Beijing: Shanghai, which is reeling under a massive outbreak of coronavirus cases, has released over 11,000 recovered COVID-19 patients from hospitals, but infection numbers continued to climb, raising questions about China's much-touted dynamic zero-case policy. Wu Qianyu, a senior official with the east Chinese city's public health commission, told a media briefing on Sunday that the patients would be put under home quarantine and no further controls should be imposed on them. "Relevant authorities in the areas they live in have to be alerted that they are allowed to go home.
At the same time, the officials are required to monitor their health (during the quarantine period)," the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported. Over 11,000 recovered patients have been released, it said. But much to the disquiet of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) headed by President Xi Jinping, single-day new infections in Shanghai hit 24,944 on Sunday, setting a new record for the ninth consecutive day. However, positive cases dropped slightly to 1,006 from 1,015 on Saturday.
Shanghai, China's commercial and financial capital, has seen more than 179,000 cases since the current outbreak, driven by the Omicron variant, began on March 1, the Post report said. About 5,400 patients were reported to have mild symptoms, while others were asymptomatic. As the cases continue to rise, Shanghai on Saturday inaugurated 50,000 bed makeshift hospital, its largest till date, amid heightened efforts in battling Omicron, as new daily infections continued to climb, the state-run Global Times reported.
In total, Shanghai has built more than 100 makeshift hospitals with over 160,000 beds, the report said. Neighbouring cities are also on alert to stop the disease from spreading further in Yangtze Delta, one of the country's most important economic areas. Nearby cities such as Hangzhou and Yangzhou have reserved thousands of quarantine sites for accommodating infected patients and their close contacts from Shanghai to support the city's antivirus measures, the Post report said Wu Fan, a leading expert with Shanghai's COVID-19 medical team, said China should stick to dynamic zero-COVID policy rather than "lie flat", adding that antivirus measures should be properly followed to tame the virus with the lowest costs. Wu, who is also the deputy dean of the Shanghai Medical College of Fudan University, said during an interview that nobody knows how the virus will mutate in the future. She said it is possible that the virus may become less lethal yet more contagious and pathogenic, another daily The Paper reported.
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