Tag: China Covid Surge

  • COVID-19 is not over yet, prepared to manage any situation: Health minister Mandviya

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Amid a spike in Covid-19 cases globally, Union Health Minister Dr Mansukh Mandaviya on Wednesday held a high-level review meeting and stressed that Covid is not over yet and India is prepared to manage any situation.

    His remarks came after official sources said three cases of Omicron subvariant BF.7, which is driving the surge in China, have been detected in the country. 

    The ministry also announced stepping up random screening of passengers, especially those who are travelling from countries reporting a spike in cases, at Indian airports in the country, and urged people to wear masks in crowded places and to take booster doses.

    While reviewing the Covid-19 situation and the preparedness of the public health system for surveillance, containment and management gave rising Covid-19 cases worldwide; the minister directed all concerned to be on alert and strengthen surveillance. 

    “I also urge people to take Covid vaccination,” said the health minister as he advised states and union territories to send samples daily of all Covid-19 positive cases to INSACOG labs to facilitate tracking new variants.

    Underlining the challenge posed by the increasing number of Covid-19 cases in some countries across the world, such as China, Japan, South Korea, France and the US, Mandaviya noted the importance of being prepared and remaining alert against new and emerging strains, especially given the upcoming festive season

    He also urged people to follow Covid-Appropriate Behaviour.

    India has been witnessing a steady decline in cases, with average daily cases falling to 158 in the week ending December 19. However, a consistent rise in global daily average cases has been reported in the last six weeks, with 5.9 lakh average daily cases reported in the week ending December 19.

    The meeting comes a day after Union Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan asked state governments and union territories to submit samples of positive cases on a priority basis to the genome sequencing laboratories.

    Official sources said two cases of BF.7 have been detected in the country. BF.7, a sub-lineage of the Omicron variant BA.5, is said to have the strongest infection ability since it is highly transmissible. It also has a shorter incubation period and a higher ability to cause reinfection. 

    It has already been detected in countries like the US, the UK and European Union, Belgium., Germany, France and Denmark, and also China, which is seeing a deadly surge.

    After the review meeting, NITI Aayog member (Health) Dr V K Paul said people should take the jab and wear masks in crowded places.

    “Only 27-28 per cent of people have taken booster doses. We appeal to others, especially senior citizens, to take it. Precaution dose is mandated and guided to everyone.” 

    He also urged people to use masks in crowded spaces, indoors or outdoors. “This is all the more important for people with comorbidities or higher age,” Paul added.

    Dr N K Arora, chairman of the Covid-19 working group National Technical Advisory Group on Immunization(NTAGI), said there is nothing to panic about as the country’s system is “vigilant”.

    Chaos has engulfed China after the government reversed its strict lockdown guidelines under its zero-Covid policy. According to reports, crematoriums in the country are overwhelmed by the large influx of bodies, though the government has denied the death tally reaching double digits.

    ALSO READ | Masks back up, booster shots: Centre’s advice amid Covid surge in China

    NEW DELHI: Amid a spike in Covid-19 cases globally, Union Health Minister Dr Mansukh Mandaviya on Wednesday held a high-level review meeting and stressed that Covid is not over yet and India is prepared to manage any situation.

    His remarks came after official sources said three cases of Omicron subvariant BF.7, which is driving the surge in China, have been detected in the country. 

    The ministry also announced stepping up random screening of passengers, especially those who are travelling from countries reporting a spike in cases, at Indian airports in the country, and urged people to wear masks in crowded places and to take booster doses.

    While reviewing the Covid-19 situation and the preparedness of the public health system for surveillance, containment and management gave rising Covid-19 cases worldwide; the minister directed all concerned to be on alert and strengthen surveillance. 

    “I also urge people to take Covid vaccination,” said the health minister as he advised states and union territories to send samples daily of all Covid-19 positive cases to INSACOG labs to facilitate tracking new variants.

    Underlining the challenge posed by the increasing number of Covid-19 cases in some countries across the world, such as China, Japan, South Korea, France and the US, Mandaviya noted the importance of being prepared and remaining alert against new and emerging strains, especially given the upcoming festive season

    He also urged people to follow Covid-Appropriate Behaviour.

    India has been witnessing a steady decline in cases, with average daily cases falling to 158 in the week ending December 19. However, a consistent rise in global daily average cases has been reported in the last six weeks, with 5.9 lakh average daily cases reported in the week ending December 19.

    The meeting comes a day after Union Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan asked state governments and union territories to submit samples of positive cases on a priority basis to the genome sequencing laboratories.

    Official sources said two cases of BF.7 have been detected in the country. BF.7, a sub-lineage of the Omicron variant BA.5, is said to have the strongest infection ability since it is highly transmissible. It also has a shorter incubation period and a higher ability to cause reinfection. 

    It has already been detected in countries like the US, the UK and European Union, Belgium., Germany, France and Denmark, and also China, which is seeing a deadly surge.

    After the review meeting, NITI Aayog member (Health) Dr V K Paul said people should take the jab and wear masks in crowded places.

    “Only 27-28 per cent of people have taken booster doses. We appeal to others, especially senior citizens, to take it. Precaution dose is mandated and guided to everyone.” 

    He also urged people to use masks in crowded spaces, indoors or outdoors. “This is all the more important for people with comorbidities or higher age,” Paul added.

    Dr N K Arora, chairman of the Covid-19 working group National Technical Advisory Group on Immunization(NTAGI), said there is nothing to panic about as the country’s system is “vigilant”.

    Chaos has engulfed China after the government reversed its strict lockdown guidelines under its zero-Covid policy. According to reports, crematoriums in the country are overwhelmed by the large influx of bodies, though the government has denied the death tally reaching double digits.

    ALSO READ | Masks back up, booster shots: Centre’s advice amid Covid surge in China

  • Chinese with mild COVID urged to work as restrictions ease amid massive spike in cases

    BEIJING:  Several local governments in China encouraged people with mild cases of COVID-19 to go to work this week, another sign of the difficulty the country faces as its rollback of virus-containment measures sets off a wave of infections — and a growing number of deaths.

    Health authorities reported Tuesday that five people died in the latest 24-hour period, all in Beijing, fueling concern that the toll could rise sharply after the lifting of most “zero-COVID” restrictions. The official toll likely understates the actual number, and it’s unclear how the unleashing of the virus will play out in China and whether the healthcare system can handle a surge in cases nationwide.

    The city of Guiyang in southern Guizhou province proposed that infected people with little or no symptoms go to work in a range of sectors, including government offices, state-owned companies, medical, health and emergency workers and those in express delivery and supermarkets.

    That’s a sea change from just a few weeks ago when China’s policy was to isolate anyone infected at a hospital or government-run facility. The announcement Tuesday followed similar ones from the cities of Wuhu in Anhui province and Chongqing earlier this week. The moves appear to be in response to worker shortages that have affected medical care and food deliveries.

    They also reflect the difficulty officials face in trying to revive an economy that was throttled by pandemic restrictions, and now that they have been lifted, is being slowed by workers falling ill.

    China had long hailed its restrictive “zero-COVID” approach of lockdowns, quarantines and compulsory testing as keeping case numbers and deaths relatively low. Yet the policy placed China’s society and the national economy under enormous stress and prompted rare anti-government protests, apparently convincing the ruling Communist Party to heed outside advice and alter its strategy.

    Now, unofficial reports suggest a widespread wave of new coronavirus cases, and relatives of victims and people who work in the funeral business have said deaths tied to COVID-19 are increasing.

    ALSO READ| Beijing crematoriums strain under China Covid wave

    Wang Guangfa, a doctor in the Respiratory Department of Peking University First Hospital, warned Beijing will see the peak of severe cases in the next one or two weeks. “The current wave of infection resembles an epidemic tsunami,” he said in a Q&A piece published online this week. He also said northern China will have a higher rate of severe cases than the southern part because of the cold weather.

    As is typical, cases of severe illness and death will be largely concentrated among the elderly or those who haven’t received booster shots of vaccines, said Dr Gagandeep Kang, who studies viruses at the Christian Medical College in Vellore, India.

    China, despite fully vaccinating 90.3% of its population, has only given a booster dose to 60.5%. China needs to prioritize giving boosters, especially to those over 60, to avoid large numbers of deaths, Kang said.

    The National Health Commission said the five newly recorded fatalities had taken the country’s total death toll to 5,242 — relatively low by global standards but potentially set to increase substantially following moves by the government to step away from the “zero-COVID” policy.

    With people now testing and recuperating at home, China has said it is no longer possible to keep an accurate count of new case numbers, making it substantially more difficult to gauge the state of the current wave of infection and its direction. Some scientific models have estimated numbers will rise with an eventual death toll in the tens or hundreds of thousands.

    ALSO READ | China says tracking Covid cases now ‘impossible’ as infections soar

    China is trying to persuade reluctant seniors and others at risk to get vaccinated, apparently with only moderate success. Vaccination centres visited over recent days have been largely empty and there has been no major publicity drive in the entirely state-controlled media.

    The other major concern is shoring up health resources in smaller cities and the vast rural hinterland ahead of January’s Lunar New Year travel rush, which will see migrant workers returning to their hometowns.

    The number of fever clinics have been expanded in both urban and rural areas and people have been asked to stay home unless seriously ill to preserve resources. Hospitals are also running short on staff, and reports say workers have been asked to return to their posts as long as they aren’t feverish.

    Case and death counts in every country are thought to underestimate the true toll of the virus, but there are particular concerns in China. Chinese health authorities count only those who died directly from COVID-19, excluding deaths blamed on underlying conditions such as diabetes and heart disease that raise risks of serious illness.

    In many other countries, guidelines stipulate that any death where the coronavirus is a factor or contributor is counted as COVID-19 related.

    ALSO READ | Facing surge in COVID-19 cases, China expands hospitals, ICUs

    BEIJING:  Several local governments in China encouraged people with mild cases of COVID-19 to go to work this week, another sign of the difficulty the country faces as its rollback of virus-containment measures sets off a wave of infections — and a growing number of deaths.

    Health authorities reported Tuesday that five people died in the latest 24-hour period, all in Beijing, fueling concern that the toll could rise sharply after the lifting of most “zero-COVID” restrictions. The official toll likely understates the actual number, and it’s unclear how the unleashing of the virus will play out in China and whether the healthcare system can handle a surge in cases nationwide.

    The city of Guiyang in southern Guizhou province proposed that infected people with little or no symptoms go to work in a range of sectors, including government offices, state-owned companies, medical, health and emergency workers and those in express delivery and supermarkets.

    That’s a sea change from just a few weeks ago when China’s policy was to isolate anyone infected at a hospital or government-run facility. The announcement Tuesday followed similar ones from the cities of Wuhu in Anhui province and Chongqing earlier this week. The moves appear to be in response to worker shortages that have affected medical care and food deliveries.

    They also reflect the difficulty officials face in trying to revive an economy that was throttled by pandemic restrictions, and now that they have been lifted, is being slowed by workers falling ill.

    China had long hailed its restrictive “zero-COVID” approach of lockdowns, quarantines and compulsory testing as keeping case numbers and deaths relatively low. Yet the policy placed China’s society and the national economy under enormous stress and prompted rare anti-government protests, apparently convincing the ruling Communist Party to heed outside advice and alter its strategy.

    Now, unofficial reports suggest a widespread wave of new coronavirus cases, and relatives of victims and people who work in the funeral business have said deaths tied to COVID-19 are increasing.

    ALSO READ| Beijing crematoriums strain under China Covid wave

    Wang Guangfa, a doctor in the Respiratory Department of Peking University First Hospital, warned Beijing will see the peak of severe cases in the next one or two weeks. “The current wave of infection resembles an epidemic tsunami,” he said in a Q&A piece published online this week. He also said northern China will have a higher rate of severe cases than the southern part because of the cold weather.

    As is typical, cases of severe illness and death will be largely concentrated among the elderly or those who haven’t received booster shots of vaccines, said Dr Gagandeep Kang, who studies viruses at the Christian Medical College in Vellore, India.

    China, despite fully vaccinating 90.3% of its population, has only given a booster dose to 60.5%. China needs to prioritize giving boosters, especially to those over 60, to avoid large numbers of deaths, Kang said.

    The National Health Commission said the five newly recorded fatalities had taken the country’s total death toll to 5,242 — relatively low by global standards but potentially set to increase substantially following moves by the government to step away from the “zero-COVID” policy.

    With people now testing and recuperating at home, China has said it is no longer possible to keep an accurate count of new case numbers, making it substantially more difficult to gauge the state of the current wave of infection and its direction. Some scientific models have estimated numbers will rise with an eventual death toll in the tens or hundreds of thousands.

    ALSO READ | China says tracking Covid cases now ‘impossible’ as infections soar

    China is trying to persuade reluctant seniors and others at risk to get vaccinated, apparently with only moderate success. Vaccination centres visited over recent days have been largely empty and there has been no major publicity drive in the entirely state-controlled media.

    The other major concern is shoring up health resources in smaller cities and the vast rural hinterland ahead of January’s Lunar New Year travel rush, which will see migrant workers returning to their hometowns.

    The number of fever clinics have been expanded in both urban and rural areas and people have been asked to stay home unless seriously ill to preserve resources. Hospitals are also running short on staff, and reports say workers have been asked to return to their posts as long as they aren’t feverish.

    Case and death counts in every country are thought to underestimate the true toll of the virus, but there are particular concerns in China. Chinese health authorities count only those who died directly from COVID-19, excluding deaths blamed on underlying conditions such as diabetes and heart disease that raise risks of serious illness.

    In many other countries, guidelines stipulate that any death where the coronavirus is a factor or contributor is counted as COVID-19 related.

    ALSO READ | Facing surge in COVID-19 cases, China expands hospitals, ICUs