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© Reuters. The family is seen at a fever clinic set up in a sports district as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak continues in Beijing, December 20, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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By Bernard Orr and Humeyra Pamuk
BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Cities across China scrambled to install hospital beds and build fever-screening clinics on Tuesday as the United States said Beijing’s sudden decision to let the virus go free was a concern to the world.
China abruptly this month began dismantling its strict “zero COVID” mass lockdown after protests against restrictions that have largely kept the virus at bay for three years but at great costs to society and the world’s second-largest economy.
Now, as the virus sweeps through a country of 1.4 billion people who lack natural immunity after having been protected for so long, there is growing concern about potential deaths, viral mutations and the impact, once again, on the economy.
“We know that anytime a virus spreads, it’s in the wild, it has the potential to mutate and pose a threat to people everywhere,” US State Department spokesman Ned Price said Monday, adding that the virus outbreak was also a concern for the Chinese economy, and therefore global growth. .
Beijing reported five COVID-related deaths on Tuesday, after two cases on Monday that were the first deaths reported in weeks.
In total, China has reported only 5,242 coronavirus deaths since the outbreak of the epidemic in the central city of Wuhan in late 2019, a very low toll by global standards.
But there is growing suspicion that your statistics are capturing the full impact of a disease spreading in cities after China dropped restrictions including most mandatory testing on December 7.
Since then, some hospitals have been flooded, pharmacies emptied of medicine, and the streets have been unusually quiet as residents, whether sick or worried about contracting the disease, stayed home.
Some health experts estimate that 60% of people in China – equivalent to 10% of the world’s population – could be infected over the coming months, and that more than 2 million people could die.
And in the capital, Beijing, security guards patrolled the entrance to a designated COVID-19 crematorium where Reuters journalists on Saturday saw a long line of hearers and workers in protective suits carrying the dead inside. Reuters could not immediately confirm whether the deaths were caused by the coronavirus.
healthcare strains
Top health officials have softened their tone about the threat posed by the disease in recent weeks, a shift from previous messages that the virus must be stamped out to save lives even as the rest of the world opens up.
They also downplayed the possibility that the now dominant Omicron strain might evolve to become more virulent.
“The probability of a sudden large surge … is very low,” Zhang Wenhong, a leading infectious disease specialist, said at a forum on Sunday in remarks reported by state media.
But there are growing signs that the virus is harming China’s fragile health system.
The government newspaper Global Times reported Monday that cities are ramping up efforts to expand intensive care units and other treatment facilities for severe COVID cases.
The authorities have also been racing to build so-called fever clinics, facilities where medical staff check patients’ symptoms and administer medication. Often associated with hospitals, these clinics are common in mainland China and are designed to prevent the widespread spread of infectious diseases in healthcare settings.
Last week, major cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu and Wenzhou announced they had added hundreds of fever clinics, according to government WeChat accounts and media reports.
Reuters saw that a gymnasium in Beijing’s Shijingshan district was converted into a fever clinic late last week, with booths containing more than 150 beds covering a basketball court.
The spread of the virus is expected to hamper China’s economy, which is expected to grow 3% this year, its worst performance in nearly half a century.
A survey by World Economics showed, on Monday, that business confidence in China fell in December to its lowest level since January 2013.
China kept its benchmark lending interest rate unchanged for the fourth consecutive month on Tuesday.