Asia

China Set to Release Data on Symptom-Free Coronavirus Cases - Reports

The new coronavirus was first detected in China and has infected 81,518 people in the nation since December 2019. The country is now moving towards easing the restrictions imposed to contain COVID-19 as the number of those who have recovered has reached 76,052, giving hope for a decline of the infection.
Sputnik

China has signalled its willingness to disclose data on the number of those infected with COVID-19 who did not manifest any symptoms "in the near future", Yicai media outlet reported on Monday, quoting a source close to the government.

"I believe it will soon be announced. There is no good in hiding this. No one has the intention to conceal it", the source revealed.

Monday's meeting, led by Premier Li Keqiang, called on local governments to pay special attention to monitoring, tracking, isolating, and treating asymptomatic cases of the coronavirus.

“Once asymptomatic cases are discovered, it’s required to immediately implement strictly centralised isolation and medical management, release information openly and transparently, resolutely prevent late reporting and omissions, identify the source as soon as possible, and quarantine close contacts for medical observation”, Bloomberg quoted the statement issued at the meeting.

The developments come as China has been slammed both internally and internationally for withholding data on the outbreak. US officials, including President Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, criticised Beijing for what they described as its failure to provide prompt data regarding the epidemic.

China, in turn, underlined that it had shared information on the epidemic with the World Health Organisation and other countries, including the United States, in a timely manner.

The virus, which was first detected in China's Hubei province, has spread to almost every nation on the planet, infecting 789,240 and killing 38,092. China has registered 81,518 cases and 3,305 deaths, whereas 76,052 people have recovered.

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