The rate of HMPV infections in northern China is declining, Chinese 
		health official says
		
		 
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		 [January 13, 2025] 
		BEIJING (AP) — The rate of infections with the flu-like human 
		metapneumovirus (HMPV) in northern China is declining, a health official 
		said Sunday, amid some international concern over a potential pandemic. 
		 
		HMPV, which belongs to the same family as the respiratory syncytial 
		virus, causes flu or cold-like symptoms including fever, cough and nasal 
		congestion. The symptoms often clear up by themselves, though they can 
		cause lower respiratory tract infections among children, older adults 
		and those immunocompromised. 
		 
		“The human metapneumovirus is not a new virus, and has been with humans 
		for at least several decades,” said Wang Liping, a researcher at the 
		Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, during a press 
		briefing by China’s National Health Commission. 
		 
		Wang added that the increase in recent years in the number of cases of 
		the virus, first detected in the Netherlands in 2001, is due to better 
		detection methods. 
		 
		“At present, the rate of positive cases in human metapneumovirus 
		detection is fluctuating, and the rate of positive cases in northern 
		provinces is declining, and the rate of positive cases among patients 
		aged 14 and below has started to decline,” she said. 
		 
		Concerns surfaced in recent days over a surge in HMPV infections in 
		northern China after images circulated online of hospitals overrun with 
		masked patients. The World Health Organization said it has not received 
		reports of unusual outbreaks in China or elsewhere. 
		 
		Experts say HMPV is unlike COVID-19 in that it has been around for 
		decades and there is some built-in immunity to it. Most children are 
		infected with the virus by the age of 5. 
		 
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            Wang Liping, left, researcher for the Chinese Center for Disease 
			Control and Prevention speaks during a press briefing by the 
			National Health Commission as concerns surfaced in recent days over 
			a surge in human metapneumovirus (HMPV) infections in northern China 
			after images circulated online of hospitals overrun with masked 
			patients, in Beijing, Sunday, Jan. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) 
            
			
			  Wang said respiratory diseases 
			currently affecting people in China are caused by known pathogens, 
			and no new infectious diseases have emerged. 
			The number of patients in fever clinics and 
			emergency departments across the country has been rising but is 
			still generally lower compared to the same period last year, said 
			Gao Xinqiang, deputy director of the Department of Medical Emergency 
			Response of the health commission. 
			 
			“There is no obvious shortage of medical resources,” Gao said. 
			 
			Flu infections across the country are expected to gradually decline 
			in mid-to-late January, said commission spokesperson Hu Qiangqiang. 
			 
			There are no vaccines or drugs available for HMPV. Experts recommend 
			precautions against catching the virus and other respiratory 
			diseases including washing one’s hands regularly, avoiding crowds if 
			possible, and wearing a mask in crowded places. 
			
			
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