Jumat, 24 Januari 2020

Live updates: Healthy young man dies of coronavirus in China; new cases in Japan, South Korea - The Washington Post

Chung Sung-Jun AFP/Getty Images Disinfection workers in Seoul wearing protective gear spray antiseptic solution in a train terminal amid rising public concerns over the spread of China's Wuhan Coronavirus, Jan. 24, 2020.

BEIJING — A young, healthy man from Wuhan and a person living 1,500 miles from the epicenter of the coronavirus are among the latest victims of the outbreak, which has incited fear and anger across China as its important Spring Festival gets underway.

Authorities around the country, including in the capital, Beijing, have canceled the temple fairs and festivals that accompany the holiday to avoid having large public gatherings where the airborne virus could spread.

“The public should not gather during the Spring Festival and try stay at home as much as possible to protect themselves,” Gao Fu, a member of the expert group of the National Health and Health Commission and director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said Friday.

He encouraged everyone to wear masks, and photos from train stations and airports across the country showed people with their mouths and noses covered.

● There are more than 830 confirmed cases of infection, and at least 26 people have died. A total of 8,420 people are reported to be under observation. The vast majority of the victims had been older than 60, and almost all of them had existing health conditions.

● Authorities are enforcing a lockdown across large parts of the province of Hubei, population 59 million.

● Officials in South Korea confirmed that a second person has tested positive for the virus, a 55-year-old man who had been living in Wuhan. Japan also confirmed a second case, a man in his 40s from Wuhan who arrived in Japan on Sunday after flying through Hong Kong.

● Infections have also been reported in Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam and the United States. In addition to a case confirmed in Washington state, Texas has reported a potential case in Brazos County, 100 miles northwest of Houston.

● The Chinese medical system has clearly struggled to cope with the outbreak, with reports of crowded hospitals, stressed doctors and dwindling supplies.

7:15 AM: After first U.S. case, number of contacts being monitored for virus nearly triples

SEATTLE — There is only one confirmed case of a coronavirus patient in the United States, in Snohomish County, Washington. But the patient’s contacts who are being monitored for signs of the illness jumped from 16 to 43.

Authorities provided no information about the types of individuals being monitored, but the fact that the list expanded is not unexpected.

“This is an evolving investigation, similar to peeling back an onion,” said Heather Thomas, Snohomish Health District spokeswoman. “Our disease investigators, in coordination with other public health partners, are doing daily symptom monitoring and contact investigations.”

Washington State Secretary of Health John Wiesman described the patient’s contacts as being under “active monitoring.” Public health officials call them daily to see if they have a fever, cough or other respiratory issues. If they are experiencing symptoms, they are instructed to call public health officials, who will facilitate medical evaluations.

The contacts are people in both Snohomish and King Counties and represent individuals who have had “prolonged contact” with the patient — eating meals or holding meetings together, for example.

The patient, in his 30s, remains in isolation at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, Wash. At a Wednesday news conference, Jay Cook, Providence’s chief medical officer, said the man is not confined to his hospital bed and is walking around his room.

The staff in the isolation unit are nurses who volunteer to work with patients who are barred from contact with other patients or staff.

Cook said he expects the man to be able to be discharged soon, assuming he continues to improve. “We hope he will continue on his excellent clinical course and hopefully will be able to return to his home in the very near future,” he said.

By: Bonnie Rochman

6:30 AM: Chinese President Xi Jinping appears without mask on state TV at festival banquet

BEIJING — Amid calls for people to avoid public gatherings during the Spring Festival, the state broadcaster, CCTV, led its midday news program with a report about a huge banquet in Beijing attended by President Xi Jinping and other Communist Party leaders. None of them were wearing masks, and the report made no mention of the virus outbreak.

By: Anna Fifield

5:30 AM: Healthy young man dies of coronavirus in China

BEIJING — Until now, the vast majority of coronavirus victims have been older than 60 with preexisting health conditions. But a 36-year-old man from Wuhan, identified only by his family name, Li, died on Thursday. He had no chronic diseases or other existing health conditions, and had been treated with anti-virus medication and antibiotics since being admitted to a hospital on Jan. 9.

Another death occurred in Suihua in Heilongjiang province, near the border with Russia and some 1,500 miles from Wuhan.

By: Anna Fifield

5:00 AM: New travel restrictions imposed as efforts grow to curb transmission of virus

BEIJING — Wuhan shut down tunnels under the Yangtze River to stop the flow of traffic. That comes in addition to travel bans imposed on Wuhan and seven other areas in Hubei province Thursday, with trains and buses canceled and highways closed.

All ride-hailing services in Wuhan were cut off from midday Friday in attempt to stop transmission of the virus, and only half of taxis are allowed on the road every day, alternating between tags ending in odd and even numbers.

China Southern, the country’s biggest airline, had already canceled all flights in and out of Wuhan airport on Thursday. The other two main carriers, Air China and China Eastern, said they would cancel all Wuhan flights from Friday to at least Feb. 8.

New year festivals and temple fairs around the country have been canceled, and the Forbidden City in Beijing, which can admit 80,000 people a day and was already entirely sold out for the holiday, has been closed until further notice.

Production companies have postponed the release of seven blockbuster films that were to be released over the holiday, prompting Chinese cinema companies to close the country’s 70,000 movie theaters.

Schools in Hubei province, due to begin the spring semester after the holiday, will not open their doors as planned but will wait for further guidance from health authorities. And the Education Ministry instructed universities around China to delay their opening dates if necessary.

By: Anna Fifield

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2020-01-24 13:01:00Z
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China coronavirus: Wuhan panic-building new hospital in 6 days - Business Insider - Business Insider

  • The Chinese city of Wuhan is rushing to build a new hospital in just six days to treat patients of the deadly coronavirus.
  • Excavation has started at a site in Wuhan, where the outbreak started, and where doctors describe an overwhelmed medical system.
  • The city, and at least nine others, have had their public transport links shut off, leaving a total of 30 million people quarantined in a bid to stop the virus from spreading further.
  • Wuhan’s strategy mirrors Beijing’s efforts to control the deadly SARS coronavirus outbreak in 2003, when it built a hospital in just seven days that treated one-seventh of the country’s patients.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

The Chinese city of Wuhan is rushing to build a brand-new hospital within six days to treat patients of the coronavirus that has killed at least 26 people across the country and is overwhelming the quarantined city’s health system.

The 2019-nCoV virus, which has infected more than 870 people as of Friday morning, originated in Wuhan. China has closed down public transport links in the city and at least nine others, sealing off a total of 30 million people.

Doctors in Wuhan say that people have to queue for hours for medical attention, that screening the disease is difficult, that there is not enough protective gear, and that some doctors were told not to go to work over fears they could catch the virus.

Video footage shows people packed in small hallways as they wait for treatment.

New York Times video Wuhan hospital crowding

Foto: A still from video sourced by The New York Times shows people crowding into a hospital corridor in Wuhan, China, amid the coronavirus outbreak.sourceThe New York Times

Wuhan authorities said Friday that a new, 1,000-bed hospital is being built for coronavirus patients to „address the insufficiency of existing medical resources,“ the Associated Press reported.

Patients with the coronavirus are currently being treated in hospitals and fever clinics across the city.

The new hospital is to be built in six days, and be put to use on February 3, state-run news site The Paper reported, citing state media outlet People’s Daily.

The hospital will be made from prefabricated buildings – making it quicker and cheaper to build – on the outskirts of the city, People’s Daily reported.

Video footage shows construction machinery working at the site.

The strategy is a repeat of how China dealt with the outbreak of SARS in 2003, which killed more than 770 people.

Wuhan

Foto: Excavators at the construction site of a new hospital in Wuhan on January 24.sourceSTR/AFP via Getty Images

In April 2003, Beijing built in just seven days the Xiaotangshan Hospital, which People’s Daily said treated one-seventh of China’s SARS patients at the time.

People’s Daily called that hospital „a miracle in the history of medicine.“

The ongoing Wuhan coronavirus can spread from human to human, and has already spread to some healthcare workers treating the infected.

It has spread to at least eight other countries: the US, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, Singapore, Vietnam, and Saudi Arabia.

This map shows where it had spread as of Thursday:

These countries have quarantined people who are infected, and are monitoring those who have been in close contact with the infected.

Other countries, including Scotland and Finland, have suspected cases.

Countries around the world are screening passengers in airports for symptoms, and have quarantine procedures in place.

wuhan virus

Foto: Passengers who just arrived on a train from Wuhan are screened for coronavirus in Beijing.sourceKevin Frayer/Getty Images

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2020-01-24 11:26:10Z
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China coronavirus outbreak: Death toll climbs as authorities lock down more cities in unprecedented bid to contain virus - CBS News

Authorities in China raced Friday to lock down more cities in an extraordinary bid to halt the spread of the deadly coronavirus, which has left at least 26 people dead in the country and sickened hundreds more. The move is unprecedented and affects more than 30 million people.

The U.S. has confirmed one case, and several others have popped up in Asian countries — all among people who visited Wuhan, China, the city at the epicenter of the outbreak.

Authorities believe the virus, which causes flu-like symptoms, moved into the human population from an infected animal at a market in Wuhan. 

Chinese health officials and the World Health Organization confirmed this week that the virus has been transmitted person-to-person, but it remains unclear how easy it is to contract it from another infected individual. The WHO on Thursday declined to declare the virus a global public health emergency, saying it was still too soon to take that measure.

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2020-01-24 11:02:00Z
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China coronavirus outbreak: Death toll climbs as authorities lock down more cities in unprecedented bid to contain virus - CBS News

Authorities in China raced Friday to lock down more cities in an extraordinary bid to halt the spread of the deadly coronavirus, which has left at least 26 people dead in the country and sickened hundreds more. The move is unprecedented and affects more than 30 million people.

The U.S. has confirmed one case, and several others have popped up in Asian countries — all among people who visited Wuhan, China, the city at the epicenter of the outbreak.

Authorities believe the virus, which causes flu-like symptoms, moved into the human population from an infected animal at a market in Wuhan. 

Chinese health officials and the World Health Organization confirmed this week that the virus has been transmitted person-to-person, but it remains unclear how easy it is to contract it from another infected individual. The WHO on Thursday declined to declare the virus a global public health emergency, saying it was still too soon to take that measure.

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2020-01-24 09:43:00Z
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Healthy young man dies of coronavirus in China; new cases in Japan and South Korea - The Washington Post

Chung Sung-Jun AFP/Getty Images Disinfection workers wearing protective gears spray antiseptic solution in a train terminal amid rising public concerns over the spread of China's coronavirus at on Thursday in Seoul.

BEIJING — A young, healthy man from Wuhan and a person living 1,500 miles from the epicenter of the coronavirus are among the latest victims of the outbreak, which has incited fear and anger across China as the important Spring Festival gets underway.

Reports of eight new deaths from the pneumonia-like virus, taking the total to 26, came as authorities enforced a lockdown across large parts of the province of Hubei, population 59 million. But they also came as the medical system clearly struggled to cope with the outbreak, with reports of crowded hospitals, stressed doctors and dwindling supplies.

Adding to the stress, Friday marked the official start of the Spring Festival, when China celebrates the arrival of the new lunar year. Authorities around the country, including in the capital Beijing, have canceled the temple fairs and festivals that accompany the holiday to avoid having large public gatherings where the airborne virus could be spread.

“The public should not gather during the Spring Festival and try stay at home as much as possible to protect themselves,” Gao Fu, a member of the expert group of the National Health and Health Commission and director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said Friday.

He encouraged everyone to wear masks, and photos from train stations and airports across the country showed people with their mouths and noses covered.

The state broadcaster, CCTV, led its midday news broadcast with a report about a huge Spring Festival banquet in Beijing, led by Xi Jinping and other Communist Party leaders. None of them were wearing masks and there was no mention of the virus outbreak in any the report.

[

Chinese cities cancel New Year celebrations, travel ban widens in effort to stop coronavirus outbreak

]

The National Health Commission reported Friday that there are now more than 830 confirmed cases of infection, and reports of new cases continued to roll in from around the country: from Xinjiang in the west to Shandong in the east, from Inner Mongolia in the north to Hainan in the south.

A total of 8,420 were reported to be under observation.

Amid increasing talk that the real number of deaths and infections could be much higher than the official figures, the State Council, the Chinese equivalent of the cabinet, vowed to “seriously handle” underreporting of cases.

But still the virus continues to spread, including outside China’s borders.

South Korean authorities confirmed Friday that a second person tested positive for the new coronavirus. The person had flown from Wuhan to Incheon airport, outside Seoul, and is now hospitalized.

Japan also confirmed a second case, a man in his 40s from Wuhan who arrived in Japan on Sunday. He is currently being treated, the health ministry said.

Other countries to have reported infections including Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam and the United States. In addition to a confirmed case in Washington state, Texas has reported a potential case of coronavirus in Brazos County, about 100 miles northwest of Houston.

The patient contracted a respiratory illness within two weeks of traveling in Wuhan and is being isolated at home, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said

While the World Health Organization has still not declared the outbreak was a public health emergency of international concern, Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Thursday that it still amounted to “an emergency in China.”

“It has not yet become a global health emergency, but it may become one,” he said.

[Travel ban goes into effect in Chinese city of Wuhan as authorities try to stop coronavirus spread]

Some details about the latest deaths in China have raised concerns about the virus’s spread.

Until now, the vast majority of the people had been older than 60 and almost all of them had existing health conditions. All of them had been in Hubei province and especially in its capital, Wuhan.

But the latest announcement said that 36-year-old man from Wuhan, identified only by his family name, Li, died on Thursday. He had no chronic diseases or other existing health conditions, and had been treated with anti-virus medication and antibiotics since being admitted to hospital on Jan. 9.

Another death occurred in Suihua in Heilongjiang province, near the border with Russia and some 1,500 miles from Wuhan.

New travel restrictions were put in place Friday to try to curb transmission of the virus.

Wuhan shut down tunnels under the Yangtze River to stop the flow of traffic. That comes in addition to the travel bans imposed on Wuhan and seven other areas in Hubei province Thursday, with trains and buses canceled and highways closed.

All ride hailing services in Wuhan were cut off from midday 12:00 Friday in attempt to stop transmission of the virus, and only half of taxis are allowed on the road every day, alternating between tags ending in odd and even numbers.

China Southern, the country’s biggest carrier, had already canceled all flights in and out of Wuhan airport on Thursday. The other two main carriers, Air China and China Eastern, said they would cancels all Wuhan flights Friday to at least Feb. 8.

[As families tell of pneumonia-like deaths in Wuhan, some wonder if China virus count is too low]

Authorities are taking extreme measures to stop the large public gathering that are a hallmark of the Spring Festival, which is often the only time of year that families can gather together, much like Thanksgiving in the United States.

New year festivals and temple fairs around the country have been canceled, and the Forbidden City in Beijing, which can admit 80,000 people a day and was already entirely sold out for the holiday, has been closed until further notice.

Production companies have postponed the release of seven blockbuster films that were to be released over the holiday, leading Chinese cinema companies to close the country’s 70,000 movie theaters.

Schools in Hubei province, due to begin the spring semester after the holiday, will not open their doors as planned but will wait for further guidance from health authorities. And the education ministry instructed universities around the control to delay their opening dates if necessary.

Lyric Li and Wang Yuan in Beijing contributed to this report.

Read more:

Stock markets brace for economic impact of coronavirus outbreak

Wuhan: The Chinese megacity at the center of coronavirus outbreak

See how the coronavirus is upending daily life in China

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

Like Washington Post World on Facebook and stay updated on foreign news

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2020-01-24 07:40:00Z
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Kamis, 23 Januari 2020

Mnuchin says Greta Thunberg can explain US economic policy after she studies economics in college - CNN

The remarks came during a press briefing by the secretary during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where the world's political, business and financial elite turned their attention to the climate crisis and sustainability.
Greta Thunberg: 'Nothing has been done' to tackle the climate crisis
"Greta Thunberg has called for a public and private sector divestment from fossil fuel companies. Does that pose a threat to US economic growth?" a reporter asked Mnuchin.
"Is she the chief economist, or who is she? I'm confused," the secretary replied. "It's a joke. After she goes and studies economics in college she can come back and explain that to us."
Thunberg responded to Mnuchin on Twitter later Thursday.
"My gap year ends in August, but it doesn't take a college degree in economics to realise that our remaining 1,5° carbon budget and ongoing fossil fuel subsidies and investments don't add up," she said. "So either you tell us how to achieve this mitigation or explain to future generations and those already affected by the climate emergency why we should abandon our climate commitments."
Thunberg has repeatedly criticized top industrial nations for not doing enough to address the crisis. Earlier this week at the conference, Thunberg admonished world leaders for doing "basically nothing" to reduce carbon emissions despite evidence of a looming climate catastrophe.
"Immediately end all fossil fuel subsidies and immediately and completely divest from fossil fuels. We don't want these things done by 2050, or 2030 or even 2021 -- we want this done now," she said.
Greta Thunberg labeled a 'brat' by Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro
Mnuchin's comments add to mocking remarks President Donald Trump has made toward Thunberg. Last month, he tweeted that Thunberg -- who has been open about her diagnosis of Asperger's, calling it a "superpower" that helps her activism -- has "anger management" issues. In September, he called her a "very happy young girl" after she sternly castigated world leaders over the climate crisis.
Trump didn't address Thunberg by name when he spoke at Davos earlier this week, though he did call for the rejection of "the perennial prophets of doom and their predictions of the apocalypse."
Asked by a reporter at the conference whether he spoke to other leaders and CEOs about Thunberg and her policies which many of them have supported, Trump said: "No, I didn't actually. But I would have loved to have seen her speak." He also said that she should "start working" on other countries that he claimed are contributing more to the climate crisis.

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2020-01-23 14:50:00Z
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Map: A deadly virus is spreading across the globe. Here's where coronavirus cases have been confirmed. - NBC News

As of Thursday, more than 630 people have been sickened and 17 have died since the start of the month, according to an NBC News analysis of data collected from China's National Health Commission, province and city health departments, China Central Television, and the People's Daily. China Central Television is a government-run station and People’s Daily is Communist Party-run.

While most of the cases and all of the deaths have occurred in China, officials fear that this week’s busy travel season, in advance of Saturday’s Lunar New Year, could accelerate the virus’ spread.

The Chinese government, which is looking to avoid a repeat of the 2003 SARS outbreak, has warned officials not to cover up the spread of the virus. The South China Morning Post reported Tuesday that Beijing said anyone who withheld information would be “the sinner of a millennium to the party and the people” and would be “nailed on the pillar of shame for eternity.”

See NBC News’ coverage of the coronavirus.

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2020-01-23 15:24:00Z
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