China Daily Global Weekly

Rural older folk, children priority in COVID protection

After infection peak, govt remains on alert to safeguard most vulnerable

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Efforts must be made to ensure older adults and young children have adequate support and monitoring so as to prevent “incidents that test the bottom line of social morals” from happening.

WU HONGYAO

Deputy director of the Office of the Central Rural Work Leading Group and a senior Party official at the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs

Authoritie­s have pledged to continue to prioritize seniors and young children in rural areas as the group that needs the most protection against COVID-19, even though the virus had subsided nationwide.

The weeklong Spring Festival holiday, which officially ended on Jan 27, did not cause a spike of COVID-19 infections in thinly resourced rural areas as experts had feared. And the risk for the virus to further spread among farmers was described as low, by a senior agricultur­al official, on Feb 3.

The official, Wu Hongyao, deputy director of the Office of the Central Rural Work Leading Group and a senior Party official at the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, came to the conclusion based on local health data.

He told a teleconfer­ence with rural affairs officials from across the country that new COVID-19 cases are dropping steadily in the countrysid­e regardless of increased gatherings and the typical mass migrations during the Chinese New Year festivitie­s.

However, Wu urged officials to still monitor the “left behind” older adults and young children in the countrysid­e, as well as rural nursing home residents as their younger relatives left to go back to cities for work after the holiday.

Efforts must be made to ensure such groups have adequate support and monitoring so as to prevent “incidents that test the bottom line of social morals” from happening.

For months, Chinese rural areas, where hospitals lag behind cities in aspects including critical-care resources and highly trained doctors, have been referred to as a weak point in the fight against the elusive Omicron variant.

The demographi­cs there — a large portion of older people who are tasked with taking care of grandchild­ren left behind by young couples working in cities — have added another layer of challenge.

China had 121 million rural residents aged 60 and older in 2020, accounting for 23.8 percent of rural residents and higher than the national average of 18.7 percent, according to the last national census data. That means roughly one in every four rural residents falls in that age group.

Health officials have said that people aged 65, 75 and 85 are respective­ly five, seven and nine times more likely to descend into life-threatenin­g conditions when infected with COVID-19.

With that in mind, places from the wealthier coastal Zhejiang province to the rust belt Heilongjia­ng province have revved up support for such groups in hopes that they can get timely treatment.

In addition to prioritizi­ng the needs for antiviral drugs in rural areas when supplies ran low, Zhejiang also turned to neighborho­od officials and Party members in villages for help.

Official figures showed that some 267,000 such officials had increased their oversight for vulnerable groups in 19,771 villages across the province by Jan 14.

Some 245,000 villagers aged 65 and above and 30,000 children younger than 14 were covered by the program. Some 100,000 vehicles were mobilized to deliver medicines or help purchase basic living necessitie­s.

In the run-up to Spring Festival, Heilongjia­ng province arranged 20 “mobile hospitals” to offer health services in far-flung regions.

The vehicles, carrying electrocar­diograms, oximeters and biochemica­l testing devices, were reported by media to be part of a drive to care for seniors and children amid the surge of COVID-19 infections.

The Tencent Foundation, which is controlled by the namesake internet giant, donated some 150 million yuan ($22 million) in recent months in support of COVID-19 control in some 20,000 nursing homes and 160 formerly impoverish­ed counties across the country.

The money was used to buy finger oximeters and oxygenerat­ors, and hand out epidemic control packages containing hand sanitizer and fever reducers to the elderly and children.

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