The Japan Times - Why China's Covid wave is stirring fear

EUR -
AED 4.246168
AFN 73.421127
ALL 96.080579
AMD 437.405912
ANG 2.069706
AOA 1060.240841
ARS 1591.813902
AUD 1.665343
AWG 2.083773
AZN 1.966007
BAM 1.955388
BBD 2.336928
BDT 142.389987
BGN 1.976314
BHD 0.436478
BIF 3446.288495
BMD 1.156206
BND 1.483194
BOB 8.017275
BRL 6.044181
BSD 1.160265
BTN 109.136524
BWP 15.811804
BYN 3.438805
BYR 22661.643378
BZD 2.333628
CAD 1.599178
CDF 2636.150356
CHF 0.915293
CLF 0.026874
CLP 1061.119847
CNY 7.979553
CNH 7.98805
COP 4279.524169
CRC 539.48862
CUC 1.156206
CUP 30.639467
CVE 110.241287
CZK 24.455613
DJF 206.619129
DKK 7.471735
DOP 69.955557
DZD 153.424549
EGP 61.001685
ERN 17.343094
ETB 181.171096
FJD 2.599441
FKP 0.864652
GBP 0.8656
GEL 3.115955
GGP 0.864652
GHS 12.685271
GIP 0.864652
GMD 85.038269
GNF 10169.900368
GTQ 8.88009
GYD 242.747784
HKD 9.046222
HNL 30.724657
HRK 7.536496
HTG 152.148588
HUF 387.349347
IDR 19537.573969
ILS 3.613318
IMP 0.864652
INR 108.675064
IQD 1520.08617
IRR 1518272.295998
ISK 143.196406
JEP 0.864652
JMD 182.762268
JOD 0.819755
JPY 184.379062
KES 149.962063
KGS 101.109316
KHR 4653.039354
KMF 493.700316
KPW 1040.652492
KRW 1739.801927
KWD 0.355406
KYD 0.9669
KZT 559.824421
LAK 25015.9435
LBP 103748.72112
LKR 364.916239
LRD 212.914201
LSL 19.544649
LTL 3.413977
LVL 0.699378
LYD 7.398537
MAD 10.813374
MDL 20.287899
MGA 4836.02249
MKD 61.669071
MMK 2428.014465
MNT 4143.644146
MOP 9.343371
MRU 46.230455
MUR 53.913328
MVR 17.863527
MWK 2011.993314
MXN 20.578332
MYR 4.617858
MZN 73.877671
NAD 19.544565
NGN 1602.628577
NIO 42.701184
NOK 11.179241
NPR 174.619949
NZD 1.997341
OMR 0.444557
PAB 1.160255
PEN 4.012272
PGK 5.012965
PHP 69.58686
PKR 323.840542
PLN 4.27183
PYG 7549.474017
QAR 4.23139
RON 5.095979
RSD 117.426623
RUB 95.184232
RWF 1694.250213
SAR 4.337549
SBD 9.298254
SCR 16.100424
SDG 694.880448
SEK 10.83654
SGD 1.483586
SHP 0.867454
SLE 28.384666
SLL 24245.080415
SOS 663.063107
SRD 43.173321
STD 23931.135931
STN 24.494943
SVC 10.152904
SYP 128.850948
SZL 19.555047
THB 37.947817
TJS 11.10971
TMT 4.046722
TND 3.404768
TOP 2.783867
TRY 51.298213
TTD 7.889371
TWD 36.885273
TZS 2977.299425
UAH 50.943403
UGX 4293.07654
USD 1.156206
UYU 46.969897
UZS 14151.078431
VES 534.271782
VND 30464.301558
VUV 137.615528
WST 3.179024
XAF 655.821602
XAG 0.016987
XAU 0.000261
XCD 3.124706
XCG 2.091168
XDR 0.815635
XOF 655.827273
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.928661
ZAR 19.665105
ZMK 10407.23896
ZMW 21.726608
ZWL 372.297955
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RIO

    0.7700

    87.54

    +0.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.91

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    1.9600

    84.29

    +2.33%

  • BCC

    1.0800

    74.65

    +1.45%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    25.49

    -1.33%

  • GSK

    1.7500

    54.7

    +3.2%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    58.45

    +1.18%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    32.47

    +0.03%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    12.1

    +1.98%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.68

    +0.22%

  • RYCEF

    0.3700

    16.06

    +2.3%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    187.14

    +0.73%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.72

    +0.41%

  • BP

    0.6200

    45.41

    +1.37%

Why China's Covid wave is stirring fear
Why China's Covid wave is stirring fear / Photo: Noel Celis - AFP/File

Why China's Covid wave is stirring fear

China is experiencing a huge Covid-19 surge after years of hardline containment restrictions were dismantled last month.

Text size:

A growing number of countries are worried about a lack of data and transparency surrounding China's outbreak.

Here is why it is sparking concern:

- Unreliable data -

Beijing has admitted the scale of the outbreak has become "impossible" to track following the end of mandatory mass testing last month.

The National Health Commission has stopped publishing daily nationwide infection and death statistics.

That responsibility has been transferred to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which will only publish figures once a month after China downgrades its management protocols for the disease on January 8.

China has only reported 15 Covid deaths since it began unwinding restrictions on December 7, shortly after which it narrowed the criteria by which deaths from the virus are recorded.

This has stoked concerns that the wave of infections is not being accurately reflected in official statistics.

Authorities admitted last week that the scale of data collected is "much smaller" than when mandatory mass PCR testing was in place.

CDC official Yin Wenwu said authorities are now compiling data from hospitals and local government surveys as well as emergency call volumes and fever medicine sales, which will "make up for deficiencies in our reporting".

Chinese hospitals and crematoriums are struggling with an influx of patients and bodies, with rural areas hit particularly hard.

Several countries including the United States, Australia and Canada last week said they were imposing testing restrictions on arrivals from China because of a lack of transparency on infection data.

- Piecemeal estimates -

Last month, a few local and regional authorities began sharing estimated daily infection totals as the scale of the outbreak remained unclear.

Health officials in the wealthy coastal province of Zhejiang believed one million residents were being infected every day last week. The cities of Quzhou and Zhoushan said at least 30 percent of the population had contracted the virus.

The eastern coastal city of Qingdao also estimated around 500,000 new daily cases and the southern manufacturing centre of Dongguan forecast up to 300,000.

Officials in the island province of Hainan estimated Friday that the infection rate there had surpassed 50 percent.

But top health official Wu Zunyou said Thursday that the peak had passed in the cities of Beijing, Chengdu and Tianjin, with Guangdong province -- the country's most populous -- saying the same on Sunday.

Shanghai's top infectious diseases expert, Zhang Wenhong, has told state media the megacity may have entered its peak period on December 22, with an estimated 10 million residents having contracted Covid.

Leaked notes from a meeting of health officials last month revealed they believed 250 million people had been infected across China in the first 20 days of December.

Independent infection models paint a grim picture. University of Hong Kong researchers have estimated nearly one million Chinese may die this winter as a result of opening up.

And health risk analysis firm Airfinity forecast 11,000 deaths and 1.8 million infections per day, with a total of 1.7 million fatalities by the end of April.

- New variants? -

Many countries have cited concerns over potential new variants as a reason to screen Chinese arrivals for Covid.

But there is as yet no evidence of new strains emerging from the current wave.

Top CDC official Xu Wenbo said last month that China was developing a national genetic database of Covid samples derived from hospital surveillance that would help track mutations.

Chinese health experts have said in recent days that the Omicron subvariants BA.5.2 and BF.7 are most prevalent in Beijing, in response to public fears that the Delta variant may still be circulating.

They said Omicron also remained the most dominant strain in Shanghai.

In many Western nations, these strains have been overtaken by the more transmissible subvariants XBB and BQ, which are not yet dominant in China.

Beijing has submitted 384 Omicron samples in the past month to global online database GISAID, according to its website.

But the country's total number of submissions to the database, at 1,308, is dwarfed by those of other nations, including the United States, Britain, Cambodia and Senegal.

Recent samples from China "all closely resemble known globally circulating variants seen... between July and December", GISAID said Friday.

University of Hong Kong virologist Jin Dong-yan said on an independent podcast last month that people need not fear the risk of a deadlier new variant in China.

"Many places all over the world have experienced (large-scale infection) but a more deadly or pathogenic variant did not emerge afterwards," said Jin.

"I'm not saying that the emergence of a (more deadly) strain is completely impossible, but the possibility is very small."

T.Kobayashi--JT