Fear of community transmission rises in Beijing
After COVID-19 patients having no relationship to the Xinfadi market were detected in Beijing, fear of community transmission has been rising in the city, even though health experts believe the latest outbreak has reached a plateau.
Beijing health authorities reported 13 newly confirmed cases, along with two suspected cases and one asymptomatic infection on Monday, a slight rise compared with the previous day’s nine cases.
But information released by the health authorities showed that several patients neither had a direct contact history with the Xinfadi market nor were they close contacts of confirmed cases, according to epidemiological investigations.
This lack of clarity sparked public concern that transmission may have started among local communities.
In the past few days, infections with a direct relation to Xinfadi began to decline while the number of indirect contacts has increased. Some small-scale infection clusters have also occurred at restaurants, food producing company PepsiCo and construction sites.
These cases, which can’t clearly be traced to a specific source, increased the risk of further spread of the virus, said Wang Guangfa, a respiratory expert at Peking University First Hospital.
“We should prioritize epidemiological investigation on cases outside the infection chain relating to the
Xinfadi market. But many patients display minor or no symptoms, making it difficult to identify them,” Wang told the Global Times on Tuesday.
“If we fail to track down potential infections, community transmission risks will rise,” Wang said.
But Wang Peiyu, a deputy head of Peking University’s School of Public Health, told the Global Times on Tuesday that transmission at the community level is so far very low.
The capital city has expanded testing scope to cover people work in markets, catering, delivery, logistics industries, medical staff, and other service providers such as supermarket workers and bank clerks. People about to finish medical observation will take a second nucleic acid test, city authorities said on Tuesday.