The Southland Times

House-to-house checks of all Wuhan residents

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The head of a leading hospital in China’s central city of Wuhan, the epicentre of a coronaviru­s outbreak, has died of the disease, state television says, as police prepare to begin house-to-house checks of all nine million residents in the city.

Liu Zhiming, the director of Wuhan Wuchang Hospital, died at 10.30am yesterday, it said. Earlier this month, millions in China mourned the death of Li Wenliang, a doctor who was previously reprimande­d for issuing an early warning about the coronaviru­s.

As in the case of Li’s death, there was confusion on the Chinese internet about Liu’s condition earlier.

The developmen­ts came hours after the new Communist Party chief of Wuhan declared a three-day operation to cleanse the city, ordering police and other officials to check every resident. Those found to be displaying symptoms of the virus – which has killed 1873 people across the world – will be taken to hospital and all suspected cases will be tested.

‘‘No household shall be left unchecked, and not a single person will be left behind,’’ Wang Zhonglin, 57, who was appointed last week as the city’s highest official dealing with the public health crisis.

In Shanghai, doctors are using infusions of blood plasma from people who have recovered from the coronaviru­s to treat those still battling the infection, reporting some encouragin­g preliminar­y results, a Chinese professor says.

Lu Hongzhou, professor and codirector of the Shanghai Public Health Clinical Centre, said the hospital had set up a special clinic to administer plasma therapy and was selecting patients who were willing to donate.

The blood would be screened to check if the donor had other diseases like hepatitis B or C, he added. ‘‘We are positive that this method can be very effective in our patients.’’

There are no fully licensed treatments or vaccines against the new coronaviru­s, and the process of developing and testing drugs can take many months and even years.

Meanwhile, the feel-good story of how Cambodia allowed a cruise ship to dock after it was turned away elsewhere in Asia for fear of spreading a new disease took an unfortunat­e turn after a passenger later tested positive for the virus.

News over the weekend that an 83-year-old American woman who was on the ship and flew from Cambodia to Malaysia was found to be carrying the virus froze further movement of the passengers and crew of the Westerdam. Some are in hotels in Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh, while others are still aboard the ship. – The Times, AAP

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A Cambodian man sits with his son near the MS Westerdam cruise ship docked in Sihanoukvi­lle, Cambodia, yesterday.
GETTY IMAGES A Cambodian man sits with his son near the MS Westerdam cruise ship docked in Sihanoukvi­lle, Cambodia, yesterday.

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