Temperature checks tightened yesterday at Beihang University after the death of a freshman.
A university freshman has become the first person died from A(H1N1) influenza in Beijing, bringing the mainland toll to four.
The male student, whose name has not been released, died on Tuesday amid an H1N1 outbreak at Beihang University, the nation's top aeronautic and astronautic institution.
In a brief statement issued last night, the health bureau said: "The patient was sent to Daxing District Hospital on Monday and died in the hospital on Tuesday."
The death brings to four the number of victims killed by H1N1 on the mainland. The other three people lived in western China, with the most recent in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
The health bureau said the man was among 3,000 freshmen participating in compulsory military drills and that a group of students began showing symptoms of influenza last Thursday.
A total of 71 students recorded a fevers and 28 tested positive for H1N1 virus. The students were in a stable condition last night.
News of the man's death came as almost 4,000 visitors converged on the university for a national scientific competition yesterday.
A staff member, who was unaware of the death, told METRO on condition of anonymity that the school may try to play down the H1N1 outbreak because of the competition.
"It is a tough decision for the school leaders. They have been busy having meetings for three consecutive days," said another school staff member with the executive office last night.
Meanwhile, authorities urged the university to tighten its disease control and quarantine measures.
Imran Sadiq, an overseas researcher from Pakistan at Beihang, told METRO yesterday that he received an e-mail from school authorities about the latest flu precaution measures on Tuesday evening.
"The school told us once again to report ourselves once we have coughing or any other flu symptoms," said the 39-year-old PhD candidate.
METRO observed nearly all students having their temperatures recorded before entering dormitories at the campus yesterday.
At men's dormitory No 16, supervisors and volunteers pointed electronic thermometers to the forehead of each student returning from lunch.
It came as authorities warned that the daily influenza infection rate could hit 12,000 by January. And it will not be long before most of the flu cases are almost entirely H1N1.
"There is a long battle ahead as the city counters this year's flu infection," said Fang Laiying, head of the Beijing municipal health bureau, at an emergency meeting held yesterday.
A student has his temperature taken before being allowed access to his dormitory.