Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

After months as success story, China tries to tame delta

- By Sui-Lee Wee and Elsie Chen

In the battle against the coronaviru­s, few places seemed as confident of victory as China.

The country of 1.4 billion people had eradicated the virus so quickly that it was one of the first in the world to open up in spring last year. People removed their masks and gathered for pool parties. In recent months, the government has contended with sporadic outbreaks in various provinces, but stamped them out swiftly by mobilizing thousands of people to test and trace infections, as well as locking down communitie­s.

That model is now looking increasing­ly fragile.

China is facing its biggest challenge since the virus first erupted in the Chinese city of Wuhan last year: the highly transmissi­ble delta variant that is rapidly spreading throughout the country. Chinese officials have acknowledg­ed that curbing this outbreak will be much harder than the others, owing to the fast and asymptomat­ic spread of the variant.

While the number of cases are still relatively low compared to those in the United States and elsewhere, these new outbreaks — happening in cities such as Nanjing, Wuhan, Yangzhou and Zhangjiaji­e — are showcasing the limitation­s of China’s zero-tolerance approach to COVID-19. They may also undermine the ruling Communist Party’s argument that its authoritar­ian style has been an unquestion­able success in the pandemic.

Although the government had to stamp out a delta flare-up in June in Guangdong province, authoritie­s this time are dealing with a much larger spread. Since the current delta outbreak started on July 21, the number of cases has risen to 483, more than the sum total of infections from the first five months of the year. By Tuesday afternoon, the virus had spread to 15 of the 31 provinces and autonomous regions in China.

“Once it reaches so many provinces, it’s very hard to mitigate,” said Chen Xi, an associate professor of public health at Yale University. “I think this would be surprising and shocking to the rest of the world. Such a powerful government has been breached by delta. This will be a very important lesson — we cannot let our guard down.”

Sun Chunlan, a vice premier of China, recently blamed “ideologica­l laxity” for the delta outbreaks and urged officials to step up their prevention efforts. “We cannot relax for a moment,” Ms. Sun said.

Some public health experts in the country say it is time for China to rethink its COVID strategy. In a recent essay, Zhang Wenhong, who advises the Chinese government on dealing with COVID-19, floated the idea of following a model similar to that of Israel and Britain, in which vaccinatio­n rates are high and people are willing to live with infections.

For now, China has stuck to the same strict playbook. Across the country, the government has instructed people not to travel unless necessary. In the cities of Zhangjiaji­e and Zhuzhou, 5.4 million people have been barred from leaving their homes. Roughly 13 million residents in the city of Zhengzhou, the site of deadly floods in July, had to stand in line for virus testing starting during a recent weekend.

In Nanjing, where the recent delta cases first appeared, millions of residents have had to participat­e in four rounds of testing.

“It’s just torturing the masses,” said Jiang Ruoling, a resident in Nanjing, who has been tested four times in the last three weeks. Ms. Jiang, who works in real estate, said she understood the need for testing, but was still critical of officials for failing to control the latest outbreak. “The leaders are actually wasting resources and everyone’s time,” she said.

Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations, said China’s “containmen­t-based” strategy would not work in the long run, particular­ly as new variants continue to emerge. “It will become extremely costly to sustain such an approach,” he said.

And yet China appears unwilling to take any chances. In Wuhan, authoritie­s on Tuesday started testing all 12 million residents after only three cases of the delta variant were discovered. The cities of Sanmenxia and Zhuhai have also begun mass testing. In Beijing, where there are five infections, train service from 23 cities has been canceled.

Jennifer Huang Bouey, a senior China policy expert and an epidemiolo­gist at the RAND Corp., said that even with strict controls, it may not be realistic for officials in China to get these latest cases down to zero. “I think they may have to prepare people for a higher tolerance of COVID,” Ms. Huang said.

Part of the challenge for Beijing is that the Chinesemad­e vaccines being used to immunize the country are not as effective against the delta variant as other shots. The government says it has already administer­ed about 1.69 billion doses. Health officials are now considerin­g giving booster shots to people with compromise­d immune systems as well as older citizens.

Zhong Nanshan, a top epidemiolo­gist, said China’s vaccines are 100% protective against severe disease caused by delta, and 63.2% effective against asymptomat­ic cases. He said he was confident that the latest outbreak would be controlled in about 10 to 14 days, during which officials hope to carry out extensive contact tracing in Nanjing and several other cities in Jiangsu province.

The current delta cases have been linked to a flight from Moscow that landed in Nanjing on July 10. Seven passengers on the flight were infected with the variant. On July 20, nine airport cleaners tested positive. Their infections spread quickly among people who entered the airport, a major transporta­tion hub.

A mother and daughter and a 12-year-old girl who flew to Zhangjiaji­e after transiting for two hours in the Nanjing airport have all tested positive. Three other tourists who traveled to Zhangjiaji­e have been linked to an outbreak in the central city of Changde, after they all took a river cruise. About 27 infections in at least six places have been linked to the boat ride.

Cases have also spread in

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in/Associated Press ?? Visitors wear face masks to protect against COVID-19 as they walk at a tourist shopping street Tuesday in Beijing. Current outbreaks, while still in the hundreds of cases in total, have spread much more widely than previous ones, reaching multiple provinces and cities, including the capital, Beijing.
Mark Schiefelbe­in/Associated Press Visitors wear face masks to protect against COVID-19 as they walk at a tourist shopping street Tuesday in Beijing. Current outbreaks, while still in the hundreds of cases in total, have spread much more widely than previous ones, reaching multiple provinces and cities, including the capital, Beijing.

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