More than 43,000 people who tested positive in China for coronavirus
by the end of February were not included in the nation’s official tally
of confirmed cases, according to a report Sunday. The figure represents so-called silent carriers, people who tested
positive for the virus but showed no symptoms, according to Chinese
government data obtained by the South China Morning Post. The asymptomatic individuals were placed in quarantine and were
monitored by authorities, but they were not added to China’s official
tally of confirmed coronavirus cases, the SCMP reported. China’s failure to report asymptomatic coronavirus cases in its
official tally goes against the World Health Organization’s guidance
that anyone who tests positive for the virus should be counted as a
confirmed case regardless of his or her symptoms. While the WHO has said asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus is
“extremely rare,” the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
has reported instances of asymptomatic individuals spreading the virus. “Some spread might be possible before people show symptoms,” the CDC
stated. “[B]ut this is not thought to be the main way the virus
spreads.” And a joint study
by a panel of experts in China, the United States, Britain and Hong
Kong in January estimated that upward of 79 percent of confirmed
coronavirus cases in Wuhan were spread by individuals showing mild or no
symptoms...Five million people fled Wuhan by the time Chinese authorities locked down what was then the epicenter of the virus on Jan. 23, enabling the virus to spread around the world at a remarkable pace. As of early Monday afternoon, there were 347,457 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 16,113 deaths worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins...MORE
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