Bangkok Post

China targets asymptomat­ic cases

Public fears grow of unreported infection

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SHANGHAI: As it eases its strict coronaviru­s curbs, China has urged authoritie­s to pay more attention to asymptomat­ic cases, part of efforts to allay public fears that large numbers of infectious people have gone unreported.

China is easing travel restrictio­ns and allowing people to return to work in the city of Wuhan and the surroundin­g province of Hubei after two months of strict curbs on people’s movements with no new cases of the coronaviru­s reported in the region where it emerged last year for seven days.

But several studies have raised the possibilit­y that the attempt to restore normal life might be premature, warning that lifting the restrictio­ns in Wuhan so soon could lead to a second wave of infections.

The government said on Monday there were still risks, and it would step up screening, widen its testing coverage and ensure asymptomat­ic patients were detected earlier and that informatio­n was disclosed promptly.

The total number of confirmed cases on the mainland stands at 82,240, with 3,309 deaths.

But with Italy, Spain and the United States now exceeding 100,000 cases each, and with death tolls higher than China’s and still rising, experts fear the official data from Beijing might not tell the whole story.

“Even if China has 100 times more cases than were reported, still less than 1% of the population was infected,” said Raina McIntyre, head of biosecurit­y research at the Kirby Institute at the University of New South Wales.

Residents and medical staff in Wuhan said testing problems at some hospitals meant that some infected people were not identified, and thus were not included in official data.

But concerns have also been expressed about China’s failure to include asymptomat­ic patients in total case numbers. Anxious members of the public have taken to social media to express concern that authoritie­s have covered up sources of transmissi­on.

On March 12, a resident of a central village said in a widely shared social media post that there were several new cases of coronaviru­s infection in the city of Yueyang, “but the new case list still shows zero!”

The local government revealed the following day that five residents had indeed received confirmed diagnoses, but because they showed no symptoms, authoritie­s were not obliged to disclose the figures to the public.

Residents of Wuhan also expressed concern that lifting the lockdown could trigger new infections.

“I don’t think that’s very safe,” said a shopkeeper who only gave his surname of Zhang, talking about the plan to lift restrictio­ns in the city on April 8.

“Haven’t there been reports on the internet that some people have recovered and checked multiple times but they later died?”

Cases have emerged in Hubei and the neighbouri­ng province of Henan of asymptomat­ic and undiagnose­d people going on to infect others, including medical staff.

The South China Morning Post said China has found more than 43,000 cases of asymptomat­ic infection through contact tracing.

Officials and health experts have played down the risks.

 ?? AFP ?? Community volunteers wearing protective gear check residents entering and leaving a compound in Wuhan in China’s Hubei province yesterday. Wuhan, the central Chinese city where Covid-19 first emerged last year, partly reopened on Saturday.
AFP Community volunteers wearing protective gear check residents entering and leaving a compound in Wuhan in China’s Hubei province yesterday. Wuhan, the central Chinese city where Covid-19 first emerged last year, partly reopened on Saturday.

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