Global Times

Beijing doubles quarantine period to 28 days

- By Zhao Yusha

Beijing has doubled the COVID-19 quarantine period from 14 days to 28 as scientists fear that the type of coronaviru­s that set off Beijing’s recent outbreak in Xinfadi market may be more contagious than the one in Wuhan.

Most people under quarantine in Beijing are workers from the beef and lamb section of the Xinfadi market, which makes them a high-risk group for COVID-19 infection, said Shi Guoqing, an expert from China’s National Health Commission (NHC), at a Monday conference.

Shi said some of those who were infected had either shown no symptoms at all or demonstrat­ed atypical symptoms, so it’s hard to judge if they had contracted the virus simply by observing their symptoms.

Moreover, because some infected had an initial negative test result, solely relying on a negative nucleic acid test, and no abnormalit­y being found within 14 days, are not sufficient to confirm if they were infected, said Shi, noting it is possible they would spread the virus to others once allowed to move freely.

Chu Junwei, deputy head of Beijing’s Fengtai district, said on Sunday that the lockdown period for quarantine­d persons who were connected with the beef and lamb market section has risen to 28 days.

Shi noted on Monday that this group of people will receive a nucleic acid test after being quarantine­d for 14 days, and another test after the 28-day quarantine, just in case. Shi said that 33.8 percent of the confirmed cases in Beijing were workers from the beef and lamb section of the Xinfadi market, while 20.5 percent were visitors to this area.

Yang Zhanqiu, deputy director of the pathogen biology department at Wuhan University, told the Global Times on Monday that many people were infected in Beijing within a short period, and all were related to Xinfadi. This means that this strain is more contagious than the one found in Wuhan, and it is possible a “super spreader may exist in the Xinfadi market.”

It is safer to impose stricter measures on high-risk groups, Yang said.

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