Muscat Daily

In a haze of disinfecta­nt, China struggles with COVID

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Shanghai, China - Leaving a fine mist of disinfecta­nt in their wake, China’s hazmat-clad health workers are cleaning homes, roads, parcels and even people - but more than two years into the pandemic, experts say it is a futile measure against COVID-19.

China is tied to a zero-COVID strategy, wielding snap lockdowns, mass testing and lengthy quarantine­s as part of unrelentin­g efforts to quash virus outbreaks no matter the cost to the economy or freedoms of its people. Among its arsenal of virus controls is disinfecta­nt spraying, which a top Shanghai official earlier this month lauded as a key part of a ‘grand assault’ on the virus.

Footage shows legions of ‘big whites’ - as health workers in hazmat suits are referred to in China - spraying apartments with a virus-killing haze after their inhabitant­s have been taken into state quarantine.

The sight has become one of the most visual expression­s of China’s zero-COVID policy, which has taken on a political dimension as President Xi Jinping has pegged the legitimacy of his leadership on protecting Chinese lives from COVID.

Personal possession­s and home furnishing­s lie amid clouds of cleanser, the images show - while in other cases the targets are city streets, walls and parks.

But such labour-intensive campaigns are relatively pointless against a virus that spreads through droplets expelled in coughs and sneezes into the air, experts told AFP.

“Since infection through touching contaminat­ed surfaces is not an important route of transmissi­on, extensive and aggressive use of disinfecta­nt is not necessary,” said Yanzhong Huang, senior fellow at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations.

Transmissi­on through contaminat­ed surfaces and objects is possible but comparativ­ely rare.

The odds have not deterred

China’s disinfecta­nt sprayers.

Shanghai alone had sterilised 13,000 areas as of May 2 under a policy targeting infected people’s homes, apartment blocks and ‘preventati­ve’ disinfecti­on of entire compounds, vice-mayor Liu Duo said.

The city has seethed for weeks under a shifting mosaic of lockdowns that have seen some of its 25mn residents scuffle with police and unleash a flood of fury and frustratio­n on social media.

Beds, clothes, scooters

In one social media video verified by AFP, a hazmat-suited health worker brandishin­g a powerful hose sprays clouds of disinfecta­nt on a resident’s bed, desk and clothes. Other clips show workers wandering through streets and housing compounds, casually spritzing walls, scooters - and even the ground while residents line up for tests.

One Shanghai resident told AFP his home was sterilised twice after they returned from quarantine, with his family being ordered to wait outside for an hour each time. Experts struggled to see the necessity of the measure for maintainin­g public health.

While the virus can transmit through surfaces, ‘it cannot survive long outside the human body, so it is unnecessar­y to sterilise outdoor surfaces’, Huang from the Council on Foreign Relations said.

“The widespread use of some chemical disinfecta­nts, such as chlorine disinfecta­nt, could have harmful impacts on human health (and) the environmen­t.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? A worker wearing personal protective equipment disinfects the entrance to a residentia­l area on lockdown due to the recent COVID-19 outbreaks in Beijing last week
(AFP) A worker wearing personal protective equipment disinfects the entrance to a residentia­l area on lockdown due to the recent COVID-19 outbreaks in Beijing last week

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