China Daily

SHANGHAI KEEPS ONE STEP AHEAD OF VIRUS

Prompt action taken after new cases reported

- By ZHOU WENTING and HE QI in Shanghai

Ma Jie, Party secretary of Yingqian, a village in Shanghai’s Pudong district, can finally catch up on some well- earned rest at home after sleeping on the floor of his office for 14 consecutiv­e nights because of the recent COVID- 19 local lockdown.

The lockdown was imposed in the village, which has a population of 3,000, after a local COVID- 19 case was reported on Nov 9. The restrictio­ns were lifted on Tuesday after residents completed a 14- day quarantine.

Yingqian was removed from the list of areas at medium risk for the spread of the disease after there were no reports of secondary infection during the quarantine period.

The action taken in the village epitomizes how Shanghai, which aims to become one of the world’s safest cities for public health by 2025, has mobilized its resources to counter the contagion.

Ma said, “The villagers showed a high degree of cooperatio­n, and more than 100 volunteers, security guards and police officers went the extra mile to communicat­e, patrol and help in various ways during the lockdown.”

Shanghai confirmed six local cases in the past week, making a total of seven this month. Of the cases, five were reported among cargo workers at Shanghai Pudong Internatio­nal Airport. Two of the workers’ wives were also infected.

Leading local health expert Zhang Wenhong said Shanghai’s epidemic prevention and control efforts have helped keep the city one step ahead of the virus. These efforts include the rapid deployment of resources, a quick response and precise preventive measures.

Zhang, head of Shanghai’s COVID- 19 clinical expert team, said: “The city is still under threat, as new infections are being reported and the risk of scattered cases may linger throughout the winter as the pandemic evolves. However, we’re confident that life will be close to normal, thanks to the efforts of the government and residents regarding personal protection.”

On Nov 9, nucleic acid testing for the residents of Yingqian village started at 9 am and ended at midnight.

Chu Fuguo, a 60- year- old resident who acted as a volunteer during the lockdown, said, “Most people cooperated, even though we knocked on some doors late at night to make inquiries.”

The villagers, who took the tests on the first, sixth and 13th days of the quarantine period, all returned negative results.

Ma said a contingenc­y plan, which included setting up a temporary quarantine site and sending in designated ambulances, was drawn up in case anyone tested positive.

Despite no such results being reported, ambulances were still sent to the village a number of times during the 14 days. They took residents, who under the quarantine regulation­s could not go to hospitals by themselves, to medical institutio­ns for various reasons, including the birth of a baby and treatment for accidental cuts.

On the second day of the lockdown, when a villager was due to give birth, Ma said he contacted the hospital in advance to ensure that pandemic prevention measures were in place. The expectant mother was admitted that evening and her baby was born the following day.

Yin Xiuping, a 51- year- old resident, said she and her family spent most of their time at home and complied with the request not to gather with neighbors.

“We have witnessed the great efforts made by government workers and healthcare profession­als for the village and for ourselves, which included the provision of food once every two days. We, as individual­s who care for this city, want to make our contributi­on to safeguard it,” she said.

Thousands tested

On Monday, video clips of nucleic acid tests being administer­ed to more than 17,700 cargo workers at Pudong Internatio­nal Airport the previous night went viral.

The tests involved 240 doctors and nurses and 300 workers who helped with preparator­y work.

Netizen Xin Zhidu said: “The tests were like a meticulous blanket search for a suspicious infection. We’re confident the city, which has a government that people trust, will make it through. Stay strong Shanghai and the world!” The comment received 27,000 “likes”.

Epidemiolo­gists said the infections among the airport workers are a reminder that imported non- cold- chain cargo may become a viral transmissi­on route in winter.

Zhou Junlong, vice- president of the Shanghai Airport Authority, said strict cargo disinfecti­on, standard loading and unloading procedures and protection for key workers will be strengthen­ed at cargo handling facilities.

Pan Hao, deputy head of Shanghai’s front- line COVID- 19 work team, said epidemiolo­gical investigat­ion tracing for the cases reported in the past week was expanded from close contacts, and those linked to them, to individual­s at the same work site or in the same occupation.

A case reported on Monday was discovered among the nucleic acid test results for the airport cargo workers.

The prompt action taken by the Shanghai authoritie­s has again been impressive. City and district centers for disease control and prevention, or CDCs, have thoroughly screened, located and quarantine­d individual­s related to the latest cases, with their work being clearly defined.

For example, after two cases were reported on Nov 20, the city’s CDC said the next day that 91 close contacts, 213 people linked to these close contacts and 15,415 other individual­s had been traced. Their initial nucleic acid test results were obtained, and most of those involved were quarantine­d at designated hotels, while the remainder made their way to quarantine locations.

Pan said that when the medical team members failed to identify the source of infection for the case reported on Nov 9, involving a cargo worker at the airport, they felt frustrated.

Strenuous efforts were made to detect the source through human- to- human or object- tohuman transmissi­on vectors – the two channels commonly agreed on internatio­nally.

Pan said, “We later began to look for possible work sites that the two cases ( on Nov 20) had been exposed to. We finally identified an aircraft container from North America, which the workers entered without wearing face masks on Oct 30.

“Tests also showed the virus they were infected with was a strain from North America,” he said.

Experts said the early detection of infections in the past week also showed that Shanghai’s network of 117 fever clinics, where an intelligen­t system to report suspicious cases has been installed, had played its part.

Wu Jinglei, director of the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, said, “The system collects and analyzes informatio­n concerning cases, helps health authoritie­s and CDCs to predict epidemic developmen­t more accurately and enables effective precaution­ary measures to be taken promptly.”

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 ?? ALY SONG / REUTERS PHOTOS BY GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY ?? Clockwise from top: A guard checks the temperatur­e of a scooter driver at Yingqian village, Pudong New Area, Shanghai, on Wednesday. A resident and her grandchild shelter from the rain at the village; security guards patrol the entrance to the community.
ALY SONG / REUTERS PHOTOS BY GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY Clockwise from top: A guard checks the temperatur­e of a scooter driver at Yingqian village, Pudong New Area, Shanghai, on Wednesday. A resident and her grandchild shelter from the rain at the village; security guards patrol the entrance to the community.
 ?? DING TING / XINHUA ?? Flights have been unaffected at Pudong Internatio­nal Airport.
DING TING / XINHUA Flights have been unaffected at Pudong Internatio­nal Airport.

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