Bangkok Post

Health commission stops publishing Covid figures

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BEIJING: China’s National Health Commission (NHC) stopped publishing daily Covid-19 data yesterday, amid doubts about their reliabilit­y as infections have exploded in the wake of an abrupt easing of tough restrictio­ns.

“Relevant Covid informatio­n will be published by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention for reference and research,” the commission said in a statement, without specifying the reasons for the change or how frequently China CDC will update Covid informatio­n.

The NHC’s halt to reporting daily infection and death totals comes as concerns grow around the lack of vital informatio­n since Beijing made sweeping changes to a zero-Covid policy that had put hundreds of millions of its citizens under relentless lockdowns and battered the world’s second-largest economy.

Despite the record surge of infections, the NHC had reported no Covid deaths nationwide for four consecutiv­e days before halting the data release. China narrowed its definition for reporting Covid deaths, counting only those from Covid-caused pneumonia or respirator­y failure, raising eyebrows among world health experts.

British-based health data firm Airfinity last week estimated China was experienci­ng more than a million infections and 5,000 deaths a day.

After Covid cases were breaking daily records in late November, the NHC this month stopped reporting asymptomat­ic infections, making it harder to track cases.

Official figures from China had become an unreliable guide as less testing was being done across the country, while China has been routinely accused of downplayin­g infections and deaths.

The United States has also reported Covid cases less frequently, changing from daily to weekly updates, citing needs to reduce the reporting burden on local areas.

The World Health Organizati­on has received no data from China on new Covid hospitalis­ations since Beijing eased its restrictio­ns. The organisati­on says the data gap might be due to the authoritie­s struggling to tally cases in the world’s most populous country.

Several models and reports in recent days have forecast as many as two million Covid deaths as the virus spreads to rural sections of the country, threatenin­g to hit the most vulnerable elderly population and the unvaccinat­ed.

The country’s healthcare system has been under enormous strain, with staff being asked to work while sick and even retired medical workers in rural communitie­s being rehired to help grass-root efforts, according to state media.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man wearing a protective mask and face shield worships at the Buddhist Jing’an Temple in Shanghai, China on Friday.
REUTERS A man wearing a protective mask and face shield worships at the Buddhist Jing’an Temple in Shanghai, China on Friday.

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