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Deaths from coronavirus spike by 40% as experts say infected cases now at 44,000

Posted on 28 January 2020 No comments
By The SUN


The intensive care unit at Zhongnan Hospital in Wuhan (AP Photo)

The death toll from the rapidly spreading coronavirus that started in the Chinese city of Wuhai topped 800 today, Jan. 27, a rise of more than 40% in just 24 hours.

The rate of infection is also climbing fast, with the Chinese government reporting more than 2,800 confirmed cases, a significant increase from the 2,000 cases reported the previous day.

But what is often not reported is the actual number of patients in Wuhan, the center of the epidemic which has been locked down for the past five days.
According to a report from the South China Morning Post, academics from the University of Hong Kong have estimated that the number of patients in Wuhan had already reached a staggering 43,590 by last Saturday. 

Using mathematical extrapolations, the experts say the number of infected cases would double in 6.2 days.

That would make the novel coronavirus far more infectious than Sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome), which afflicted more than 8,000 people across China, and killed about a tenth of them. Hong Kong was among those severely hit, with 299 deaths.
Mainland officials now say that unlike Sars, the Wuhan coronavirus which causes pneumonia, is infectious even during the incubation period, which could last about 14 days.

The Hong Kong experts warned a pandemic might be close because human-to-human transmission is already happening in major mainland cities.

So far, all the confirmed cases both in China and other parts of the world involve patients who had been to Wuhan.



Hong Kong has eight confirmed cases of infection.

As of midnight last night, the city has banned the entry of all Hubei residents and those who had visited the Chinese province in the past 14 days. Returning local residents are exempted.

Macau, which has 7 confirmed cases,  has adopted a firmer stance, announcing that about 1,100 Hubei visitors in the city would have to return to the mainland or be quarantined.

Several countries, including the United StatesAustralia and Russia, are planning to evacuate their nationals from Wuhan where everyone is virtually quarantined because of the lockdown.

But the Philippines, which has an estimated 200,000 nationals working in China, both legally and illegally, has no plans for a mass evacuation.

Presidential spokesman Salvador Panelo also said in a radio interview that the government cannot force Filipinos working there to leave their jobs.

“If they feel that they are safe, hindi mo mapapaalis yun doon, kasi livelihood nila yun,” he said.

The Philippine government has, however, asked more than 600 Chinese nationals from Wuhan who managed to fly into the Philippines just before the lockdown to return home as a precautionary measure.

Many of them had flown direct from the central Chinese city to Kalibo in Aklan, a major gateway to the famed Boracay island.

Some of the Wuhan tourists who were sent back to the Mainland by the Philippine govt (photo by Epoch Times)

Among the confirmed cases in Hong Kong is a visiting couple from Wuhan who had stayed with their daughter in Ma On Shan before falling ill  

The couple’s daughter and her Filipina domestic worker were both quarantined at the Lady MacLehose HolidayVillage in Sai Kung on Jan 25 as a result.

According to Consul General Raly Tejada, the Filipina has remained asymptomatic since.

“We are hoping she remains healthy and eventually released,” ConGen Tejada has said.

The Hong Kong Health Department reportedly told the Consulate that the worker will stay in quarantine, and no test will be done on her, although her body temperature will be monitored regularly.

“If nothing happens in 14 days, she may leave QC (quarantine camp). If she turns to have fever or other symptoms, she will be sent to hospital for hospital treatment,” said the message.

“Most importantly she is not a patient but just a confinee. We will send updates soonest if any.”
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No Filipino among coronavirus cases in China, says Phl ambassador

Posted on No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

No Filipino so far has been sick of the coronavirus, says Ambassador Sta Romana

The Philippine Ambassador to China, Jose Santiago Sta. Romana, has said no Filipino has been stricken by the deadly novel coronavirus that originated in Wuhan city.

“No report of a Filipino in China infected by the novel coronavirus thus far,” he said in an online message late on Jan 26.

But he said the Philippine Embassy in Beijing is closely monitoring the situation, and advised Filipino nationals who want to be evacuated from the stricken areas, particularly Wuhan, to contact the nearest consulate in Shanghai, +86 139 1747 7112.

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Ambassador Sta Romana also says there is as yet no plans to evacuate Filipinos from the blockaded city.

"We are closely assessing the situation of Filipinos in Wuhan in coordination with the Shanghai Consulate and DFA (Department of Foreign Affairs). All options are under discussion, no decision yet tonight," he said in his message.

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Embassy records show only four registered Filipinos in Wuhan. The actual number, however, could be far higher, as many Filipinas are known to work there illegally as domestic workers.

One of them, Malou G., told The SUN in an online message that she and two other Filipinas managed to flee Wuhan the night before the city, along with most parts of Hubei province, were locked down in a bid to contain the spread of the virus.
All roads leading to Wuhan are closed (credit to the owner)

Malou said she and her friends got scared when the police told them they would all be moved to one place and wouldn’t be let out until Feb. 3

“Gusto po nila kami isama sa isang building na pinaglagyan sa mga tao pero hindi namalayan ng mga pulis na naka exit kami, ma’am. Bawal po kasi ang lumabas sa mga province.”

Luckily, she said one of her friends who works as a teacher in the city, managed to get them high speed train tickets to Shandong. They left Wuhan at 9pm on Jan 22, then caught another train to Beijing where they are now staying.



She said Wuhan was already a virtual ghost town when they left, with most people either in hospitals or holed up at home, afraid of being infected.

She also related seeing several people, apparently sick, suddenly crumpling to the ground where they would be later picked up by ambulances.

“Parang ‘Train to Busan’, maam”, she said, referring to the hit Korean movie that centered on a group of terrified train passengers running away from a countrywide viral outbreak that turned the afflicted into zombies.

She also confirmed the presence of many foreigners in Wuhan, including Filipinas like her who work secretly as domestic helpers. “Marami pa sila sa Wuhan, ma’am,” she said.

Malou related that their employers had let them go a week before their escape. They were provided accommodation by the coordinator of an international school, but they survived by mostly eating porridge.

Shortly afterwards she said chaos erupted, with the wet markets being ordered to discard their products, and residents told they would be put in isolation.
Wuhan is a virtual dead city, says Malou (Credit to owner)

One of her friends who remained in Wuhan later told her they were “ok” as they were rescued by a certain “Ma’am Lalaine” who managed to get help from the Consulate in Shanghai.

While fearful of her safety, Malou does not seem inclined to return to the Philippines just yet, clearly hoping she and her friends would soon be able to ride out the storm sparked by the deadly virus.

Escaping the lockdown and the contamination itself are enough to give her hope.

“Malakas siguro resistensya ko,” she mused.


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Filipina DH quarantined after sharing flat with 2 coronavirus patients

Posted on 26 January 2020 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

Lake Silver in Ma On Shan, where the Filipina shared a flat with HK's 4th and 5th known coronavirus cases

A Filipina domestic worker in Ma On Shan was put under quarantine yesterday, Jan. 25, after two of her employer’s house guests tested positive for the Wuhan coronavirus, the fourth and fifth such confirmed cases in Hong Kong.

The information was confirmed today, Jan 26, by Consul General Raly Tejada, who said the Filipina was healthy and showed no signs of infection.

“However, she was contact traced to her employer’s two guests in Ma On Shan who were tested positive,” said CG Tejada. “Given Hong Kong’s strict protocols and heightened emergency alert, even healthy individuals maybe subjected to quarantine procedures if there is proof of contact.”
He assured that the Consulate is in close contact with the HK Department of Health and will extend assistance to the worker if necessary.

“We are hoping she remains healthy and eventually released,” he said.

He added the Consulate is ready to help any Filipino needing assistance.


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It is not clear how long the Filipina would be quarantined. It is the first reported case of a Filipino being affected by the rapidly spreading novel coronavirus, which was first traced to the central Chinese city of Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province.

Chief Executive Carrie Lam yesterday raised the highest emergency level for Hong Kong, saying the situation had reached a “critical point,” two days after Hong Kong’s first two confirmed cases.
 
It's mask season in HK again as the CE raises emergency alert level
She also confirmed reports schools across the city would reopen on Feb. 17, two weeks later than was previously announced.

The annual Hong Kong marathon, scheduled for Feb 5 and 6, has also been scrapped, to prevent large numbers of people congregating. All public celebrations of the Lunar New Year have also been shelved for the same reasons.

And today, Ocean Park and Hong Kong Disneyland announced they would close indefinitely in response to the heightened response to the contagion.
 
Ocean Park and HK Disneyland have closed down as part of emergency measures
The Hospital Authority also ordered the suspension of all general visiting arrangements, volunteer services and clinical attachment programs at public hospitals.

However, Mrs Lam rejected calls for the border with the mainland to be closed, saying such a move would be “inappropriate and impractical.”

The heightened alert in Hong Kong echoes steps taken by most major cities across China, including Beijing and Shanghai, as the rate of contamination continued to mount.



As of this morning, more than 2,000 people have tested positive for the virus nationwide, with at least 56 confirmed deaths.

Wuhan and most other cities in Hubei have been locked down to contain the spread of the virus, trapping millions of people inside the affected area.

In response, several countries, including the United States, France and Russia have begun taking steps to evacuate their trapped nationals from Wuhan, where medical supplies are reported to be running low, while thousands of people swarm hospitals for check-ups and treatments.

There are more than 11 million people in Wuhan, and 58.5 million in the entire Hubei province.

In other parts of the world, the number of confirmed cases mounts by the day, although all have been traced back to Wuhan so far.

Reports indicate some patients did not show the usual symptoms, including a two-year-old boy in Shenzhen who had no fever, cough or sore throat, but tests showed he had pneumonia and was  positive for the coronavirus.

The latest to report a confirmed case was Canada, which described the patient as a man in his 50s who recently flew from Wuhan to Guangzhou, then on to Toronto on Jan. 23.

Singapore and Malaysia confirmed four cases each Saturday, and Japan, its third. France reported three cases Friday, the first in Europe; and the US reported a second case, that of a woman who had returned to Chicago from China.

Hong Kong also confirmed its latest three cases Saturday, after reporting the first two on Friday.

The latest cases involved the 62-year-old woman and her 63-year-old husband in Ma On Shan, who had been in Wuhan within two weeks before getting sick. They were taken to Prince of Wales Hospital in Shatin where they are still being treated.

They stayed in a flat in Lake Silver in Ma On Shan with their daughter and the Filipina helper. Their daughter was also taken to hospital with fever, while the Filipina who was quarantined did not show any symptoms.

Earlier on the same day, another 62-year-old woman tested positive at Tuen Mun Hospital. She arrived in Hong Kong on Jan. 19 from Shenzhen North Station, and developed a fever and cough the next day. She had been to a wet market and visited a relative in a hospital in Wuhan who was admitted with cough.

Her husband, daughter and son-in-law with whom she stayed in a flat in South Hillcrest in Tuen Mun have been quarantined although they were all asymptomatic.

The first confirmed case in Hong Kong was a 39-year-old mainland tourist who had taken the high speed train from Wuhan to Shenzhen, and then on to Hong Kong on Thursday, Jan 23. He was found with fever at the West Kowloon station.


His four family members went on to spend the night at the Empire Hotel in Tsim Sha Tsui, then flew out the next morning to Manila aboard Cebu Pacific 5J111. Philippine health authorities said they were not tested for the virus as they did not have fever on arrival.

The second confirmed case is a 56-year-old Hong Kong resident who had visited Wuhan. He submitted himself for tests at the Prince of Wales Hospital after experiencing a slight fever.

Hong Kong health authorities said three people who had been in close contact with the two had been placed in hospital quarantine. Another five people had been put in quarantine at one of two holiday camps set for the purpose: Lady MacLehose Holiday Village in Sai Kung, and Lei Yue Mun Park.
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