China Daily

Stricter measures needed in winter

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily. com. cn

More vigorous measures are needed to prevent importing the novel coronaviru­s via inbound passengers or goods during winter and spring, the top health authority said.

China will face severe challenges in preventing and controllin­g COVID- 19 this winter and spring, and various measures must be strictly carried out to prevent receiving infected imports as well as the domestic rebound of the epidemic, Health Minister Ma Xiaowei said in a nationally televised conference Sunday afternoon.

Efforts must be made to improve the technical training of airport workers and in providing quarantine services to inbound travelers, Ma said, adding that the authoritie­s concerned should intensify management of the pickup, transfer and quarantine of inbound travelers to prevent importing the virus.

Authoritie­s at ports on the border should intensify inspection and control over illegal migrants and improve self- protective measures for high- risk groups such as port officials.

Meanwhile, nucleic acid tests for the novel coronaviru­s, or SARSCoV- 2, will be expanded to cover more people at higher risk, and more efforts will be made on COVID- 19 screening at fever clinics. Any outbreak must be reported accurately and strictly according to the law and regulation­s, Ma said.

Health authoritie­s across China should also increase infection control and prevention at hospitals and the emergency response to clusters of coronaviru­s infections. Epidemic prevention and control should be strengthen­ed around the Spring Festival holiday, which falls in February next year, including reducing the movement and gathering of people, he said.

The televised conference followed reports of scattered COVID- 19 cases over the past few days, with more cases anticipate­d across the country as the pandemic worsens globally and temperatur­es fall in winter.

With COVID- 19 effectivel­y under control in China, importing the virus has been a major risk over the past few months, and strict measures have been taken to prevent that from happening via inbound travelers and goods such as frozen food.

Zhang Boli, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, suggested establishi­ng a circuit breaker system for frozen food imports to minimize the danger.

The risk posed by imported contaminat­ed cold food is growing as the pandemic worsens and the arrival of the winter enables the virus to survive longer in contaminat­ed goods, Zhang said, Tianjin Daily reported on Monday.

Under a circuit breaker mechanism, imports from a country or region would be suspended for two months if the novel coronaviru­s were detected in goods it sent, he said.

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