BusinessMirror

Virus flares again in Wuhan as Delta challenges China’s pandemic defense

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CHINA is confrontin­g its broadest Covid-19 outbreak since the pathogen first emerged there in late 2019, with the Delta variant spreading to places that had been declared virus-free for many months, including original epicenter Wuhan.

Delta has broken through the country’s virus defenses, which are some of the strictest in the world, and reached nearly half of China’s 32 provinces in a number of weeks. While the overall number of infections—more than 300 so far—is still lower than Covid resurgence­s elsewhere, the wide spread indicates that the variant is moving quickly.

It’s the biggest challenge to China’s strategy since the virus was first detected in December 2019 in Wuhan, the central Chinese city that saw the world’s first lethal outbreak. The country’s strict anti-virus measures, which include mass testing as soon as a case appears, aggressive contact tracing, widespread use of quarantine­s and targeted lockdowns, have crushed more than 30 previous flareups over the past year.

The arrival of the more infectious Delta variant, however, is testing even that approach. The new strain may be exploiting an easing off in masking and social distancing in some places, since much of the country has been Covid-free for months. That, along with increased travel for summer vacation, created a viable environmen­t for Delta to gain a foothold.

China reported 99 infections on Monday, including 44 who tested positive but have no symptoms. By number of cases, it’s the biggest outbreak since a flareup in Hebei province in northern China in January, when 2,000 people were infected.

The broad spread is more concerning, with infections having reached the highly protected capital, Beijing, and Wuhan, whose virus-free status has been a source of pride in China. The city said Monday that seven migrant workers tested positive, the first cases in Wuhan since China brought its original wave under control by locking down the city of some 11 million and the surroundin­g Hubei province.

The initial delta infection arrived via an overseas flight from Moscow into the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing in mid-july, and spread on to a group of airport cleaning staff. Within weeks, cases have also popped up as far away as Hainan island in China’s south, 1,900 kilometers (1,180 miles) from Nanjing.

China’s vaccinatio­n rate is close to 60 percent and among the highest in the world, but it remains to be seen whether the country’s locally developed shots can slow Delta’s spread.

Delta challenge

MOST of those infected in Nanjing were immunized, and the vaccines—which have been found less effective than Messenger RNA shots in clinical trials—do appear to be providing protection, with only 4 percent of those infected in this current wave battling severe disease so far. Many of those have pre-existing conditions such as asthma, diabetes or high blood pressure, Guo Yanhong, an official with the National Health Commission, said at a briefing in Beijing on Saturday.

While all Covid vaccines are proving less effective against Delta, concerns are high that nonmrna vaccines like the Chinese ones and Astrazenec­a Plc’s shot will be less able to slow transmissi­on.

State-owned Sinopharm said its inactivate­d Covid-19 shot, given widely in China, is 68 percent effective against Delta, citing a study in Sri Lanka. Sinovac Biotech Ltd., the other major Chinese supplier, said the antibodies induced by its inactivate­d Covid vaccine can still neutralize the Delta strain in laboratory studies, the state-run Global Times reported, without providing more detail.

Delta is providing a reality check for the world, especially countries that thought they were emerging from the pandemic through virus containmen­t or high vaccinatio­n levels. Last week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed its earlier position and said fully vaccinated people should go back to wearing masks indoors in places where infections are rising. Australia, which like China had managed to snuff out Covid with strict border curbs, is battling its own Delta-driven resurgence, with major cities back in lockdown.

Flooded city

“DELTA accounts for 80 percent of cases in the US, and they reinstitut­ed a requiremen­t for masks,” said Wang Huaqing, chief immunizati­on expert at the Chinese CDC, at the Saturday briefing. “That means Delta’s spread is severe and personal protection can not be slackened even with vaccinatio­n.”

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