Global Times - Weekend

week US cases to double next

Mandatory measures, curfew needed: experts

- By Zhang Hui and Chen Qingqing

As California became the only US state to issue a “stay at home” order on Thursday with the nationwide spike in COVID-19 cases this week, experts who believed that the US coronaviru­s epidemic will quickly rise in the following weeks warned that the US may witness the number of reported cases double before the end of next week and a steadily worsening epidemic for weeks.

It’s very likely that the number of confirmed cases in the US will grow to more than 20,000 by next weekend or even sooner given that the US coronaviru­s epidemic is fast spreading, Zeng Guang, chief epidemiolo­gist of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told the Global Times on Friday.

It took China four days for the number of confirmed cases to rise from 100 to 1,000, and 10 days for the US. And from 1,000 to 10,000, it took China seven days and the US nine days. From 10,000 to 20,000, it took China three days.

The US has recorded more than 10,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases as of Thursday, doubling over two days. To prevent further spikes, California has asked its residents to stay inside as much as possible, although they could still spend time outside as long as they stay six feet away from other people.

Some analysts forecast there would be about 50,000 to 500,000 infections in the US, and the US has adopted an influenza-tackling policy which will see 28 million infections, 250,000 in the hospital and 16,000 deaths. “We may see much higher infections, and may reach a similar range as influenza,” Chen Xi, an assistant professor of public health at Yale University, told the Global Times on Friday.

Testing in the US has been hampered by delays and strict criteria on who could get tested. So far, the US has run about 60,000 tests, federal officials said Tuesday. However, Wuhan city ran a daily average of 20,000 tests in February.

Zeng said that US public health sectors have yet displayed their full potential due to politics. It’s not that US health department­s run by its government have no ability to test more, it’s that Trump administra­tion officials do not listen to public health experts, Zeng said.

The supply shortage of materials used in tests has also led to the insufficie­nt and delayed tests.

Peng Zhiyong, director of the intensive care unit of Wuhan University’s Zhongnan Hospital, told the Global Times that he received a growing number of phone calls and emails this week from his US counterpar­ts seeking treatment plans not just for elderly people, the normally considered high risk group, but also for young people.

“Some American doctors said that the US has recorded a relatively high infection rate among younger people, as they are reluctant to listen to government advice,” Peng said. He said that to reduce the new infections, the US has to adopt stricter and mandatory measures, such as curfew, to stop large gatherings.

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