(Beijing Comprehensive News) Chinese senior health officials suggest that people do not have skin contact with foreigners to avoid infection of monkey acne.This remarks have detonated disputes in foreign groups stationed in China, and were also reprimanded by netizens as "externalism" and "terrorist diseases".

Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist of the China Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, proposed on Weibo on Weibo that "in order to prevent possible monkey acne infections, but also the content of our daily healthy lifestyle"Do not "suggest that you do not have direct contact with foreigners, do not have skin contact with people who return from overseas (within three weeks) in the near future (within three weeks), and do not contact strangers with strangers.

It is called "7+3" isolation measures to be effective anti -enters

His first suggestion has detonated the controversy online. Many netizens reposted this Weibo to blame the proposal to "discriminate", "excerpts", "anti -science", and some people asked, "You have to show your passport before you contact you in the future?"EssenceThere are also foreign netizens who live in China, referring to Wu Zunyou's remarks, and hurt foreigners in China.

Wu Zunyou said in the same Weibo long text that China ’s“ 7+3 ”isolation measures to prevent overseas input crown diseases also play an important role in preventing monkey acne from being transmitted in.Five to 21 days, most of them are six to 13 days. Isolation measures can intercept most of the cases entered overseas. However, for cases with more than seven days in the incubation period, it may flow into the society.

Chongqing City last Friday (September 16) found the first diagnostic case of Monk Acne on Friday.The Chongqing Municipal Health and Health Commission stated on its website that the case is conducting centralized isolation treatment at designated hospitals, no social activities, and low risk of epidemic dissemination.

According to Bloomberg, the World Health Organization data shows that more than 50,000 people have been diagnosed with acne in 102 countries, mainly men, and at least 18 people have died.

Monkey acne usually spreads closely through close contact, such as contact with contaminated objects or damage (such as pustules) caused by virus, without evidence that the propagation is related to race.