THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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China sees surge of cases of new virus

China sees surge of cases of new virus

BEIJING - The Spring Festival in China is always a logistical exercise of mind-blowing proportions: hundreds of millions of people traveling via planes, trains, buses and taxis to return to their hometowns to ring in the new lunar year with their families. 

It is the biggest human migration on the planet. And that's without mentioning the bursting bags of gifts, clothing, food and liquor that travel with them.

But this year, authorities are having to deal with a new and potentially deadly challenge: the spread of a mysterious, pneumonialike virus that is confounding diagnosis and treatment, and sparking concerns across the country and beyond.

Officials have confirmed 218 cases, and although they are centered in Wuhan, there are infections from Beijing in the north to Guangdong in the south. Three people have died, the most recent on Saturday, and eight people are in critical condition. Authorities do not know what the virus is, beyond saying that it is a type known as a coronavirus.

The surge in infections - about 150 confirmed since Saturday - has some experts increasingly convinced that, contrary to initial indications, it can be passed from person to person.

"The fact that there have been (so many) new cases indicates that there is human-to-human transmission," said Guan Yi, an virologist at Hong Kong University who was instrumental in identifying the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), another coronavirus, in 2003.

"The number of new cases has increased suddenly. We should not play word games anymore about whether it's human-to-human transmission," he told Caixin, a local news outlet.

Li Gang, director and chief physician of the Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said the possibility of human-to-human transmission could not be ruled out. "With the implementation of various prevention and control measures, the epidemic is preventable and controllable," he told reporters Sunday.

The timing of the outbreak could hardly be worse. China's Ministry of Transport expects an astonishing 3 billion trips to be taken in the 40 days that surround Lunar New Year's Day, which falls on Saturday.

The Spring Festival, signaling the dawn of a new lunar year - Saturday marks the beginning of the Year of the Rat, according to the Chinese zodiac - is the most important holiday on the Chinese calendar. It is a period when migrant workers of all stripes, from those who labor in factories to upwardly mobile professionals in big cities, return to their hometowns. It is often the only time each year that families can gather together.

This flood of humanity even has a special name in Chinese: "Chunyun," from the characters for spring and movement.

China's multitudinous trains are packed literally to the rafters during this odyssey. People lie under the seats in sleeper cars and crouch in the hallways or in the vestibules between train cars. It's not unheard of for people, even adults, to contort themselves into the overhead luggage racks. Those who are not so lucky might find themselves standing for a 12-hour journey home. 

Despite the crush, the atmosphere on the trains is convivial and filled with the aroma of instant noodles. Almost everyone is excited to be going home and eager to share their snacks and their bottles of baijiu liquor with one another, although some try not to drink a drop of anything to avoid having to go to the bathroom and potentially lose their few inches of real estate.

But as China becomes wealthier, and as more young professionals dread the idea of going home to be harangued about still being single, many people opt out of the spring movement by going abroad. Southeast Asia is a popular destination because it's close, warm and cheap.

As a result, authorities in neighboring countries are also on high alert.

Cases of the mystery coronavirus have now been confirmed in Thailand and Japan, and on Monday, a woman was quarantined after thermal detectors at South Korea's main airport, Incheon, singled her out. Health authorities in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam are also monitoring suspected cases.

Three international airports in the United States - Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York's John F. Kennedy - have started screening passengers on flights from China.

The virus appears to have started in a market that sold wild snakes, marmots, frogs and hedgehogs.

At the end of last month, a cluster of pneumonia cases were reported in Wuhan, a city of 11 million people that straddles the Yangtze River in central China. The cases were traced to the west wing of the Huanan seafood market, where wild and exotic animals were on sale for consumption. 

State media reports described the market as "filthy and messy," and it has been closed down and disinfected.

The market is less than a mile from the Hankou train station, one of Wuhan's biggest transportation hubs. About 100,000 passengers pass through the station each day.

In the first 10 days of the Spring Festival travel period, there had been more than 4 million trips through Wuhan by air, railway and highway, according to local media, and some 81 million journeys on the city's public transportation network.

It was only Friday, after two deaths, that authorities in Wuhan started to check passengers' body temperature at airports and railway and bus stations. The local authorities have also launched a "patriotic health campaign," with major bus, train and subway stations being disinfected. 

"I am quite worried," said Zhou, a business owner in Wuhan, noting that stores had run out of masks. She declined to provide her full name. "What if it spreads very quickly? I hope it can be brought under control soon."

Still, the mystery virus is spreading.

There are now five confirmed cases in the capital. The Beijing Health Commission said it has stocked enough antibiotics and asked 89 public hospitals to provide outpatient treatment for fever to cope with a possible "flu outbreak" during the holidays. 

Five people who had visited Wuhan and were experiencing respiratory problems have also been hospitalized in four cities across Zhejiang, outside Shanghai, and a 56-year-old woman who traveled from Wuhan to Shanghai on Jan. 12 was confirmed Monday as having the virus.

In the south, 14 people in Guangdong province, which sits on the border with Hong Kong, have also been diagnosed with the virus, although the severity of the infections was not disclosed.

Guangdong was the epicenter for the SARS epidemic in 2002 and 2003. More than 8,000 people were infected and 774 died, and the virus spread to 37 countries before being contained.

China's ruling Communist Party was widely condemned for trying to cover up the outbreak and stifle news reports, contributing to its spread. In this case, health authorities in Wuhan have been posting updates every night, although often after midnight.

Nevertheless, researchers at Imperial College London estimate that the real number of infections is much higher than Chinese authorities have disclosed. They said that there had been at least 1,723 cases by Jan. 12, before the latest spike, but perhaps as many as 4,500.

Neil M. Ferguson, an epidemiologist at Imperial College, said that it was not clear whether these were new cases or just new confirmations, as Chinese health authorities began conducting a new kind of test on Jan. 16. 

"If they are all new cases, that would suggest that there is some human-to-human transmission," he said.

Chinese authorities are stepping up efforts to contain the virus, telling citizens to wear masks and try to reduce group activities as much as possible over the Spring Festival.

"Take precautions against transmitting contagious diseases such as the flu, even at get-togethers with family and friends," the Beijing Health Commission said in a notice. 

Those with symptoms such as fever and coughing are advised to wear face masks, avoid going to work or participating in group activities. "If you are obligated to attend, please stay at least one meter away from the next individual," the notice said.

In Shanghai and Zhejiang, the health authorities have allocated more staff in triage and fever clinics in hospitals and have set up new emergency procedures for dealing with suspected cases. 

 

 

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