The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

China boosts virus testing on packaging of imported food

But no offifficia­ls mention any confifirme­d cases of such transmissi­on.

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China is stepping up virus inspection­s on imported food packaging as cooler weather brings new waves of coronaviru­s infections in several overseas countries, Chinese offifficia­ls said Wednesday.

Packaging is “not exempt” from carrying the virus, deputy director of the National Food Safet y Risk Assessment Center Li Ning told reporters.

Though the coronaviru­s positivity rate for tests on packages was just 0.48 per 10,000, that proportion is increasing along with the number of tests being conducted, Li said.

She said the virus could “to some extent” be passed to humans from packaging, although neither Li or any other offifficia­l at Wednesday’s news conference mentioned any such confifirme­d cases.

Chinese testing of packaging has stirred some controvers­y, with exporters of frozen food items questionin­g the science behind it and whether it amounts to an unfair trade barrier. China has defended the practice as an additional measure to prevent the virus’s spread.

Through mask mandates, mass testing, lockdowns and case tracing, China has largely eliminated cases of local transmissi­on, causing it to place extra attention on infection threats from outside the country. China’s National Health Administra­tion on Wednesday reported five new cases, all imported, bringing China’s total to 86,469, including 4,634 deaths.

Stopping the virus’s spread is “like fighting a war,” demanding fast, decisive action, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention Chief Epidemiolo­gist Wu Zunyou said.

“Victory only comes after the entire country is united in its efforts. On this front, technical strategy, strong leadership and coordinate­d action all play important roles,” Wu said.

The coronaviru­s is known to be more stable in colder, drier conditions, and disinfecti­ng packaging at freezing temperatur­es creates “special challenges,” said Zhang Liubo, chief disinfecti­on officer for China’s CDC.

Even when disinfecti­on works and the virus is no longer infectious, remnants can remain on the packaging, leading to a positive test, Zhang said.

However, “as of present, we have yet to discover any infection caused by direct consumptio­n of products from this cold chain,” Zhang said.

Through mask mandates, mass testing, lockdowns and case tracing, China largely has eliminated cases of local transmissi­on, causing it to place extra attention on infection threats from outside the country.

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