Beijing outbreak under control, number of new cases would dwindle: chief epidemiologist
By
Zhao Yusha and Wang Qi
The
chief epidemiologist of the China Center for Disease Control and Prevention
said Thursday that Beijing's latest COVID-19 outbreak has already been brought
under control, but warned that new cases will emerge in the next two days, but
the number would dwindle.
When asked if Beijing's outbreak was under control, Wu Zunyou said it was,
explaining at a Thursday conference that despite Beijing has been reporting
confirmed cases every day, this does not mean that all cases are newly
infected.
For example, the newly discovered 21 cases on Wednesday were all infected
before June 12, Wu said.
Of the 21 new infections found in Beijing on Wednesday, none were considered
serious, Pang Xinghuo, the deputy director of the municipal center for disease
prevention and control, said at the press conference.
Pang said Beijing has already reported eight cluster infections linked to the
Xinfadi market, where the outbreak first emerged. One of the eight is from
a restaurant, where an employees purchased food at Xinfadi market and
transmitted the virus to a co-worker.
More cases are expected in the following days, but the number would dwindle, Wu
said.
If Beijing had not taken timely measures to curb the spread, it would have been
a repeat of Wuhan, he added. Beijing's outbreak could occur in any place as the
virus is still ravaging the world, said Wu, noting that it was unexpected that
the outbreak happened again at a market, and led to so many cases.
Wang Guangfa, a respiratory expert at Peking University First Hospital in
Beijing, told the Global Times on Thursday that cluster infections and even
community transmissions of COVID-19 are unlikely in Beijing since China's
capital applied strict and timely measures, including closed-off management of
residential communities.
"All the cluster infections are linked to Xinfadi, so the infection is
traceable," Wang said, noting all the cases are the result of active
screening by the Beijing government. "Most of patients were classified as
mild cases."
Beijing has completed nucleic acid testing for about 700,000 residents as of
Thursday, including 355,000 people related to the Xinfadi wholesale market,
media reported.
Xue Lan, a professor and former dean at the School of Public Policy and
Management of Tsinghua University in Beijing, told the Global Times on Thursday
that although Beijing's outbreak is basically under control, people should
always stay alert and mind personal hygiene.
Aside from the government, community workers and citizens should remain
vigilant and report suspicious symptoms and undergo nucleic tests as soon as
possible to cope with any possible situations in the future, Xue said.
Jin Dongyan, a virologist at Hong Kong University, still has reservations about
the outbreak in Beijing, as "the curbing of Beijing's outbreak is based on
the epidemiological investigation."
The investigation and screening are not completely finished. Since the virus
transmission has the possibility of a "super spreader," the impact of
an infected individual on the entire transmission curve cannot be ignored, Jin
told China Newsweek on Thursday.
Source:
Global Times
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