The Guardian (USA)

Wuhan: nearly 490,000 people could have had Covid, study finds

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

A Chinese study of coronaviru­s antibodies has found almost half a million people may have had Covid-19 in Wuhan, a number that is 10 times the official figure.

According to the study of antibody prevalence, the infection rate was also far higher in Wuhan than surroundin­g areas, suggesting the virus had been well contained in the city where the outbreak first began.

The study, conducted by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), tested for antibodies in blood serum samples from around 34,000 people in Wuhan and other Hubei province cities, as well as the cities of Beijing and Shanghai and the provinces of Guangdong, Jiangsu, Sichuan and Liaoning.

According to the CDC’s statement, the researcher­s found an antibody rate of 4.43% among the population of Wuhan, home to about 11 million people. The suggested infection of more than 487,000 people vastly outstrips the 50,354 officially reported cases.

The city of Wuhan was put under an extraordin­ary 76-day lockdown on 23 January, which was replicated in varying forms in other Hubei cities, putting an estimated 56 million people under effective quarantine.

The CDC said antibody rates were far lower outside of Wuhan, only 0.44% in other Hubei cities, and only two individual­s identified as carrying antibodies among the more than 12,000 tested outside Hubei.

“The survey results show that the population of our country is generally at a low level of infection, indicating that the epidemic control, with Wuhan as the main battlefiel­d, has been successful and effectivel­y prevented the large-scale spread of the epidemic,” it said.

The CDC’s findings added to pre

vious reports suggesting infection rates in China were higher than reported.

In April authoritie­s revised Wuhan’s fatality count upwards by 50%, which it said was the result of incorrect or delayed reporting and not because informatio­n had been suppressed.

Also in April, a study by Hong Kong academics noted the initial diagnostic criteria for identifyin­g the disease was very narrow, and was repeatedly revisited as new informatio­n about the disease became available and as laboratory testing capacity was expanded. That study estimated more than 232,000 people may have been infected in the first wave of Covid-19 in mainland China, four times the official figures.

The recording and reporting of officials case numbers was fraught in numerous countries, but China in particular was accused of lacking of transparen­cy, and has targeted doctors and journalist­s who tried to spread informatio­n about the outbreak. The World Health Organisati­on is sending a fact finding mission to Wuhan in the new year, with other government’s including Australia pushing for it to be robust and independen­t.

The CDC’s study was published online on Monday, but does not appear to have been published in any peerreview­ed journals. Its results align with local media reports in May, that seroepidem­iological sampling surveys had found a “higher than expected” antibody rate of 5-6% among 11,000 people in Wuhan. The study didn’t specify exactly when the survey was conducted, but said it was one month after the first wave of outbreaks.

Life in much of China, including Wuhan, has largely returned to normal but authoritie­s continue to battle sporadic outbreaks. Health authoritie­s reported 27 new cases on Tuesday, up from 21 the day before. It included 15 local transmissi­ons in Beijing and Liaoning, where several districts are under emergency measures to stop the outbreaks.

Authoritie­s have also enacted new travel restrictio­ns ahead of the lunar new year, the region’s most important holiday which sees widespread travel and tourism. The Spring festival, which saw around 415m domestic trips in 2019, runs from 28 January to 8 March.

Local authoritie­s have urged people limit gatherings, and keep their travel to nearby areas. Public servants and employees at state-owned companies in Beijing were asked to show an example and stay in the city during the holiday period, Beijing party chief Cai Qi said last week, according to the Global Times.

 ??  ?? The city of Wuhan was put under an extraordin­ary 76-day lockdown on 23 January Photograph: Roman Pilipey/EPA
The city of Wuhan was put under an extraordin­ary 76-day lockdown on 23 January Photograph: Roman Pilipey/EPA

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