Global Times

Caution urged despite signs of fewer new cases

- By GT staff reporters

More positive signs have emerged as cities nationwide have enhanced measures to contain the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, sparking more speculatio­n on when the inflection point would come. Some analysts urged continuous vigilance as it is still too early to draw a conclusion due to lack of effective therapeuti­cs against the virus.

Daily reported new infections continued to decline for the eighth straight day outside Central China’s Hubei Province, where the epicenter city of Wuhan is located. Newly confirmed cases in Wuhan also dropped below 2,000, the lowest since the start of February, according to official data on Wednesday. The death rate also appeared to slow with an improving recovery rate.

China’s National Health Commission said on Wednesday that the number of daily confirmed novel coronaviru­s pneumonia cases has

seen a 48.2 percent decline between February 4 and Tuesday. Mi Feng, spokespers­on of (NHC), said during a routine press conference that although the country still faces a severe outbreak situation, after authoritie­s launched a series of effective measures, some positive signs have emerged. Meanwhile, the overall recovery rate has been improving in the past few weeks.

The cure rate has exceeded 10 percent, increasing from 1.3 percent on January 27 to 10.6 percent on Tuesday, the NHC said on Wednesday. Some 744 patients were discharged from the hospital on Tuesday.

However, the deadly disease has so far caused 44,653 confirmed infections and 16,067 suspected cases, with the death toll reaching 1,113, exceeding that of the SARS epidemic from 2002 to 2003.

An advance team of WHO medical experts had already arrived in China on Monday to assess the outbreak while the organizati­on held a meeting in Geneva on Tuesday and Wednesday with more than 400 scientists from around the world to coordinate the response to this disease, which WHO director Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s considers as a new disease that the public may only be seeing “the tip of the iceberg.”

While some Chinese analysts hold an optimistic view that the inflection point would soon emerge, the central government’s top medical adviser Zhong Nanshan said the turning point of the epidemic is still difficult to predict.

Zhong said the epidemic peak may appear by mid- to late-February. And in an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, Zhong said he hoped “this outbreak or this event may be over in April.”

Zeng Guang, chief epidemiolo­gist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said on Wednesday that inflection point is just a concept for a specific time and people should not simply think that arrival of an inflection point means the situation is certain.

While an inflection point indicating the epidemic’s downward trend has emerged, an inflection point of growing infections could also occur, Zeng noted.

Rising infections could occur as 160 million Chinese people are still expected to return to cities to resume work in the coming days, with mounting pressure weighing on areas like the Pearl River Delta, Yangtze River Delta and Beijing-TianjinHeb­ei region, which will pose challenges to prevention and control work, the expert said.

All-out efforts

The Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology of the Chinese Academy of Science Wednesday said they had finished the first-phase of a backup vaccine to treat the coronaviru­s.

The first vaccine could be ready in 18 months, Ghebreyesu­s said at a press conference on Tuesday.

“Antiviral drugs, especially some Chinese patent medicines that are recommende­d by medical experts, are scarce at drugstores,” a chief doctor of the emergency department of a hospital in North China’s Shanxi Province told the Global Times on Wednesday.

He added that when he suggested his patients buy antiviral drugs, he was told that the Chinese patent medicines were sold out at many stores. “The supplies of other medicines are available.”

Drug companies in China try to meet the demand.

Workers of a Chinese patent medicine factory in Shanxi started producing medicine on Monday, Wang Jinqing, one of the employees of the factory, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“We are enhancing production of a kind of Chinese patent medicine to donate to Wuhan’s hospitals,” Wang said. The medicine he mentioned has been included in the fifth guidebook on treating the COVID-19 and has been recommende­d as part of medicines to patients in critical conditions.

 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? Customers sit far from each other while eating in a restaurant in Changsha, Central China’s Hunan Province, on Wednesday. The restaurant put clapboards between desks to avoid the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.
Photo: cnsphoto Customers sit far from each other while eating in a restaurant in Changsha, Central China’s Hunan Province, on Wednesday. The restaurant put clapboards between desks to avoid the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.
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