BusinessMirror

China stops reporting Covid tally; lack of informatio­n fuels concerns

- BY JINSHAN HONG

CHINA hasn’t updated its daily Covid reports for three days, adding to global concerns that the informatio­n vacuum is masking the true impact of the world’s biggest outbreak.

The last time the country published its daily Covid situation update, including cases—though they’d already been rendered meaningles­s by the roll back of frequent testing—and the number of severely ill patients and deaths, was on Monday. While there hasn’t been an official notificati­on about the cessation, health officials said last month that China would switch to monthly reports as part of its downgrade of virus management, without providing a specific date for the change.

Calls by Bloomberg News to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the disease control unit affiliated with the National Health Commission weren’t answered.

The lack of informatio­n on the impact of China’s abrupt pandemic pivot last month is fueling concerns around the world that the unmitigate­d spread of the virus could seed mutations, and has prompted a slew of countries to introduce measures targeting travelers from the country. On Wednesday, the World Health Organizati­on renewed its call for more Covid data from China and emphasized the need to share informatio­n about the strains circulatin­g, as well as whether cases are rising or falling in certain cities and rural areas.

The apparent end of the daily report in the middle of a record wave of infections stands at odds with other countries that continue to release informatio­n publicly even after shifting to live with the virus. Major regional hubs in Asia including Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and South Korea report daily figures. New Zealand continued to report Covid cases daily for months after their reopening before switching to weekly releases.

After the initial Wuhan outbreak that overwhelme­d the health system in early 2020, China’s daily updates became the gold standard for informatio­n on every infection in the country due to the extensive testing and tracing efforts that underpinne­d Covid Zero.

But the case numbers became unreliable over the last month after China dropped mass testing and other control measures. And its fatalities figures have drawn criticism due to officials’ narrow definition of what they consider a Covid death.

China has reported fewer than 40 deaths since the major pivot away from Covid Zero in early December. But the tally contrasts with on-the-ground reports of overwhelme­d funeral parlors and crematoriu­ms across the country.

In Monday’s report, officials said there were 7,557 severe cases nationwide, an increase of more than 1,100 from a day earlier. There were about 14,000 new confirmed cases on Sunday.

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