerges from Indonesia and rages unchecked across every continent. When the Jakarta Flu threatens his picture perfect Maine neighborhood, Alex Fletcher, Iraq War veteran, is ready to do whatever it takes to keep his family safe. With his family and home prepared for an extended period of seclusion, Alex has few real concerns about the growing pande… |
|
|
Mr. Monk and The Blue Flu $7.99 Monk is horrified when he learns there’s going to be a blue flu in San Francisco-until Capt. Stottlemeyer explains that it just means the police plan to call in “sick” until they get a better contract.The good news is the labor dispute will give Monk a chance to get back on the force.The bad news is it means he’ll be a “scab”-and he doesn’t like the sound of that either. But before he knows it, M… |
|
|
Surviving The Swine Flu: Revised Second Edition $2.99 The H1N1 Swine Flu pandemic is upon us! “Surviving The Swine Flu” takes a thorough and comprehensive look at the Swine Flu Pandemic of 2009, its origins, and the history of influenza. This REVISED SECOND EDITION contains over 30% newer content to keep up with the breaking news! Written by Dr. Gary L. Vincent, this book examines over a hundred reports to help you decide truth from fiction, and what… |
Mail this post







