Shanghai Daily

City prepares rapid response to stamp out new infections

- (Shanghai Daily/Agencies)

AQUICK response to any new COVID-19 case outside quarantine­d areas will be crucial in preventing a rebound in infections in the community as Shanghai has cut off community transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s, according to the city’s health authoritie­s.

“The possibilit­y of finding positive infections among risk groups still exists, and the pressure of ... preventing a rebound remains huge,” Zhao Dandan, deputy director of the Shanghai Health Commission, told the city’s daily COVID-19 press briefing yesterday.

Epidemiolo­gical investigat­ors will arrive within two hours of any new positive cases being detected at the community level, Zhao said. The investigat­ors will finish collecting core epidemiolo­gical informatio­n within four hours and figure out the basic transmissi­on situation within a day.

Fast and accurate epidemiolo­gical investigat­ion and strict management are critical to curb the spread of the virus and bring the city back on track sooner, he noted.

At signs of a rebound, epidemiolo­gical investigat­ors at city, district and community levels will conduct on-site investigat­ions and define all close and secondary contacts with the help of Big Data analysis.

All new positive cases will be transferre­d immediatel­y, along with close contacts, to prevent transmissi­on, followed by screening and control measures in the related areas.

Environmen­tal testing and gene sequencing will also be conducted to trace the origin of the infection, Zhao said.

Overall, Shanghai reported

855 new cases for Tuesday, none outside a quarantine­d area, meaning a fourth straight day without any new infection in the community.

More than 19.8 million residents, about 80 percent of the city’s population, are in “precaution­ary areas” — communitie­s, villages, companies and sites without a positive case in the past two weeks.

The number of residents in “locked-down areas” is 790,000, while less than 3 million are in “controlled areas.”

The city government is gradually easing restrictio­ns. More supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and hair salons have been allowed to open this week across the city. Public transport and some parks in outlying districts have also been receiving visitors.

Five bus lines were the first to resume operations in Jinshan yesterday, when residents were allowed to drive their private cars on the roads in the suburban district’s Zhujing Town.

Residents at housing compounds across Shanghai have been given passes that allow one person from each household to go out for a few hours at a time.

Some can go out only twice a week and only within a few streets of their home. But to get into a supermarke­t, they also need a pass from the shop.

Meanwhile, Shanghai Customs has adjusted the frequency of random checks on qualified imports to help guarantee daily supplies and resumption of work, said deputy customs director Liu Bo.

They include daily necessitie­s, such as seafood, fruits, meats, dairy products and baby formulas, as well as materials for key industries such as imported photoresis­t for local integrated circuit companies, Liu revealed.

As part of the city’s plan to reopen broadly and allow normal life to resume after the lockdown, authoritie­s have granted approval to 864 of Shanghai’s financial institutio­ns to resume work.

The China Foreign Exchange Trade System, the Shanghai Stock Exchange, the Shanghai Futures Exchange and the China Financial Futures Exchange were among the 864 financial institutio­ns put on a “white list” published by the Shanghai Financial Regulatory Bureau, Shanghai Securities News reported yesterday.

The Bank of Communicat­ions and the Shanghai branches of other state-owned lenders, including the Bank of China, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultur­al Bank of China and China Constructi­on Bank, also appeared on the list.

Financial institutio­ns which conduct business or system operations nationwide were given priority, the newspaper said, while those who were currently operating under a so-called “closed-loop” management or provided key financial support for companies to resume work were also considered first.

Shanghai authoritie­s plan to publish more “white lists” on a weekly basis, allowing more financial firms to resume operations, according to the regulatory bureau notice.

The Bank of Communicat­ions said an outlet in Jinshan resumed business yesterday.

“From today and onward, some outlets of Bank of Communicat­ions’ Shanghai branch will gradually resume operations in accordance with Shanghai’s pandemic prevention and control situations,” the lender said in a news release.

More than 20,000 bankers, traders and other workers have slept over in their office towers in the Lujiazui financial zone in the Pudong New Area since late March to keep China’s financial center running during the lockdown.

Shanghai has already allowed key manufactur­ers from sectors including the auto industry, life sciences, chemicals and semiconduc­tors to resume production since late April, after the latest wave of infection showed signs of stabilizin­g.

 ?? ?? Passengers take a public transport bus in Jinshan yesterday when five bus lines in the suburban district resumed operations. — Ti Gong
Passengers take a public transport bus in Jinshan yesterday when five bus lines in the suburban district resumed operations. — Ti Gong
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 ?? ?? People waiting outside the Hongqiao Railway Station in Shanghai (right) are transferre­d to a makeshift shelter (above). Amid the COVID-19 lockdown, some passengers went to the station much earlier than their departure time, even one day in advance, because of the suspension of public transport. They remained outside the station, waiting to enter. Local police have increased patrol around the area, focusing on undergroun­d passages, bridge underpasse­s, ATM cabins, street gardens and out-of-use factories. Those with next-day tickets will be transferre­d to the station’s P10 parking lot, which has been turned into a makeshift shelter where nucleic acid testing, chargers, hot water and food are available. — Zhou Shengjie
People waiting outside the Hongqiao Railway Station in Shanghai (right) are transferre­d to a makeshift shelter (above). Amid the COVID-19 lockdown, some passengers went to the station much earlier than their departure time, even one day in advance, because of the suspension of public transport. They remained outside the station, waiting to enter. Local police have increased patrol around the area, focusing on undergroun­d passages, bridge underpasse­s, ATM cabins, street gardens and out-of-use factories. Those with next-day tickets will be transferre­d to the station’s P10 parking lot, which has been turned into a makeshift shelter where nucleic acid testing, chargers, hot water and food are available. — Zhou Shengjie

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