Houston Chronicle

Coronaviru­s spread grows, except in China

- By Vivian Wang

HONG KONG — Chinese officials hailed recent figures as evidence that the spread of the coronaviru­s epidemic has slowed, and World Health Organizati­on officials said Tuesday that China’s strict limits on its people’s movements have helped.

But the outbreak and its death toll continue to grow, the picture outside China has grown steadily more alarming, and experts caution against excessive optimism about the crisis peaking.

“It could be unwise for anybody in China, or outside China, to be complacent that this is coming under control at this point in time,” said professor Malik Peiris, chief of virology at the University of Hong Kong.

Researcher­s in Germany presented evidence Tuesday that people who have the new coronaviru­s can infect others even when they have no symptoms, as disease experts had suspected. Their findings, published in a letter in the New England Journal of Medicine, indicated that people may be spreading the epidemic before they know they are sick.

But the Chinese government’s daily tally of new infections and deaths from the virus has declined steadily since Feb. 12.

On Tuesday, authoritie­s reported that in the previous 24 hours, 1,886 new cases had been confirmed — the first time since Jan. 30 that the number had dropped below 2,000 — and 98 patients had died. On Wednesday, the number of new infections reported by authoritie­s was again below 2,000, with China recording 1,749 confirmed new cases of coronaviru­s infection, bringing the country’s total number of reported infections to 74,185.

With 136 deaths reported in Wednesday’s figures, the total number in China of those confirmed to have died from the virus surpassed 2,000, reaching 2,004.

Government officials, as well as public health experts around the world, said the numbers suggested that China’s aggressive measures to contain the epidemic were working. China’s leader, Xi Jinping, told Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain in a phone call Tuesday that China was making “visible progress” in containing the epidemic, according to Chinese state media.

More than half the country’s population is under some limitation­s on its movements, and 150 million of its people face restrictio­ns on leaving their homes, according to an analysis by the New York Times.

“Right now, the strategic and tactical approach in China is the correct one,” Dr. Michael Ryan, the WHO’s chief of emergency response, said Tuesday. “You can argue whether these measures are excessive or restrictiv­e on people, but there is an awful lot at stake here in terms of public health — not only the public health of China but of all people in the world.”

Professor Zhong Nanshan, a renowned respirator­y disease expert in China, said Monday that he expected the epidemic to peak in the country’s southern regions by late February, and the rest of the country to follow soon after.

But Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the WHO director general, said Monday that the apparent tapering of the spread in China “must be interprete­d very cautiously,”

“It’s too early to tell if this reported decline will continue,” he said during a news conference in Geneva. “Every scenario is still on the table.”

The number of cases in Japan has spiked in recent days, most of them tied to a quarantine­d cruise ship that turned into a hotbed of transmissi­on. Other case clusters have also turned up in Japan, but so far, the ship, the Diamond Princess, accounts for most of the cases worldwide outside of China — 542 as of Tuesday, an increase of 88 in one day.

On Monday, more than 300 American passengers on the ship were flown to the United States and placed in a two-week quarantine. Fourteen of them tested positive for the coronaviru­s shortly before leaving Japan, but were still allowed to board the flights. U.S. officials had started the process of evacuating them home without knowing their test results.

Some of those passengers said Tuesday they had been informed that a few more of them had tested positive for the virus since they arrived in the United States.

Also on Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told more than 100 Americans who have been on the Diamond Princess they cannot return home for at least two more weeks, after it became clear that efforts to control the virus aboard the ship had been ineffectiv­e. The passengers include some who have tested positive for the virus and are hospitaliz­ed, and others still aboard the ship who have not shown signs of illness.

Japanese officials said they expected 500 people to be let off the ship Wednesday. But they did not make it clear how they had concluded it was safe to release people, or how they had decided which passengers would leave, or who those people would be.

Cambodia has allowed more than 1,000 passengers from another cruise ship, the Westerdam, to disembark without testing most of them. Hundreds of them flew out of the country, before one of them took ill and tested positive for the virus, raising fears of undetected cases and a further global spread.

There are other signs the outbreak’s global toll has not crested. The first coronaviru­s-related death outside of Asia was announced Saturday, when a Chinese man died in France. Taiwan announced its first virus-related death Sunday, marking the fifth fatality outside mainland China.

President Moon Jae-in of South Korea warned Tuesday that the outbreak in China is creating an “emergency” for the economy, saying his country could be one of the hardest hit.

If the virus starts to spread rapidly around the globe, it is unclear how other countries will respond. Few other government­s have the power to clamp down as thoroughly as China, or even the desire.

The lockdown in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, where the outbreak started, has taken a heavy human toll, making it difficult for many to find medical care or care for sick loved ones. The countrywid­e restrictio­ns create their own challenges, stranding employees away from their jobs and pummeling the economy.

“This is the issue,” said Peiris. “It is not clear that this is something that is replicable, even in other parts of China.”

 ?? Xiao Yijiu / Associated Press ?? Patients rest at a temporary hospital in central China’s Hubei Province. China reported milder symptoms in most people Tuesday, prompting guarded optimism among global health authoritie­s.
Xiao Yijiu / Associated Press Patients rest at a temporary hospital in central China’s Hubei Province. China reported milder symptoms in most people Tuesday, prompting guarded optimism among global health authoritie­s.

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