China pushes vaccines as retreat from 'zero-COVID' turns messy
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[December 15, 2022]
By Brenda Goh and Albee Zhang
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China raced to vaccinate its most
vulnerable people on Thursday in anticipation of waves of COVID-19
infections, with some analysts expecting the death toll to soar after it
eased strict controls that had kept the pandemic at bay for three years.
The push comes as the World Health Organisation also raised concerns
that China's 1.4 billion population was not adequately vaccinated and
the United States offered help in dealing with a surge in infections.
Beijing last Wednesday began dismantling its tough 'zero-COVID'
controls, dropping testing requirements and easing quarantine rules that
had caused mental stress for tens of millions and battered the world's
second largest economy.
The pivot away from President Xi Jinping's signature "zero-COVID" policy
followed unprecedented widespread protests against it. But, WHO
emergencies director Mike Ryan said infections were exploding in China
well before the government's decision to phase out its stringent regime.
"There's a narrative at the moment that China lifted the restrictions
and all of a sudden the disease is out of control," Ryan told a briefing
in Geneva.
"The disease was spreading intensively because I believe the control
measures in themselves were not stopping the disease."
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on Thursday China
has "institutional advantages" to fight COVID.
"We will certainly be able to smoothly get through the peak of the
epidemic," he told a regular news briefing in response to White House
national security spokesperson John Kirby saying that the U.S. was ready
to help if China requested it.
There are increasing signs of chaos during China's change of tack - with
long queues outside fever clinics, runs on medicines and panic buying
across the country.
One video posted online on Wednesday showed several people in thick
winter clothes hooked up to intravenous drips as they sat on stools on
the street outside a clinic in central Hubei province. Reuters verified
the location of the video.
The COVID scare in China also led people in Hong Kong, Macau and in some
neighbourhoods in Australia to go in search for fever medicines and test
kits for family and friends on the mainland.
For all its efforts to quell the virus since it erupted in the central
city of Wuhan in late 2019, China may now pay a price for shielding a
population that lacks "herd immunity" and has low vaccination rates
among the elderly, analysts said.
"Authorities have let cases in Beijing and other cities spread to the
point where resuming restrictions, testing and tracing would be largely
ineffective in bringing outbreaks under control," analysts at Eurasia
Group said in a note on Thursday.
"Upward of 1 million people could die from COVID in the coming months."
Other experts have put the potential toll at more than 2 million. China
has reported just 5,235 COVID-related deaths so far, extremely low by
global standards.
China's stock markets and its currency fell on Thursday on concerns of
the virus spread.
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People wait outside a fever clinic of a
hospital amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in
Beijing, China December 15, 2022. REUTERS/Josh Arslan
China reported 2,000 new symptomatic
COVID-19 infections for Dec. 14 compared with 2,291 a day. The
official figures, however, have become less reliable as testing has
dropped. It also stopped reporting asymptomatic figures on
Wednesday.
CONCERN FOR ELDERLY
China, which has said around 90% of its population is vaccinated
against COVID, has now decided to roll out the second booster shot
for high-risk groups and elderly people over 60 years of age.
National Health Commission spokesperson Mi Feng said on Wednesday it
was necessary to accelerate the promotion of vaccinations, according
to comments reported by state media.
The latest official data shows China administered 1.43 million COVID
shots on Tuesday, well above rates in November of around
100,000-200,000 doses a day. In total, it has administered 3.45
billion shots.
But one Shanghai care home said on Wednesday a number of its
residents have not yet been vaccinated and considering their
underlying medical condition, it has barred visitors and
non-essential deliveries while stockpiling medicines, tests kits and
protective gear.
"We are racking our brains on how to ensure the safety of your
grandparents," the Yuepu Tianyi Nursing Home wrote in a letter
posted on its official WeChat account page.
Beijing has been largely resistant to western vaccines and
treatments, having relied on locally-made shots. Pfizer's oral
COVID-19 treatment Paxlovid is one of the few foreign ones it has
approved.
The treatment, however, has only been available in hospitals for
high-risk patients, but signs have appeared in recent days that it
may soon be made more widely available.
China Meheco Group Co Ltd's stock jumped after it announced a deal
to import the U.S. drugmaker's treatment on Wednesday.
ECONOMIC CONFERENCE
As the virus spreads, President Xi, his ruling Politburo and senior
government officials began a two-day meeting to plot a recovery for
China's battered economy, according to sources with knowledge of the
matter.
China's economy lost more steam in November as factory output growth
slowed and retail sales extended declines, both missing forecasts
and clocking their worst readings since May, data on Thursday
showed.
Economists estimate that China's growth has slowed to around 3% this
year, marking one of China's worst performances in almost half a
century.
(Reporting by Albee Zhang, Liz Lee and Bernard Orr in Beijing,
Brenda Goh in Shanghai and Stella Qiu in Sydney; Writing by John
Geddie and Greg Torode; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Arun
Koyyur)
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