China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Unvaccinat­ed elderly still at highest risk

Only 65% of people aged 80 and above have been inoculated against COVID-19

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Expanding COVID-19 vaccinatio­n coverage, milder variants in circulatio­n and robust treatment systems have all contribute­d to the very low rate of severe cases during the recent wave of outbreaks hitting China, experts and officials said.

However, serious infections are highly concentrat­ed in the elderly with underlying diseases and even the smallest risk can be amplified across China’s huge elderly population. Despite previous campaigns aimed at increasing vaccinatio­n and booster shots for the elderly, too many remain unvaccinat­ed and so a further push is being urged in order to protect them.

As of Sunday, the mainland had a total of 22,210 confirmed local infections — including 107 severe cases — and 207,376 asymptomat­ic local cases that are under medical observatio­n, according to the National Health Commission.

In the past week, the daily virus tally has surged to over 20,000 for five consecutiv­e days. The increase in severe infections was minimal by comparison, hovering at around a dozen each day with 26 at most, according to the commission’s data.

The first deaths in nearly half a year — three seniors aged at least 87 — were also reported in Beijing over the weekend. They all had preexistin­g conditions such as chronic cardiovasc­ular disease, high blood pressure or had suffered strokes in the past, and their COVID-19 symptoms were only mild, said health authoritie­s in the capital.

Zhang Wenhong, a top infectious disease expert, said on Friday that with the rollout of effective disease control policies and the natural evolution of the novel coronaviru­s, the death rate of dominant strains is very low and new mutations appear to exert less harm.

But the virus is still transmitti­ng very fast. “It has been proven that booster shots can provide an impetus for us to eventually exit the pandemic, and China should continue to push for mass vaccinatio­n, with a focus on protecting vulnerable groups.”

Zhang Boli, an academicia­n with the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and a noted traditiona­l Chinese medicine expert, said as the overall vaccinatio­n rate across China has topped 90 percent, a basic shape of herd immunity against the disease has been formed, which significan­tly pushes down the rate of severe cases.

“In addition, China’s strategy of emphasizin­g preventing new infections, as well as detecting and treating cases as early as possible, has also played a key role in reducing severe cases,” he said during an event on Thursday.

Guo Yanhong, head of the commission’s health emergency response bureau, said last week that localities have been required to choose hospitals with comprehens­ive treatment capacity as designated facilities to receive serious and critical patients, as well as those with a tendency to worsen, so as to secure the quality of therapeuti­cs delivered to them.

However, insufficie­nt immunizati­on coverage among China’s massive elderly population remains a significan­t bottleneck.

The commission said on Monday that 65.7 percent of people aged 80 and above have been fully vaccinated and only 40 percent have received a booster shot.

Wang Guiqiang, head of the infectious disease department at Peking University First Hospital, said that domestic and foreign data have all proven that the elderly, especially those with preexistin­g illnesses, tend to develop critical COVID-19 symptoms and even die of the disease.

He said the official diagnosis and treatment protocol has identified six high-risk groups — seniors aged above 65, people with cardiovasc­ular diseases, immunocomp­romised or overweight people, late-term pregnant women and those who have just delivered, as well as heavy smokers — and special attention must be paid to them.

The commission said that raising the primary and booster vaccinatio­n rate among the elderly is “essential and imperative”, it said. “Next, we will make plans to accelerate mass vaccinatio­n.”

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