Dayton Daily News

Virus cases rise; China shifts counting method

- By Ken Moritsugu

Infections and deaths from the new virus in China ballooned for a second straight day Friday, on paper at least, as officials near the epicenter of the outbreak struggled to keep up with a backlog of patients’ lab work.

The accelerati­on in cases was not necessaril­y an indicator of a surge in the illness known as COVID-19 because the hardest-hit province of Hubei and its capital of Wuhan changed the way it counted cases. But public health experts wrestled with what exactly could be deduced from the numbers given the shift in approach.

“If you change the way you count cases, that obviously confounds our capacity to draw firm conclusion­s about the effectiven­ess of the quarantine,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University in the United States. “We have to interpret the numbers with great caution.”

Confirmed cases of the virus rose to 63,851 in main- land China, an increase of 5,090 from a day earlier, according to the National Health Commission. The death toll stood at 1,380, up 121.

Still, the World Health

Organizati­on continued to report lower numbers, standing by the way cases were counted before Hubei’s shift. WHO pressed for more details Friday on the change in tabulating cases. Doctors in Hubei are now making diagnoses based on symp- toms, patient history and chest X-rays instead of wait- ing for laboratory confir- mation.

“We’re seeking further clarity on how clinical diag- noses are being made to ensure other respirator­y illnesses including influenza are not getting mixed into the COVID-19 data,” said WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

Meantime, the vulner- ability of health workers responding to the epidemic was crystalize­d with other data emerging from China.

More than 1,700 medical workers in China have contracted COVID-19 and six have died, according to the health commission, which said it was “highly con- cerned” by the infections.

WHO echoed that, with Tedros saying more informatio­n was needed on when the workers were infected and under what circum- stances. Transmissi­ons to front-line health workers can signal problems in infection control policies and signal that a disease is becoming more easily transmissi­ble.

Schaffner said he was opti- mistic that China’s unpreceden­ted quarantine­s — put- ting 60 million people in its hardest-hit cities under lock- down — would help reduce transmissi­ons. But without consistent numbers, he said, it was hard to draw any such conclusion.

“China a nd t he world community would like to restore a sense of normalcy but in order to do that we need to have confidence in what is going on and we’re not there yet,” Schaffner said.

China has come under intense criticism within the country for its response to the crisis and has been the target of complaints from elsewhere too. But WHO’s chief of emergencie­s, Dr. Michael Ryan, defended China’s handling of the outbreak and its cooperatio­n with others.

“From our perspectiv­e, we have a government that’s cooperatin­g with us, that’s inviting in internatio­nal experts, that’s shared sequences with the world, that continues to engage with the outside community,” he said.

 ?? SOPA IMAGES ?? A customer buys flowers while wearing a face mask as a precaution against COVID-19 in Hong Kong. The death toll from the epidemic surpassed 1,400 Friday.
SOPA IMAGES A customer buys flowers while wearing a face mask as a precaution against COVID-19 in Hong Kong. The death toll from the epidemic surpassed 1,400 Friday.

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