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Thursday, February 13, 2020

China coronavirus epicenter boosts med waste treatment as new cases spike

The Chinese province at the center of the coronavirus outbreak has almost doubled its medical waste handling capacity after media images of bags of garbage piling up uncovered in hospital yards raised public concerns over secondary infections.
Adding to the pressure on authorities Hubei province, in central China, on Thursday reported a spike in new cases. Provincial health officials said 242 people had died from the flu-like virus on Wednesday, the fastest daily rise in fatalities so far, with another 14,840 new infections after a change in diagnostic methods.
The outbreak is putting China’s relatively unsophisticated waste treatment system to a massive test. An inadequate waste handling capacity in some regions, together with hefty disposal fees, has helped create an illegal medical waste disposal industry.
Data issued by the Ministry of Ecology and Environment (MEE) on Thursday showed that Hubei, where the virus emerged in December, had a medical waste handling capacity of 317.5 tonnes per day by Feb. 11, up from 180 tonnes per day before the virus outbreak.
“China will take further measures to improve medical waste handling capacity in Hubei… and meanwhile closely monitor the situation in other regions, in order to prevent environmental risks and support the war against the coronavirus,” the MEE said.
Hubei has been collecting 187 tonnes of medical waste each day, with 125 tonnes related to the coronavirus.

Emergency disposal facilities with a capacity of 55.8 tonnes per day can be put into operation at any time, the MEE said, as the number of number of patients getting treated increases and more medical workers are sent to the province.
At least six listed medical waste handling companies have seen their share prices rally after the coronavirus outbreak, boosted by market expectations that regulations will be tightened, as they were after the SARS outbreak in 2003.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-health-waste/chinas-coronavirus-epicenter-boosts-medical-waste-treatment-as-new-cases-spike-idUSKBN207145

LabCorp begins work on developing coronavirus test

LabCorp said on Thursday it has begun work on developing its own test for the coronavirus that has killed over 1,300 in China.
Since late January, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has rushed to distribute the agency’s testing kits to allow states to do their own testing rather than ship all samples to CDC headquarters in Atlanta.
The laboratory service provider said it had immediately engaged with the CDC on its test being available to commercial labs and is preparing to support the global response, if necessary.
LabCorp also said it had seen minimal impact to its business due to the outbreak, particularly in China, where the usually week-long Lunar New Year holiday was extended by 10 days in much of the country amid mounting alarm over the epidemic.
“We’ll have to watch quarter-by-quarter if there’s any minor impact. But over the year period of time, we think that we’ll be fine based on what we know today,” Chief Executive Officer Adam Schechter said on a conference call with analysts.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-health-laboratory-corp/labcorp-begins-work-on-developing-coronavirus-test-idUSKBN207208

China pushes for cheaper health insurance products to battle virus

China is nudging insurers to work on cheaper medical cover linked to the coronavirus and is assuring them of fast-track approval for these new products, people with knowledge of the matter said.
The move will mark a shift in the Chinese insurance market where the bulk of existing products are essentially investment schemes and pure healthcare coverage accounts for only about a fifth of the total life insurance premium.
In the last one week, China Life (601628.SS), China Pacific Insurance (2601.HK), Ping An Insurance Group (601318.SS) and Zhong An Online P&C Insurance Co (6060.HK), among others, have included coverage for the virus in their existing medical insurance products, according to their websites.
At least half a dozen more are in the process of requesting approval for products with coronavirus coverage in the coming weeks, said the people, declining to be named as they were not authorized to speak to the media.
The scramble comes as the Chinese province of Hubei, at the epicenter of the outbreak, reported a record surge in the death toll on Thursday and as global health experts warned the epidemic could get far worse before it is brought under control.
China’s Banking and Insurance Regulator (CBIRC) last week adjusted actuary rules for healthcare, accident and life insurance as well annuity insurance, which will help lower premiums for such insurance by 3% to 5%.
Police officers walk past a man holding his mobile phone while wearing face mask and plastic gloves, on a street following an outbreak of the novel coronavirus in the country, in Kunming, Yunnan province, China February 13, 2020. REUTERS/Stringer
The sources said the lower premiums and push for cheaper, basic medical cover, were largely prompted by the need to deal with treatment for those who may get infected by the coronavirus.
CBIRC did not respond to Reuters request for comment.

QUICK APPROVALS, AWARENESS

Despite a weak government healthcare system, private health insurance has been slow to take off in China as insurers mainly catered to demand for high-margin investment-like insurance products.

The high cost of coverage for critical illness products, which typically exclude insurance for epidemics, has put them out of reach of many, industry officials said.
Beijing, however, has been pushing private insurance firms to expand their product coverage to ease pressure on the healthcare system, and as part of a broader crackdown on the sale of shadow banking-linked investment products by insurers.
As a result, health insurance in 2019 accounted for 23% of life premiums in China, up from just 8% in 2003, according to Fitch Ratings. In the United States, this figure is about 30% of the life premiums.
That share in China is expected to go up significantly in the near future as individuals rush to buy coverage for treatment of the new virus with a large number seeking admissions to private hospitals, the people said.
The regulator has assured insurers of approvals to launch those products within a few days, they said, compared to the usual timeline of two weeks or more for investment-linked insurance products.
The premium charges for low-severity medical insurance, which will typically include virus treatment coverage, could be 15%-30% cheaper than the critical illness products, industry officials said.
The demand for products with basic healthcare coverage, including for coronavirus, is already soaring.
“There is no doubt that awareness for insurance will significantly increase in the near future,” said Sam Radwan, president of consultant ENHANCE International, which advises China’s top insurers.
“Customers will be more understanding of the need to buy these products as opposed to in the past when my clients had a very difficult time convincing customers to buy these products and the net result was acquisition costs were very high.”
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-health-insurance/china-pushes-for-cheaper-health-insurance-products-to-battle-virus-sources-idUSKBN2070R9

Experts fear China reluctant to accept WHO ground mission

China has recorded 48,206 cases of a new coronavirus, now known as SARS-CoV-2, which emerged in a seafood market in the central city of Wuhan in December. The virus has spread to 24 countries infecting more than 440 people, the WHO says.
Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, won a pledge from Chinese President Xi Jinping during his trip there two weeks ago that an international team would be able to help investigate the virus’ origin and spread.
An “advance team” of three experts, led by Dr. Bruce Aylward, a WHO official and public health emergency expert from Canada, as well as WHO’s Dr. Maria van Kerkhove, arrived in Beijing on Monday.
“Our advance team in China has made good progress in working out the composition of the team and the scope of its work. We hope to have more news to announce soon,” Tedros told reporters on Wednesday night.
He has said the full mission would include 10-15 experts, but has given no details of who they would be or when they would go to China.
The death toll in Hubei province, which includes Wuhan, leapt by a record 242 on Thursday to 1,310, with a sharp rise in confirmed cases after the adoption of new methodology for diagnosis, health officials said.
“It would obviously have been better if the (mission) team had arrived without delay,” a senior Western diplomat in Geneva told Reuters, though he added they could still do effective work with Chinese colleagues when they arrive.

“It’s just been very worrying and troubling and we are not seeing as much of a substantive and independent role that we would expect at this point,” he added.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Wednesday it had not yet been invited to send experts to China to assist with the WHO investigation.
“Not only was China very late in inviting international partners to help with the response, but we still only have a skeletal advance team in Beijing, and not Hubei province,” Lawrence Gostin, professor of global health law at Georgetown Law, told Reuters.
Gostin questioned whether Chinese authorities would accept experienced personnel from CDC – thereby setting aside “political and trade differences”.
“It appears that China has not accepted the U.S. offer of on the ground CDC experts, which is unfortunate. CDC has among the most experienced first responders,” he added.
Gostin voiced doubts that China would allow WHO experts to verify independently crucial information about the epidemic’s trajectory.
“Will they have complete access to epidemiologic, virologic real time data? Will they have the freedom to go into homes and communities…? Will they be full partners in surveillance and public health response?,” he said.
Xi said on Tuesday that China’s prevention and control work on the new coronavirus is having positive results, and the country will win the battle against the virus, state media reported.
WHO officials have said that Chinese authorities have been open and cooperative, sharing data throughout the outbreak.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-health-who-mission/experts-fear-china-reluctant-to-accept-who-ground-mission-idUSKBN2071WZ

Vietnam Quarantines Over 10,000 People Amid Coronavirus Outbreak

Villages in Vietnam were placed under quarantine on Thursday after seven cases of the deadly new coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, were discovered there, Vietnamese state-controlled media reported.
Son Loi, a farming region made up of several villages in northern Vietnam about 25 miles northwest of Hanoi, was placed on a lockdown that will last 14 days starting Feb. 13.
It marks the first mass quarantine outside of China since the virus emerged from the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.
Authorities in the northern province are battling to contain the disease which is quickly spreading. Last week it was confirmed that a 3-month-old girl tested positive for the virus, which so far has no cure, VnExpress reported.
Le Duy Thanh, Vice-Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee, said the number of cases of the virus in the Son Loi Commune has been growing and authorities have now increased the number of disease control checkpoints in the area from five to eight.
Provincial authorities have also established mobile shops and provided food and free face masks to over 10,600 people.
So far, 15 cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Vietnam, including 12 Vietnamese, one Vietnamese-American, and two Chinese nationals.
Of the 15 confirmed cases, 10 are reportedly in the northern province of Vinh Phuc. The virus is said to have stemmed from a group of eight workers who returned from Wuhan on Jan. 17.
The province quarantined 311 people, of whom 104 have so far tested negative for the virus, while a further 252 others are being monitored at home after they were found to have come into contact with patients but have not yet shown any symptoms.
Epoch Times Photo
Vietnamese residents (C) receive free protective face masks at a makeshift distribution center amid concerns of the Novel Coronavirus outbreak, in Hanoi on Feb. 8, 2020. (Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Getty Images)
Authorities have also set up a field hospital with 300 beds at the College of Culture and Arts in Vinh Yen Town in the province and a 200-bed facility at a military school in the same town.
“Vinh Phuc has the highest number of positive cases in the country but the disease has not spread to other areas and provinces,” Thanh said.
“Everything is still under control. We are putting in every effort and believe we’ll be able to contain it.”
On Feb. 12, the province announced that it would be providing support for quarantined people and for those working at disease control checkpoints.
According to the resolution, those at quarantine and medical centers will receive a daily food allowance of 60,000 dong ($2.57), while those quarantined at home will get 40,000 dong ($1.72). Meanwhile, schools in the area will remain closed until Feb. 23.

Losing Business

It comes as Vietnam Airlines said on Feb. 13 that it was losing up to 250 billion dong ($10.8 million) per week in revenue due to travel curbs resulting from the coronavirus.
Earlier this month, Vietnam banned all flights to and from mainland China and suspended new tourist visas for Chinese nationals or foreigners who were in China two weeks prior.
The airline is reducing operations and trying to cut costs to ride out the impact of the epidemic and “achieve a positive financial result” for this year, it said in an emailed statement to Reuters.
The flag carrier of Vietnam, founded in 1956, has suspended all flights to and from mainland China since the end of January, directly affecting 70,000 visitors per month between the two countries, it said.
“The epidemic has significantly reduced the travel demand of domestic and international tourists in the Vietnam network,” the company said, noting that passengers on domestic routes have also fallen by 20-30 percent over the past two weeks.
On Feb. 11, World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the world must “wake up and consider this enemy virus as public enemy number one,” adding that the first vaccine was most likely 18 months away.
https://www.theepochtimes.com/vietnam-quarantines-over-10000-people-amid-coronavirus-outbreak_3236909.html

Hunt on for ‘patient zero’ who spread coronavirus globally from Singapore

As lion dancers snaked between conference room tables laden with plastic bottles, pens, notebooks and laptops, some staff from British gas analytics firm Servomex snapped photos of the performance meant to bring good luck and fortune.
But the January sales meeting in a luxury Singapore hotel was far from auspicious.
Someone seated in the room, or in the vicinity of the hotel that is renowned for its central location and a racy nightclub in the basement, was about to take coronavirus global.
Three weeks later, global health authorities are still scrambling to work out who carried the disease into the mundane meeting of a firm selling gas meters, which then spread to five countries from South Korea to Spain, infecting over a dozen people.
Experts say finding this so-called “patient zero” is critical for tracing all those potentially exposed to infection and containing the outbreak, but as time passes, the harder it becomes.
“We do feel uncomfortable obviously when we diagnose a patient with the illness and we can’t work out where it came from…the containment activities are less effective,” said Dale Fisher, chair of the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network coordinated by the World Health Organisation.
Authorities initially hinted at Chinese delegates, which included someone from Wuhan – the Chinese city at the epicentre of the virus that has killed over 1,350 people. But a Servomex spokesperson told Reuters its Chinese delegates had not tested positive.
Fisher and other experts have compared the Singapore meeting to another so-called “super-spreading” incident at a Hong Kong hotel in 2003 where a sick Chinese doctor spread Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome around the world.
The WHO has opened an investigation into the Singapore incident, but said its “way too early” to tell if it is a super-spreading event.

SCARY AND SOBERING

It was more than a week after the meeting – which according to a company e-mail included Servomex’s leadership team and global sales staff – that the first case surfaced in Malaysia.
The incubation period for the disease is up to 14 days and people may be able to infect others before symptoms appear.
The firm said it immediately adopted “extensive measures” to contain the virus and protect employees and the wider community. Those included self-isolation for all 109 attendees, of whom 94 were from overseas and had left Singapore.
But the virus kept spreading.
Two South Korean delegates fell sick after sharing a buffet meal with the Malaysian, who also passed the infection to his sister and mother-in-law. Three of the firm’s Singapore attendees also tested positive.
Then cases started appearing in Europe.
An infected British delegate had headed from the conference to a French ski resort, where another five people fell ill. Another linked case then emerged in Spain, and when the Briton returned to his home town in the south of England the virus spread further.
“It feels really scary that one minute it’s a story in China… and then the next minute it is literally on our doorstep,” said Natalie Brown, whose children went to the same school as the British carrier. The school said in a letter that two people at the school had been isolated.
“It’s scary and sobering how quickly it seems to have spread,” said Brown.

TIME RUNNING OUT

Back in Singapore, authorities were battling to keep track of new cases of local transmissions, many unlinked to previous cases.
Management at the hotel – the Grand Hyatt Singapore – said they had cleaned extensively and were monitoring staff and guests for infection but did not know “how, where or when” conference attendees were infected. The lion dancers, who posted photos of the event on Facebook, said they were virus free.
“Everyone assumes it was a delegate but it could have been a cleaner, it could have been a waiter,” said Paul Tambyah, an infectious diseases expert at National University Singapore. He added it was “very important” to find “patient zero” to establish other possible “chains of transmission”.
But time may be running out.
Singapore health ministry’s Kenneth Mak said the government will continue to try and identify the initial carrier until the outbreak ends, but as days pass it will get harder.
“We might never be able to tell who that first patient is,” Mak said.
Meanwhile, the fallout from the conference continues to sow trepidation weeks after the event and thousands of miles away.
Reuters visited Servomex’s offices in the suburbs of South Korea’s capital, Seoul. It was closed and dark inside, and a building guard told Reuters employees were working from home.
A notice posted by building management stated a coronavirus patient had entered the complex, while several young women could be overheard in a nearby elevator discussing whether it had been used by the infected person.
“Do you think the patient would have gotten on this elevator or the other one?” one said.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-health-singapore-meeting/hunt-on-for-patient-zero-who-spread-coronavirus-globally-from-singapore-idUSKBN2071F5

Happiness Biotech up 18% on coronavirus outbreak-stoked demand

Nanping, China-based Happiness Biotech (HAPP +18%) is up on more than triple normal volume, albeit on turnover of only 259K shares, on the heels of its announcement that it is experiencing a “dramatic increase” in demand for its immune system-boosting products in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.
It has also donated RMB1 million of product to Shunchang General Hospital
https://seekingalpha.com/news/3541799-happiness-biotech-up-18-on-coronavirus-outbreak-stoked-demand