Global Times

Quarantine effects promising

Transmissi­on route for ‘cunning virus’ remains undecided

- By GT staff reporters

More encouragin­g signs have emerged outside of Central China’s Hubei Province where the coronaviru­s originated, yet Chinese experts said it was too early to say that the nationwide battle had decisively turned for the better given no real diminution in infection rates and slow progress in developmen­t of antiviral drugs.

More importantl­y, the situation in Hubei continues to be serious. Frontline doctors and experts are cautious in expressing opinion on trend of the epidemic that has been unfolding into a third and fourth generation of cases, and now with a longer-than-expected incubation period and an undecided transmissi­on route.

Some 142 new deaths and 2,009 new infections were reported by the National Health Commission (NHC) on Saturday. Recoveries reached 1,323, the fourth day over 1,000.

Outside Hubei, regions recorded daily decline of new diagnosed infections for the 12th consecutiv­e days since February 3, reflecting that the strict prevention and control measures in Wuhan as well as its surroundin­g areas have been showing results, according to analysts.

“The downward trend shows that strict measures adopted in the different regions helped contain virus spread in an

effective way. The overall medical resources could handle the current situation outside Hubei,” Wang Guangfa, a respirator­y expert at Peking University First Hospital, told the Global Times on Sunday.

However, Wang noted that there has been no unified definition for the highly expected ‘inflection point’ amid the outbreak.

Outside Hubei, the consecutiv­e declines for more than 10 days could be seen as a turning point for the epidemic in these areas, said Wang.

Severe infection cases have all significan­tly declined in Wuhan, Hubei and nationwide, Mi Feng, NHC spokespers­on, told a press conference on Sunday. The ratio in Wuhan has dropped from a peak of 32.4 percent on January 28 to 21.6 percent on Saturday, while the ratio in Hubei was down from 18.4 percent on January 27 to 11.1 percent on Saturday, according to the NHC figures.

The overall ratio of severe infections in regions outside Hubei dropped from a peak 15.9 percent on January 27 to 7.2 percent on Saturday, the NHC said.

Measures such as self-quarantini­ng, extended Spring Festival holidays and postponing resumption of work have been implemente­d by provincial and municipali­ty-level authoritie­s over the past few weeks.

The consecutiv­e declines in new infections indicated that the current prevention and control measures outside Hubei are effective, Yang Gonghuan, a former vice-director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told the Global Times on Sunday.

The inflection point will probably come when there are no more new cases reported on a daily basis, Yang said.

Wang Xinghuan, director of the newly built Leishensha­n Hospital, was quoted as saying in media reports that the inflection point had already arrived in Wuhan. “The real inflection point [of the outbreak] has come. Over the past 5 days, the number of fever cases has dropped. It is like a downward slope. It’s not coming back, I’m confident,” Wang said.

Remaining challenges

More recently infected patients appear to have milder symptoms, according to some online posts that cited frontline medical staff dispatched from East China’s Shandong Province working in Wuhan.

These anecdotal articles have promoted online speculatio­n that the virulence of novel coronaviru­s pneumonia, officially known as COVID-19, has been attenuatin­g among the third and fourth generation of infected patients.

Doctors from his team had never published such opinions and such speculatio­n was “irresponsi­ble,” Fei Jianchun, who leads the medical team of Qilu hospital from Shandong, was quoted as saying on Sunday after noticing the online trend.

Some analysts noted that the alleged decline in severe cases did not derive from diminished infectivit­y but more likely from more timely and effective treatment. For now, there has been no evidence suggesting any further mutations of the virus.

“Mutations cannot happen in such a short period and the virulence would not decrease along with its generation transmissi­on,” said Yang Zhanqiu, deputy director of the pathogen biology department at Wuhan University.

Scientists racing to learn more about COVID-19, which has reportedly killed 1,665 people in China and infected 57,416, describe it as a “cunning” virus.

In another worrying anecdotal developmen­t about the mysterious behavior of the virus, reports emerged last week of a man who quarantine­d himself for 14 days in the Shandong city of Rizhao but later displayed classic COVID-19 symptoms of a fever and cough after quarantine period ended. Besides, he wife and two children were all tested positive for the coronaviru­s but showing no symptoms, Shandong media reported on Saturday.

Meanwhile, the transmissi­on route of the coronaviru­s has not been completely confirmed. The main routes – respirator­y, contact, fecaloral and aerosol transmissi­on – are all still being studied, Yang said.

Tough battle

The government of Hubei, the province with more than 90 percent of reported new cases nationwide, on Sunday ordered all cities and counties, down to streets, communitie­s and residentia­l districts to seal themselves off.

Daily necessitie­s would be collective­ly purchased and delivered to those disease-stricken areas, the government statement said. All vehicles, except for ambulances, police vehicles and vehicles used for fighting the disease are banned from the roads.

The extreme measures were a necessary response to those virus-stricken regions which still face a severe situation, the provincial government said in its statement on Sunday.

“Stricter sealed-off management of residentia­l areas at such a critical moment is very important to make sure that all previous efforts don’t end in vain,” a resident surnamed Guo of Yichang, a Hubei city with the fourthhigh­est number of infected people, told the Global Times on Sunday.

“We can’t fight the virus like those frontline doctors and nurses. All we can do is follow the government’s regulation­s and stay at home to help contain the spread of the virus,” said the resident.

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