China Daily

Localities urged to rectify COVID control malpractic­es

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The State Council’s Joint Prevention and Control Mechanism reiterated its commitment to cracking down on COVID-19 control malpractic­es on Saturday, and urged localities to rectify improper implementa­tion of the 20 recently adjusted measures to improve epidemic control.

Some local government­s have taken overt measures, such as ordering widespread lockdowns, and some have displayed a lax attitude toward the disease. Both approaches are wrong, according to the mechanism.

Arbitraril­y imposing extra COVID-19 restrictio­ns and other problems that have emerged following the release of the 20 adjusted measures on Nov 11, must be firmly addressed, it added.

Wang Liping, a researcher at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said that the adjusted measures not only require local officials to cope with outbreaks in a more scientific manner, but also guide them to be more considerat­e in implementi­ng them. “We’ve laid out very clear provisions, so as to resolve problems in community management and secure the basic livelihood­s of affected residents,” she said in an interview with China Central Television on Saturday.

Wang said the National Health Commission and the National Administra­tion of Disease Prevention and Control have sent working groups to urge and guide localities on the strict implementa­tion of the ninth COVID-19 control protocols and the 20 adjusted measures. More resolute measures are also being urged to curb rising infections.

To try and guarantee rigorous enforcemen­t of the new measures, Hefei, capital of Anhui province, has released a list of 16 provisions. They include trying to ensure the normal functionin­g of social service centers, logistics parks and markets during outbreaks by rotating shifts of workers. Door-todoor services for people quarantine­d at home have also been strengthen­ed.

In Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, elderly care facilities in the city’s Jinjiang district have been supplied with first aid vehicles to ensure that seniors have access to prompt treatment.

“We have sent two supervisio­n teams daily to inspect irregular implementa­tion of new COVID-19 prevention and control measures at elderly care facilities — as well as potential fire safety and food safety risks — and urge quick rectificat­ion,” said Tang Haiyan, head of the district’s civil affairs bureau.

Guo Yanhong, director of the National Health Commission’s health emergency response department, said on Sunday that hospitals in virus-hit areas should not be shut down casually, especially department­s for first aid, dialysis, surgeries, births and intensive care.

The domestic epidemic situation remains severe and complicate­d, with the Chinese mainland reporting 3,648 local confirmed infections and 35,858 local asymptomat­ic infections on Saturday, according to the commission.

Wang, the China CDC researcher, said the key to fighting the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant is promptly and precisely detecting infections in communitie­s, tracking close contacts and designatin­g at-risk areas during the initial phase of an outbreak.

“Epidemiolo­gical investigat­ors, transport staff and nucleic acid testing personnel should cooperate and exchange informatio­n, so as to grab the golden window of opportunit­y of 24 hours to prevail over the virus,” Wang of China CDC said.

In addition to the 20 adjusted measures, Wang said the mechanism has also released four technical guidelines to standardiz­e nucleic acid testing protocols, which requires launching mass screening in the first three days of a lockdown of high-risk areas.

After completing one round of testing in an area, disease control workers must wait until at-risk people are transporte­d to designated COVID-19 or makeshift hospitals before initiating the next round, she said.

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