China Daily

Spread of virus slows down nationwide

Rate of severely ill patients drops across country, commission spokesman says

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Increasing signs of a stable slowdown in the spread of novel coronaviru­s pneumonia in China appeared over the weekend, as health authoritie­s pledged to maintain their assertive measures in Hubei province to avert the virus flaring up again at its epicenter.

Outside Hubei, the number of new infections nationwide had dropped for 12 consecutiv­e days as of Saturday. In Hubei, new cases had declined for three days in a row, and the number of suspected cases awaiting diagnosis is also shrinking, according to figures released by the National Health Commission.

Meanwhile, the rate of severely ill patients has dropped significan­tly across the country, as in Wuhan, the provincial capital of Hubei, the proportion of patients in serious condition decreased to 21.6 percent on Sunday from a high of 32.4 percent on Jan 28, commission spokesman Mi Feng said on Sunday.

Across Hubei, the proportion of severe cases decreased to 11.1 percent on Saturday from the peak of 18.4 percent on Jan 27, and the percentage of severe cases across the rest of the country declined to 7.2 percent on Saturday, he said.

This was made possible by strengthen­ed medical assistance, as well as centralize­d isolation and treatment, Mi said. “A substantia­l foundation has been laid to further increase the recovery rate and reduce the mortality rate,” he added.

However, the positive signals are not eclipsing the fact that the overall confirmed cases and fatalities nationwide are still on the rise, and some instances of infection clusters in Hubei province are particular­ly concerning, according to health officials.

The commission registered 2,009 new confirmed infections and 142 additional deaths on the Chinese mainland on Saturday. In all, 68,500 people on the Chinese mainland have been infected and 1,665 have died.

The majority of new infections and fatalities are still concentrat­ed in Hubei province, where 1,843 confirmed patients and 139 new deaths were added on Saturday.

Wang Hesheng, head of Hubei Provincial Health Commission, said on Saturday that refined control measures have subdued the outbreak and earned precious time for the country to brace for the most strenuous stretch in the fight against the disease.

“Wuhan remains the primary battlefiel­d,” he said, adding that the authoritie­s must “make sure that no city will become a second Wuhan” and ensure that “zero patients would go without treatment”.

He spoke at a news conference held in Wuhan by the State Council Informatio­n Office.

Liang Wannian, head of the commission’s institutio­nal reform department who also leads the commission’s disease control team, said on Saturday that a handful of provincial-level regions, including Shanxi, Jilin and Gansu provinces, had recorded fewer than five new cases for three consecutiv­e days.

“In Wuhan, the rate of new infections had been slowing down since Feb 1. But for other regions in the province, including Xiaogan and Huanggang, the rate remains high, and the numbers of clustered infections in families and imported cases are relatively large,” he said, adding that the risk of sustained transmissi­on and a sudden surge in cases is considered low.

“At present, disease control work in Hubei province is at the most critical stage, and the tension is mounting,” Liang said. “We must keep a firm grip on the region.”

On Sunday, the Hubei provincial government announced the upgrading of its containmen­t efforts, by implementi­ng the strictest, aroundthe-clock lockdown policies across all villages, communitie­s, neighborho­ods and residentia­l areas.

All non-essential public and group activities in Hubei will be halted, and a widespread screening that covers all residents will be launched, according to a government announceme­nt.

The announceme­nt reiterates that infected patients and people with fever who cannot be ruled out from contractin­g the virus must be isolated in designated facilities.

The use of all vehicles is prohibited except for public transporta­tion and those for epidemic control purposes, such as cars carrying medical staff, delivering daily necessitie­s, ambulances, and vehicles from the sanitation, firefighti­ng and public security department­s, it said.

In addition, there are 39,447 infected patients who need medical care in Hubei, with 8,439 of them in serious condition and 1,957 in critical condition, according to the provincial health commission.

Wang, head of the provincial health commission, said the authoritie­s will continue to repurpose wards in some hospitals into designated centers for seriously ill patients and transform public facilities into temporary treatment centers.

As of Saturday, nine temporary hospitals with more than 6,900 beds were operationa­l, receiving over 5,600 patients with mild symptoms, Wang said.

It is the United States that poses threats to China through repeated suppressio­n, accusation and smearing, and not the other way around, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in an exclusive interview with Reuters on Friday.

Wang cited cases — such as the US Congress reviewing and adopting bills that interfere in China’s internal affairs, US naval ships and airplanes used to flex muscles at China’s doorstep and the US suppressin­g Chinese companies — and said the issue is how to address the US threat to China.

In the far-ranging interview in Berlin, Wang said that countries with different social systems will not pose a threat to each other as long as they adhere to the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter, in particular the principle of noninterfe­rence in internal affairs, and respect each other’s sovereignt­y.

Asked whether the novel coronaviru­s pneumonia epidemic would influence the recently signed China-US phase one trade deal, Wang said China is ready to implement the deal, and he urged the US to fulfill its commitment.

The epidemic will affect China’s economy temporaril­y, but afterward, the vitality of the Chinese economy will rebound and the capacity of the Chinese market will continue to expand, he said.

There will be better conditions to implement the consensus in the deal as China deepens reforms and expands opening-up in accordance with its own timetable and road map, he said.

However, Wang added, the US curb on movement of people between the two countries will objectivel­y bring some difficulti­es to implementi­ng the agreement.

Wang said he hopes the US will respect the World Health Organizati­on’s recommenda­tion and avoids unnecessar­y travel and trade restrictio­ns.

Regarding US accusation­s against Chinese telecommun­ications company Huawei, Wang said they are neither reasonable nor moral.

The US cannot accept other countries’ companies displaying economic and technologi­cal talent because it doesn’t want to see other countries and their businesses develop and flourish, Wang said.

Fu Ying, vice-chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of China’s 13th National People’s Congress, dismissed US accusation­s that Huawei poses a threat to global political stability at the Munich Security Conference on Friday.

Speaker of the US House of Representa­tives Nancy Pelosi said at the conference that China is seeking to export digital autocracy through Huawei.

While introducin­g technologi­es from Western countries, China has maintained its political system and it is not threatened by these technologi­es, Fu said, asking Pelosi, “Do you really think the democratic system is so fragile it could be threatened by this single high-tech company, Huawei?”

The US has heavily lobbied other countries to follow suit and boycott the Chinese company. German lawmakers remain divided on the Huawei question, and the United Kingdom ruled last month that Huawei may continue to operate in a restricted capacity.

There is no doubt that all countries should safeguard the security of their own telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture, and also companies from all countries should be offered a level playing field and non-discrimina­tory business environmen­t, Wang said in a Q&A session after his speech at the security conference.

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