Lift coronavirus lockdown gradually to avert \'second wave\'\, warn experts

Lift coronavirus lockdown gradually to avert 'second wave', warn experts

The strict social distancing measures, including a near 11-week complete lockdown, appear to have paid off, and life is slowly getting back to normal in Wuhan.

BS Web Team & Agencies 

Travellers line up with their belongings outside Hankou Railway Station after travel restrictions to leave Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province and China's epicentre of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, were lifted. Photo: Reuters
Travellers line up with their belongings outside Hankou Railway Station after travel restrictions to leave Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province and China's epicentre of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, were lifted. Photo: Reuters

measures in must be lifted gradually in order to prevent a "second wave" of Covid-19 infections, scientists warned on Thursday, as the country lifted the in Wuhan, from where is believed to have originated. After the was lifted, thousands were finally allowed to travel from Wuhan and all transport services were resumed.

The strict social distancing measures, including a near 11-week complete lockdown, appear to have paid off, and life is slowly getting back to normal in the megacity, even as the virus devastates Europe and the US.

The restrictions enabled Chinese authorities to curb the spread of the virus, which at its peak, infected thousands of people daily in Hubei province, where Wuhan is situated.

Scientists in Hong Kong said that regions outside Hubei would need to gradually lift social distancing measures or risk the a seodn wave of the epidemic. They analysed the number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in four Chinese cities -- Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Wenzhou -- between mid-January and the end of February.

The team found that measures such as closing businesses and schools and severely restricting travel successfully reduced the virus' reproduction rate to under 1 -- that is, each infected person infected only one other on average.

"This is a significant improvement on the transmissibility rate at the start of the outbreak, roughly 2-3, enough to spread the disease exponentially. Models showed that lifting the measures prematurely would lead to new infections approaching levels seen at the peak of the first outbreak wave," they said.

The researchers also found that Covid-19 cases were deadly in less than 1 percent of cases outside of Hubei. Inside the hardest-hit province, however, mortality stood at 5.91 percent as Hubei's health systems became overwhelmed, the analysis showed.

"While these control measures appear to have reduced the number of infections to very low levels, without herd immunity against Covidd-19, cases could easily resurge as businesses, factory operations, and schools gradually resume and increase social mixing," said Joseph Wu from the University of Hong Kong who co-led the research.

Wu, a world-renowned expert in infectious diseases, said that developed countries would need to strike a balance between keeping Covid-19 reproduction rates below 1 and allowing the economy to function as best as possible.

The study also looked at the varying mortality rates among the 10 hardest-hit Chinese provinces and found a strong link between survival rates and economic development. These ranged from 0 percent mortality in prosperous Jiangsu to 1.76 percent in less developed provinces such as Henan.

"Even in the most prosperous and well-resourced megacities like Beijing and Shanghai, healthcare resources are finite, and services will struggle with a sudden increase in demand," said Gabriel Leung from the University of Hong Kong.

"Our findings highlight the importance of ensuring that local healthcare systems have adequate staffing and resources to minimise coronavirus-related deaths," he added.

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First Published: Thu, April 09 2020. 07:23 IST