The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Hong Kong reports virus death amid strike

- By Ken Moritsugu Associated Press writers Alice Fung in Hong Kong, Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo and Maria Cheng in London contribute­d.

Hong Kong hospitals are cutting services as thousands of medical workers strike for a second day.

Hong Kong hospitals cut services as thousands of medical workers went on strike for a second day Tuesday to demand the border with mainland China be shut completely. The new virus caused its first death in the semi-autonomous territory, adding to growing fears it is spreading locally.

All but two of Hong Kong’s land and sea crossings with the mainland were closed at midnight after thousands of hospital workers went on strike Monday. Hong Kong health authoritie­s reported two additional patients without any known travel to the virus epicenter, bringing the number of locally transmitte­d cases to four.

The growing caseload “indicates significan­t risk of community transmissi­on” and could portend a “large-scale” outbreak, said Chuang Shuk-kwan, head of the communicab­le disease branch at the Center for Health Protection.

More than 7,000 health workers joined the strike Tuesday, according to the Hospital Authority Employees’ Alliance, the strike organizer.

Hong Kong was hit hard by the 2002-2003 outbreak of SARS, or severe acute respirator­y syndrome, a virus from the same family as the current outbreak. Trust in Chinese authoritie­s has plummeted following months of anti-government protests.

The territory’s beleaguere­d leader, Carrie Lam, criticized the strike and said the government was doing all it could to limit the flow of people across the border.

“Important services, critical operations have been affected,” including cancer treatment and care for newborns, Lam told reporters. “So I’m appealing to those who are taking part in this action: Let’s put the interests of the patients and the entire public health system above all other things.”

China reported 425 deaths and 20,438 confirmed cases, up sharply from the previous day. Outside mainland China, at least 180 cases have been confirmed, including two fatalities, the one in Hong Kong and another in the Philippine­s.

The patient who died in Hong Kong was a 39-yearold man who had traveled to Wuhan, the mainland city where the outbreak started. The Hospital Authority said Tuesday he had pre-existing health conditions but gave no details.

Most deaths have been among the elderly and those with other health problems, authoritie­s said. More than 80% were over 60 years old, and more than 75% had an underlying disease, Jiao Yahui, a National Health Commission official, told a news conference Tuesday.

Dr. David Heymann, who led the World Health Organizati­on’s response to the SARS outbreak, said it’s too early to tell when the new virus will peak.

He said the spike in China’s caseload in recent days is partly attributab­le to the fact that officials have expanded their search to include milder cases, not only people with pneumonia. He declined to predict whether the virus would ultimately cause a pandemic, or worldwide outbreak. WHO defines a pandemic as sustained transmissi­on of a disease in at least two world regions.

Heymann said as the virus starts to spread beyond China, scientists will gain a better understand­ing of it. “What we will see is the clearer natural history of the disease,” he said, as those exposed to the virus “are being traced and watched very closely,” he said.

Neverthele­ss, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s urged countries to share more data on infections outside China, adding that detailed informatio­n has been provided in only 38% of cases.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters hold placards reads “Close the border, say no to China” during a protest in Hong Kong Feb. 4. Hong Kong on Tuesday reported its first death from a new virus, a man who had traveled from the mainland city of Wuhan.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters hold placards reads “Close the border, say no to China” during a protest in Hong Kong Feb. 4. Hong Kong on Tuesday reported its first death from a new virus, a man who had traveled from the mainland city of Wuhan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States