By Daisy CL Mandap
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Food & Health Secretary Sophia Chan confirms a new wave of infections has begun
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In what could be an indication that the fourth wave of
coronavius infectious has truly begun, Hong Kong
health authorities reported 26 new Covid-19 cases and more than 40 preliminary
positive ones today, Nov. 20.
Secretary for Food and Health Dr Sophia Chan said in a press
briefing that a new wave of infections has started in the city, citing experts
and data from the Centre for Health Protection.
“But of course we are now doing our best, and before this
severe situation started, in the past week, we have already tightened many of
our measures, including border control measures, quarantine measures, hotel
regulation measures, and also some of the social distancing measures,” Dr Chan
said.
“We have also ramped up our testing capacity and set up four
community testing centres, and also improved the accessibility of people
getting tested, not only the distribution of bottles, but also getting tested
in our centres.”
What appears to bother the experts the most is that many of
the new cases have unknown sources, indicating there are many silent carriers
around who could unknowingly spread the virus to a lot of people.
Of today’s confirmed cases, five were imported, involving a
returnee each from Pakistan
and Romania, two from India, and a pilot from the United Kingdom.
Of the 21 locally acquired cases, 12 were linked to previous
infections, and 9 had unknown sources.
Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan from the Centre for Health Protection
said in a separate media briefing that most of the new preliminary cases were
local cases, and untraceable.
Setting off the alarm further is a cluster of infections
that has emerged from the Starlight Dance Club on Lockhart Road, Wanchai.
Among the new confirmed cases today is a 75-year-old
businesswoman who visited the club on Nov 14. She lives at Victoria Heights
on Stubbs Road,
and works at Lyndhurst Terrace in Central. Among the places she visited during
the virus incubation was the Hong Kong Golf Club in Deepwater Bay.
Dr Chuang said that apart from the businesswoman, nine other
cases had been to the venue, including at least five dance instructors and one
staff member. Among the preliminary cases, at least seven are also linked to
the club.
Many of the instructors at the club also taught dancing in at
least two other venues, Heavenly Dance Studio in Sheung Wan, and Dance
Culture in Causeway
Bay. Chuang said it was
possible other dance studios may be added later as the teachers went to several
schools.
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| Some teachers at Starlight also held classes at Heavenly Dance Studio (RTHK photo) |
She said the patients had been to the club between Nov 12
and 14, so people who had been there during those dates should have themselves
tested.
Also among the new confirmed cases is a 27-year-old male
“bar bender” at a construction site in Yuen Long. His 12 close associates will
be sent for testing, while more than 100 others who worked at the site will be
given specimen bottles.
He developed symptoms on Nov 15, but still went to join a
birthday party in a room at the Olympian Hong Kong Hotel two days later. One of
his family members has also tested positive.
Another case is a 73-year-old man who tested positive at the
same time as his 37-year-old man male
relative who attended a special needs school, the Leung King Adult Training
Centre in Tuen Mun. Another seven students and staff at the school will be
tested, while the school will be closed for disinfection.
The other untraceable cases are 61-year-old female security
guard at Greenwood Garden in Shatin, a 63-year-old taxi driver who lives in
Tseung Kwan O and shared his vechicle with two other driver; a professional man
who works in San Po Kong and lives in Lam Tin; and a 42-year-old woman who
lives at Crowne Plaza Hotel in Tseung Kwan O, and arrived from Japan earlier
this year to visit relatives and friends.
They also include a 59-year-old housewife who lives at
Pacific Palisades in Braemar Hill, North Point; another housewife who lives at Lee Man
Building in Mong Kokl;
and a 57-year-old who lives in Tsuen Wan, and attended an oldies’ party during
the incubation period.
Asked about reports that four taxi drivers previously
confirmed as having the coronavirus subsequently tested negative, Dr Chuang
said it is suspected that the test samples were contaminated.
“It’s hard to say that the tests were false positive. Some
cases were positive before, and they were tested negative after admission to
hospital. So, the case numbers will not be deleted because the test samples
were negative subsequently and there was no antibody detected,” she said.
The total number of cases in Hong Kong
now stands at 5,518 with 108 deaths, which mostly occurred during the third
wave which began in early July.
Only 115 confirmed patients are still being treated in 19
public hospitals, with 8 in critical condition, 2 in serious condition, and 105
in stable condition.