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			 The death toll from the virus in mainland China jumped by 73 to 563, 
			with more than 28,000 confirmed infections there. 
 Get our full coverage on the coronavirus: https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH/0100B59Y39P/index.html
 
 Financial analysts have cut their growth outlook for the world's 
			second-largest economy, with ratings agency Moody's pointing to a 
			risk to auto sales and production.
 
 But global stocks extended their recovery, cheered by record closes 
			in Wall Street benchmarks following encouraging economic data and 
			China's announcement of a tariff cut on some imports from the United 
			States, which analysts saw as a move to boost confidence.
 
 The virus has shut down cities and factories in China and disrupted 
			global air travel. This week, it brought chaos to the sedate world 
			of luxury ocean cruises.
 
			
			 
			
 About 3,700 people on Carnival's Diamond Princess, docked off a 
			Japanese port, face quarantine for at least two weeks on the ship, 
			which has 20 virus cases, with testing continuing. Japan now has 45 
			virus cases.
 
 Gay Courter, a 75-year-old American novelist on the ship, said he 
			hoped the U.S. government would send transport to take the Americans 
			off.
 
 "It’s better for us to travel while healthy and also if we get sick 
			to be treated in American hospitals," he told Reuters.
 
 In Hong Kong, a cruise ship with 3,600 passengers and crew was 
			quarantined for a second day pending testing after three positive 
			cases on board.
 
 Taiwan, which has 13 cases, banned international cruise ships from 
			docking.
 
 TROUBLING TRANSMISSION
 
 Several countries, including the United States, have banned entry to 
			visitors who have been in China over the previous two weeks.
 
 News of another virus hot spot emerged, linked to a mid-January 
			company meeting in Singapore. At least three people caught the 
			disease after a conference held with 94 overseas staff, including 
			one from China's central city of Wuhan, the epicenter of the 
			epidemic.
 
 Authorities have not identified the company, but the World Health 
			Organization (WHO) said it was investigating.
 
 Singapore has reported 28 infections, some involving 
			person-to-person transmission, a feature the WHO has said is deeply 
			concerning and could signal a much larger outbreak.
 
 Health officials in the United States and China have set ambitious 
			goals for getting a vaccine to initial human testing within the next 
			few months, although drugmakers cautioned that they have a long way 
			to go.
 
 "There are no known effective therapeutics," WHO spokesman Tarik 
			Jasarevic said, when asked about reports of drug "breakthroughs" 
			that boosted financial markets on Wednesday.
 
 Hundreds of experts will gather in Geneva on Feb. 11-12 to try and 
			find a way to battle the outbreak by speeding research into drugs 
			and vaccines, the WHO said, adding that a multinational WHO-led team 
			would also visit China.
 
 Most of those infected recover quickly with only mild symptoms but 
			the virus can lead to severe respiratory illnesses. It is too early 
			to know how lethal it may be, as many mild cases are probably going 
			undetected.
 
			
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			SHUT AND SEALED
 Tens of millions of people in China's Hubei province, the capital of 
			which is Wuhan, have been living under virtual lockdown for nearly 
			two weeks, with train stations and airports shut and roads sealed 
			off.
 
 Hubei reported 70 new deaths on Wednesday and 2,987 new confirmed 
			cases, for more than 80% of China's total.
 
 National health officials said 3,694 cases were reported throughout 
			China on Wednesday, the first day in more than a week to see a fall 
			in new daily cases. They did not say why.
 
			At a briefing in Shanghai, a mental health official, asked how 
			people could avoid stress over the outbreak, said they should not 
			watch too much news but enjoy television soap operas instead: "That 
			could help people relieve their anxiety," said the official, Xie 
			Bin.
 First identified in Wuhan, the flu-like virus is believed to have 
			originated at a city market selling wild animals.
 
 The two deaths outside mainland China, in the Philippines and Hong 
			Kong, have both involved visits to Wuhan, where more than 400 people 
			have died.
 
 Nearly 260 cases have been reported in 31 countries and regions 
			outside mainland China, according to a Reuters tally.
 
 More than two dozen airlines have suspended or restricted flights to 
			China and hundreds of foreigners have been evacuated from Wuhan and 
			placed in quarantine around the world.
 
			
			 
			China, which has bristled at some measures to close borders to its 
			travelers, was considering delaying an annual meeting of its top 
			legislative body set, from March 5, people familiar with the matter 
			said.
 "The situation doesn't look likely to be contained by March," a 
			government official told Reuters.
 
 The virus is also stirring animosity in the decades-old dispute 
			between Taiwan and Beijing, with the island complaining that China 
			is providing the WHO with wrong information about Taiwan's cases.
 
			Taiwan is not a WHO member because of China's objections. The United 
			States urged the agency to deal directly with the island's health 
			authorities.
 (Graphic: Comparing new coronavirus to SARS and MERS,
			
			https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH-VIRUS-COMPARISON/
 0100B5BY3CY/index.html)
 
 (Graphic: Tracking the novel coronavirus, https://graphics.reuters.com/CHINA-HEALTH-MAP/0100B59S39E/index.html)
 
 (Reporting by Lusha Zhang, Ryan Woo, Roxanne Liu and Se Young Lee in 
			Beijing; David Stanway, Yilei Sun and Winni Zhou in Shanghai; 
			Additional reporting by Se Young Lee, Yilei Sun, Lusha Zhang, 
			Liangping Gao in China; Ju-min Park in Tokyo; Writing by Robert 
			Birsel; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 
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