China: Country witness 7,000 patients per day of pneumonia disease

Scientists have urged caution over fears of another pandemic..


After years of devastating Covid-19 pandemic, China is now facing a new threat. The outbreak of new pneumonia disease. According to the state-owned China National Radio earlier this week, the Beijing children’s hospital is seeing an average of 7,000 patients per day - exceeding the hospital’s capacity. Which create a panic in the country fearing a possible pandemic situation.

 

Concerns about the disease were first sparked internationally by an alert published on Tuesday by the monitoring service ProMED - part of the International Society for Infectious Diseases. The organisation called for more information about ‘undiagnosed pneumonia - China (Beijing, Liaoning)’. This alert echoed the first-ever notice of Covid-19 pandemic which said: ‘Undiagnosed pneumonia - China (Hubei)’.

 

According to some experts, the current wave of disease in China is likely due to respiratory illnesses like flu, RSV, or bacterial infection, and it is probably experiencing a significant wave of childhood infections since this was the first winter since lockdown restrictions were lifted.

 

Due to the surge in the cases of pneumonia, China's national health commission on Thursday suggested that children with mild symptoms first visit primary healthcare institutions or pediatrics departments of general hospitals because large hospitals are crowded and have long waiting times. The health commission added that it has been paying close attention to the high incidence of infectious diseases among children and is “guiding local authorities to enhance coordinated scheduling and implement a tiered diagnosis and treatment system.”

 

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has detailed information on an increase in respiratory illnesses and reported clusters of pneumonia in children in the country. 

 

The WHO has also recommended people in China to follow measures to reduce the risk of respiratory illness, advising them to get vaccinated, isolate if they are feeling ill, wear masks if necessary, and get medical care as needed.

 

Meanwhile, scientists have urged caution over fears of another pandemic and asked not to press “pandemic panic buttons”.

 

Edited By: Arusha Farooq

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