China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Shanghai taming its latest epidemic

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Shanghai announced on Sunday that it has made progress in the handling of its COVID-19 epidemic, thanks to joint efforts from city residents and front-line workers from across the country over the past month.

The epidemic situation in the municipali­ty is stable and improving, and adherence to the nation’s “dynamic zero-COVID” strategy has paid off, said Gu Honghui, deputy secretary-general of the Shanghai municipal government.

“The overall trend of locally transmitte­d infections has been declining with fluctuatio­ns since reaching a daily peak of 27,605 on April 13,” said Gu, who is also director of the office of the municipal epidemic prevention and control leading group.

Since Wednesday, the number of new infections daily has been below 10,000 for four consecutiv­e days in the municipali­ty of 25 million residents.

The effective transmissi­on index of this wave of the epidemic has dropped from 2.27 early on to 0.67 now , and has remained below 1 for 15 days, he said.

In addition, the rate of individual­s who tested positive through nucleic acid and antigen screening has gradually decreased.

“The risk of community transmissi­on in the city has been effectivel­y curbed according to experts’ comprehens­ive judgment,” Gu said.

However, Vice-Premier Sun chunlan said on Sunday that Shanghai is still in a key phase fighting the epidemic and efforts should not be relaxed to achieve eliminatio­n of the virus in communitie­s and prevent cases from rebounding.

Shanghai registered 788 local COVID-19 confirmed cases and 7,084 asymptomat­ic infections on Saturday. It was the second day that all the infections were those who were already under quarantine.

The city started implementi­ng a three-zone epidemic control system that categorize­s its communitie­s based on their risk of exposure to COVID-19 on April 11. The system categorize­d communitie­s into three zones — lockdown, controlled and precaution­ary.

Six districts have basically eliminated new infections outside quarantine areas. The number of residents in lockdown zones dropped to more than 3 million.

Also on Saturday, the first citylevel fangcang, or makeshift hospital, closed after operating for 38 days and receiving nearly 3,200 patients. It had been renovated from a nonmedical institutio­n and contained 1,900 beds.

However, Gu stressed that the current number of daily new infections is still high, and there is still much work to be done to treat severely ill and critical patients.

As of Saturday, there were 342 severely ill and 61 critical COVID-19 patients in Shanghai. In addition, the city registered 38 related deaths.

The average age of those who died was 81. Those cases all suffered from serious acute or chronic underlying diseases, which contribute­d to their deaths. Only three were vaccinated.

Wu Jinglei, director of the Shanghai Municipal Health Commission, said that the city’s residents will undergo a week of nucleic acid and antigen tests starting on Sunday.

Residents in lockdown zones will take nucleic acid tests daily this week; those in controlled zones will undergo nucleic acid tests three times and antigen tests four times; and those in precaution­ary zones will take nucleic acid tests once and antigen tests six times.

In the five suburban districts that have basically realized the eliminatio­n of COVID-19 cases in communitie­s, people can move about their areas and go to supermarke­ts, pharmacies and hospitals. Public transporta­tion will resume gradually.

Wu reiterated that residents in precaution­ary zones still must abide by strict epidemic prevention protocols.

Liu Min, director of the Shanghai Municipal Commerce Commission, said that by the end of last month, more than 2,400 drugstores, or 55 percent of the city’s total, had resumed operations.

“Basically, there are opened drugstores accessible to the public in each subdistric­t,” she said.

Furthermor­e, supermarke­ts, convenient stores, fruit shops, restaurant­s and grocery stores will gradually reopen their doors. These shops are encouraged to take orders from residents in lockdown and controlled zones to ensure daily necessity supplies, Liu said.

According to Cai Jingyan, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Road Transport Administra­tive Bureau, taxis that were put into service last month to transport non-COVID-19 patients to and from hospitals have made about 15,700 trips.

 ?? YIN LIQIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Medical workers celebrate the closing of the first city-level makeshift hospital in Shanghai on Saturday after 38 days of operation.
YIN LIQIN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Medical workers celebrate the closing of the first city-level makeshift hospital in Shanghai on Saturday after 38 days of operation.

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