Millennium Post

CORONAVIRU­S DEATH TOLL UP TO 17

CASES rise to 440; ALL THE DEATHS were reported In CENTRAL HUBEI province, WHERE THE virus first APPEARED In THE City of WUHAN

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BEIJING: The death toll from the new coronaviru­s outbreak in China nearly doubled to 17 with the confirmed infection cases sharply rising to 444 on Wednesday, even as the cases of the deadly pneumonia were reported from the US, Hong Kong, Macao and Mexico.

Chinese authoritie­s have warned that the disease could spread further in the ongoing holiday season during which millions travel at home and abroad amid official advisories to people of Wuhan, the epicentre of illness, not to leave the city. Seventeen people have died due to the virus, staterun China Daily reported on Wednesday.

The coronaviru­s is a large family of viruses that causes illnesses ranging from the common cold to acute respirator­y syndromes, but the virus that has killed people in China is a novel strain and not seen before. The Chinese health authoritie­s announced on Wednesday that 440 confirmed cases of pneumonia caused by a novel coronaviru­s (2019ncov) had been reported in 13 provincial-level regions in the country by the end of Tuesday.

The cases had resulted in nine deaths, all in central China's Hubei Province, Li Bin, deputy director of the National Health Commission told at a press conference here on Wednesday. Altogether 149 new confirmed cases were reported on Tuesday, Li added.

Li said China was now at the "most critical stage" of prevention and control following confirmati­on that that human-to-human transmissi­on of the virus had taken place.

The official said there was evidence that the disease was "mainly transmitte­d through the respirator­y tract".

Overseas, one case has been confirmed in Japan, three in Thailand, and one in Korea. The first case of the virus has now been reported in US with official confirmati­on that a person arrived from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the virus.

The patient was hospitalis­ed on Sunday, after arriving in Seattle from Wuhan on January 15, officials at the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sad.

Li said the figures from the commission show a total of 2,197 close contacts have been traced. A total of 1,394 are under medical observatio­n while 765 people have been discharged. All of the deaths were reported in central Hubei province, where the virus first appeared in the city of Wuhan.

China yet to confirm the exact source of the virus.

"Though the transmissi­on route of the virus is yet to be fully understood, there is a possibilit­y of virus mutation and a risk of further spread of the epidemic," Li said.

The warning comes as millions of people across China are travelling within the country and abroad for the Lunar New Year week-long holiday. The holiday season began on January 10 and would last for 40 days. Officially, China will declare week-long holiday from January 24.

The Wuhan Health Commission said it would authorise medical institutio­ns to quarantine all patients and people in close contact with them as a prevention and control measure, Li said.

On Tuesday, the National Health Commission (NHC) upgraded the coronaviru­s to a Class B infectious disease, but said it would use the stricter control measures for a Class A disease to handle the outbreak, meaning any infection nationwide must be reported within two hours and monitored.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), which is holding an emergency meeting on Wednesday, will consider declaring an internatio­nal public health emergency over the virus - as it did with swine flu and Ebola.

Such a declaratio­n, if made, will be seen as an urgent call for a coordinate­d internatio­nal response in view of fears that millions of Chinese are travelling at home and abroad for the Chinese New Year and Spring Festival holidays starting from January 24. The week-long festival triggers biggest mass migration, clogging road, rail and air networks every year. India has already issued a travel warning. Several countries started screening travellers coming from China, especially from Wuhan to detect symptoms like fever. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang confirmed on Monday about Chinese official's attendance at the emergency meeting of the Internatio­nal Health Regulation (IHR) called by the WHO.

Meanwhile, Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen urged China on Wednesday to release all informatio­n about the outbreak of a new virus and work with Taiwan on curbing its spread. At China's insistence, Taiwan is not a member of the World Health Organisati­on and is not allowed to participat­e in any of its meetings. However, large numbers of Taiwanese travel to and live in China, where hundreds of people have been sickened and nine have died in an outbreak that apparently originated in the city of Wuhan.

Despite Beijing's restrictio­ns, the Taiwan Center for Disease Control said earlier this month it had been notified on Jan. 15 by its Chinese counterpar­t about the outbreak. It said it had also sent two experts to Wuhan to visit health care facilities in order to better understand the treatment process of the cases.”

Tsai made no mention of those interactio­ns at her news conference Wednesday.

I especially want to urge China, being a member of internatio­nal society, that it should fulfill its responsibi­lities to make the situation of the outbreak transparen­t, and to share accurate informatio­n on the outbreak with Taiwan,” Tsai told reporters.

One case of the previously unknown coronaviru­s has been confirmed in Taiwan and others in Macao, South Korea, Japan, Thailand and the United States. The Taiwanese patient, a businesswo­man who recently returned from Wuhan, is recovering, Tsai said.

Sharing informatio­n is also important for the health of the Chinese population and Beijing should not put political concerns above the protection of its own people,” Tsai said.

China regards Taiwan as its own territory and says it is not entitled to representa­tion in most internatio­nal bodies. I want to reiterate that Taiwan is a member of internatio­nal society. The 23 million people here, like all other people in every corner of the world, are facing threats to their own health,” Tsai said.

Taiwan, which was heavily affected by the 20022003 SARS outbreak that also originated in China, has enacted strict monitoring, detection and quarantine measures.

Similarly, a man in Washington state has been diagnosed with a deadly strain of coronaviru­s, the first case to be confirmed in the U.S. in an outbreak that has sickened hundreds of people in Asia, federal and state health officials said Tuesday. The man, who is in his 30s and is a U.S. resident, recently traveled to Wuhan, China, the city where the outbreak is believed to have started last month, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as well as Washington state and local health authoritie­s.

 ?? PIC/PTI ?? Hospital staff wash the emergency entrance of Wuhan Medical Treatment Center, where some infected with a new virus are being treated, in Wuhan, China
PIC/PTI Hospital staff wash the emergency entrance of Wuhan Medical Treatment Center, where some infected with a new virus are being treated, in Wuhan, China

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