The Scotsman

China battling ‘severe and complex’ Covid-19 outbreak – driven by Omicron

- By HUIZHONG WU newsdeskts@scotsman.com

China is in a battle with its worst Covid-19 outbreak, driven by the Omicron variant, with health officials calling the situation "severe and complex".

The country has counted more than 56,000 cases since March 1, according to national health officials who gave a press briefing yesterday.

More than half of those cases have been recorded in northeaste­rn Jilin province and include asymptomat­ic cases. The numbers do not include Hong Kong, which tracks its Covid-19 data separately.

China continues striving to "achieve dynamic zero-covid in the short term, as it is still the most economical and most effective prevention strategy against Covid-19," said Wu Zunyou, an infectious disease expert at China's Centre for Disease Control.

"Only by doing dynamic zero-covid can we eliminate the hidden dangers of the epidemic, avoid the run on medical resources that may be caused by large-scale infections and prevent a large number of possible deaths of the elderly or those with underlying diseases," Mr Wu added.

The "zero-covid" strategy relies on lockdowns and mass testing, with close contacts often being quarantine­d at home or in a central government facility. The strategy focuses on eradicatin­g community transmissi­on of the virus as quickly as possible, sometimes by locking down entire cities.

Last week, Chinese president Xi Jinping acknowledg­ed the toll of the stringent measures, saying China should seek "maximum effect" with "minimum cost" in controllin­g the virus. Since then, officials have emphasised that they will ensure their approach and restrictio­ns are targeted.

Health officials are especially concerned about people aged 60 and older and spent much of yesterday’ s press briefing urging people to get vaccinated.

National data released last week showed that over 52 million people aged 60 and older have yet to be vaccinated with any Covid-19 vaccine.

Booster rates are also low, with only 56.4 per cent of people between 60-69 having received a booster shot, and 48.4 per cent of people between 70-79 having received one. The situation in Hong Kong has highlighte­d the importance of vaccinatin­g the elderly people.

The daily death toll in the semi-autonomous region remains above 200, according to Mr Wu.

A vast majority of Hong Kong's Covid-19 deaths have been among those who are not fully vaccinated, with many in the elderly population.

The city reported 10,401 new cases on Friday, continuing a downward trend, although social distancing measures have yet to be rolled back. The city has recorded over 1 million cases in the latest surge.

Meanwhile, Germany's health minister has said it is too soon to declare a "freedom day" from Covid-19 as the virus continues to run rampant, claiming hundreds of lives each day.

The country's disease control agency reported 296,498 newly confirmed coronaviru­s cases in the 24 hours to yesterday, and 288 deaths.

German MPS voted last week to let most federal rules on wearing masks and testing expire.

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