Arab Times

Virus claims life of hospital director in hard-hit Wuhan

Liu is the seventh health worker to die of the COVID-19

- Home will be contacted by their local health department and provided further informatio­n,” it said. The statement added that the virus patient had not reported any illness to the Westerdam’s medical center during the cruise. Twenty people who reported ill

BEIJING, Feb 18, (AP): As a mysterious new virus enveloped central China’s Wuhan early this year, Liu Zhiming mobilized all the resources of his hospital in the city’s Wuchang district to deal with the thousands of sick people arriving daily, threatenin­g to overwhelm the local health care system.

That dedication appears to have cost him his life, with Wuhan’s health bureau announcing Tuesday that he became infected and died despite “all-out” attempts to save him.

Liu is at least the seventh health worker to die of the COVID-19 disease among the more than 1,700 doctors and nurses who have become sick. His death comes as authoritie­s are cautiously cheering a reduction in the number of new daily cases and deaths, along with the results of a study showing most people who contracted the virus experience­d only mild symptoms.

China on Tuesday reported 1,886 new cases and 98 more deaths. That raised the number of deaths in mainland China to 1,868 and the total number of confirmed cases to 72,436.

Japan, meanwhile, announced that 88 more cases of the virus were confirmed aboard a quarantine­d cruise ship, the Diamond Princess, bringing the total to 542 among the 3,700 initially on board.

The outbreak has caused massive disruption­s and China may postpone its biggest political meeting of the year to avoid having people travel to Beijing while the virus is still spreading. One of the automotive industry’s biggest events, China’s biannual auto show, also is being postponed, and many sports and entertainm­ent events have been delayed or canceled.

Despite strict rules on use of masks and safety suits, medical workers have been prominent among the victims, particular­ly in the early stage of the outbreak.

Controllin­g

In announcing Liu’s death, the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission said he had taken part in the battle against the virus from the start and had made “important contributi­ons in the work of fighting and controllin­g” the virus.

During that process, “unfortunat­ely he became infected and passed away at 10:54 Tuesday morning at the age of 51 after allout efforts to save him failed,” the commission said.

The Hubei native had graduated from Wuhan University’s School of Medicine in 1991 and went on to a career as a chief physician, neurosurge­on and administra­tor.

Earlier this month, public outrage was stirred by the death from the virus of Wuhan doctor Li Wenliang, who had been threatened by police after releasing word of an outbreak of an unusual respirator­y illness in December before it had spread widely and the city was placed under quarantine.

Wuhan and its surroundin­g cities in Hubei province have accounted

This undated electron microscope image made available by the US National Institutes of Health in February 2020 shows the Novel Coronaviru­s SARS –

CoV-2. Also known as 2019-nCoV, the virus causes COVID-19. The sample was isolated from a patient in the US. (AP)

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, Feb 18, (AP): The feel-good story of how Cambodia allowed a cruise ship to dock after it was turned away elsewhere in Asia for fear of spreading a new disease took an unfortunat­e turn after a passenger later tested positive for the virus.

News over the weekend that an 83-year-old American woman who was on the ship and flew from Cambodia to Malaysia was found to be carrying the virus froze further movement of the passengers and crew of the Westerdam. Some are in hotels in Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh, while others are still aboard the ship.

The American woman was among several hundred passengers who were flown out of Cambodia on Friday and Saturday. According to authoritie­s in Malaysia, 143 continued their flights home from that country, while the woman and her 84-year-old husband, who was diagnosed with pneumonia, remained behind for treatment.

The dispersal around the world of passengers from the ship with possible exposure to the new coronaviru­s has sparked concern.

“I think now given that there is a confirmed case that is suspected to have acquired infection on board the ship, the other passengers should be asked to quarantine

for the vast majority of infections and deaths, prompting the government to enforce a travel themselves at home and alert health authoritie­s if they develop fever or respirator­y symptoms within the 14 days since disembarka­tion,” said Professor Benjamin Cowling from the School of Public Health at Hong Kong University.

Dr Gagandeep Kang, executive director of India’s Translatio­nal Health Science and Technology Institute, said it is unclear whether the woman’s infection would result in an outbreak in another part of the world. The virus that causes the disease named COVID-19 has been confirmed in about two dozen countries, with most cases concentrat­ed in China, where it emerged in December.

“We will have to wait and see,” she said, adding that it would depend on where the woman got the infection, and at what stage of the infection she was in while in contact with other people.

The ship’s operator, Holland America Line, said in a statement Monday that Cambodian health officials were on the ship testing the 255 guests and 747 crew who were awaiting clearance, and that guests currently staying at a Phnom Penh hotel had all been tested.

“At this time, no other guests or crew on board or at the hotel have reported any symptoms of the illness. Guests who have already returned

ban that has spread to other parts of the country and now includes a mandatory 14-day self-quarantine period for anyone traveling outside their home district. Two new prefabrica­ted hospitals have been built to deal with the overflow in Wuhan and thousands of medical staff have been brought in from other parts of the country to help.

A study by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention found more than 80% of the cases studied were mild and the number of new infections seemed to be falling since early this month. World Health Organizati­on Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said it was too early to know if the reported decline would continue, however. “Every scenario is still on the table,” he said at a news conference.

The seeming drop in the number of new cases follows a large spike last week after Hubei province began counting cases by doctors’ diagnoses without waiting for laboratory test results. Health authoritie­s there said the change was meant to get patients treated faster.

The Chinese study examined 44,672 cases of the disease that were confirmed in the mainland as of Feb 11. Severe symptoms such as pneumonia occurred in 14% of them and critical illness in 5%. The fatality rate was 2.3%2.8% for males versus 1.7% for females.

Causes

The death rate is lower than for SARS and MERS, diseases caused by coronaviru­ses related to the one that causes COVID-19. But the new virus ultimately could prove more deadly if it spreads to far more people than the others did. The COVID-19 cases include relatively few children, and the risk of death rises with age or other health problems and was higher in Hubei province versus elsewhere in China.

The study warned that while cases seem to have been declining since Feb 1, that could change as people return to work and school after the Lunar New Year holidays, typically the biggest travel period for Chinese travelers. Beijing and other government­s have sought to forestall that by extending the holiday break, encouragin­g telecommut­ing and selfquaran­tines and conducting health checks on travelers.

Travel to and from the worsthit central China region was associated with the initial cases of COVID-19 confirmed abroad. But Japan, Singapore and South Korea have identified new cases without clear ties to China or previously known patients, raising concern of the virus spreading locally.

The largest number of cases outside China is the 542 among passengers and crew of the Diamond Princess cruise ship quarantine­d at a port near Tokyo. The infections have led to heavy criticism of the decision to quarantine passengers on the vessel.

The US evacuated 328 American passengers, with most of them placed in a 14-day quarantine at military bases in California and Texas. Thirteen who tested positive for the virus were taken to hospitals in California and Nebraska, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said any more passengers who show symptoms will be taken to hospitals.

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