China Daily (Hong Kong)

Specialist­s from China, US share COVID-19 knowledge

- By LI WENFANG in Guangzhou liwenfang@chinadaily.com.cn

Medical profession­als from China and the United States shared their knowledge about COVID-19 epidemic control and patient treatment in a videoconfe­rence on Friday morning as infection cases continued to surge globally.

The number of coronaviru­s infections in the US reached 85,996 on Friday, according to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Also, the capital, Washington, reported a jump in infections.

Those taking part in the meeting included four experts from the Chinese mainland, including Zhong Nanshan, a prominent expert in respirator­y diseases, two from the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region and three from the US.

Zhong, also a leading specialist fighting at the front line of the outbreak in China, briefed his counterpar­ts on transmissi­on features, diagnosis, clinical characteri­stics, management and China’s strategy in controllin­g the spread of the virus.

Zhong drew attention to the high reproducti­on rate of the virus, high patient mortality compared with the flu and transmissi­on to humans by asymptomat­ic virus carriers.

The earlier a patient’s onset, the higher the infectious­ness, he said. Zhong also advised that sewers and exhaust pipes be kept unobstruct­ed to curb the spread of the virus.

Li Shiyue, a professor at the Guangzhou Institute of Respirator­y Health in Guangdong province, spoke primarily about bronchosco­py, a test that allows examinatio­n of a patient’s airways. Luo Fengming, a professor at the West China Hospital of Sichuan University in Chengdu, who worked for nearly two months in Wuhan, Hubei province, former epicenter of the outbreak, shared his views on clinical diagnosis and personal protection.

Gerard Criner, a professor at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia, briefed the attendees on the prevention status in the US and the related experience from his university.

Criner said keeping an ear out for advice and experience from colleagues in other virus-hit countries including China, Italy and Spain has been necessary at the university.

The disease has become a top concern for any medical center in areas affected by the novel coronaviru­s. The situation calls for more hospital beds, respirator­y equipment and also protective gear for the medical staff.

A wide range of medical workers is necessary to handle the epidemic, such as specialist­s in anesthesia and pulmonary and critical care, he added.

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