• =?UTF-8?Q?Is_Shanghai=E2=80=99s_Covid=2D19_Disaster_China=E2=80=99s_Fut

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 17 23:58:16 2022
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ

    After largely keeping out Covid-19 for two years, China’s
    largest city is battling an outbreak numbering over 100,000
    cases. And while the Shanghai government has yet to acknowledge
    any Covid fatalities, spiking deaths at some elderly care
    facilities suggest that the numbers are there, whether
    officially acknowledged or not.

    Is this a sign of things to come in the rest of China?

    Not necessarily, but if the government doesn’t move quickly
    to vaccinate and boost its elderly, and start spending much
    more heavily on hospital capacity, then the human and economic
    consequences could be disastrous.

    Events in Hong Kong and Shanghai have demonstrated that a
    “zero Covid” strategy can look very effective for a long time—
    until suddenly it isn’t, either because a more infectious variant
    changes the game or because success itself breeds overconfidence.

    To be sure, mainland China has tools that Hong Kong lacks. These
    include the network of neighborhood party committees that have
    formed the backbone of grass-roots monitoring and enforcement,
    the state’s greater coercive and surveillance capabilities writ
    large, and the ability to mobilize enormous manpower in a pinch
    to build hospital space, conduct testing, or deliver food. The
    political stakes on the mainland, where Communist Party General
    Secretary Xi Jinping is poised to bid for an unprecedented third
    term later this year, are also arguably even higher than in Hong Kong.

    Shanghai’s struggle to deliver food to residents and staff
    medical facilities shows that these advantages can crumble quickly,
    however, if Omicron’s exponential growth isn’t halted in its early
    stages. At the very least China will pay an enormous economic price
    to bring the current outbreak under control. Cities under complete
    lockdown or very harsh control measures as of early April accounted
    for about 13% of China’s economy, according to Gavekal Dragonomics. China’s target of “around 5.5%” growth for 2022—which looked ambitious before the recent outbreak—now looks implausible.

    More important, even assuming this outbreak is controlled, the
    idea that China can achieve a “soft exit” from “zero Covid” at
    some future date without large-scale fatalities is seeming
    increasingly questionable.

    China invested heavily in healthcare for the past several years—
    to the tune of 30% growth in 2020 and 25% last year, both far
    faster than overall fixed asset investment, which only grew in
    the single digits both years. But in some important respects,
    that rapid investment is coming from a very low base. China had
    only 4.4 intensive care beds per 100,000 residents in 2021,
    according to Morgan Stanley—compared with around 11 in South
    Korea and the U.K., and 26 in the U.S.

    Mainland China also has some of the same weaknesses that led to
    Hong Kong’s disastrous Omicron outbreak. As in Hong Kong, and for
    reasons that aren’t entirely clear, a large proportion of the
    elderly remain unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated—about
    half of the population over 80.

    In Hong Kong, where government health expenditures are slightly
    higher than China’s as a percentage of gross domestic product,
    hospitals were easily overwhelmed by large numbers of elderly
    patients once Omicron broke through. Hong Kong also has 7.1 ICU
    beds per 100,000 residents, according to a February article in
    the Hong Kong Medical Journal—significantly more on a per capita
    basis than China. General government expenditure on healthcare
    in China amounted to less than 3% of GDP in 2019, according to
    the World Bank, below the upper-middle-income average of 3.3%
    and well below the nearly 8% typical of developed countries.

    China has also declined to approve foreign mRNA-based Covid-19
    vaccines, such as those developed by Pfizer and Moderna that
    appear to offer superior protection against the virus compared
    with vaccines developed using older technologies—including China’s
    own. The rationale has apparently been to create room for Chinese
    businesses to develop their own mRNA vaccines, a venture that could
    eventually be successful. By buying time for China’s domestic
    vaccine entrepreneurs, however, Beijing may have squandered time
    to get its most vulnerable vaccinated with the best protection available.

    For now, China’s outbreak appears to have only reached truly
    dangerous levels in Shanghai and the northern province of Jilin.
    But the days of “zero Covid”—so successful at preventing deaths
    and economic damage early in the pandemic—are now clearly numbered.
    Omicron is too contagious and the economic cost of containing it is unsustainable. If the Chinese government doesn’t use its remaining
    time to aggressively vaccinate and boost its vulnerable with the
    best protection available, build up intensive-care capacity, and
    motivate the populace to protect itself by articulating a clear
    intention to eventually move toward living with the virus, many
    more situations like Shanghai and Hong Kong might become inevitable.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon Apr 18 03:44:38 2022
    On Monday, April 18, 2022 at 2:58:17 PM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ

    After largely keeping out Covid-19 for two years, China’s
    largest city is battling an outbreak numbering over 100,000
    cases. And while the Shanghai government has yet to acknowledge
    any Covid fatalities, spiking deaths at some elderly care
    facilities suggest that the numbers are there, whether
    officially acknowledged or not.

    Is this a sign of things to come in the rest of China?

    Not necessarily, but if the government doesn’t move quickly
    to vaccinate and boost its elderly, and start spending much
    more heavily on hospital capacity, then the human and economic
    consequences could be disastrous.

    Events in Hong Kong and Shanghai have demonstrated that a
    “zero Covid” strategy can look very effective for a long time—
    until suddenly it isn’t, either because a more infectious variant
    changes the game or because success itself breeds overconfidence.

    To be sure, mainland China has tools that Hong Kong lacks. These
    include the network of neighborhood party committees that have
    formed the backbone of grass-roots monitoring and enforcement,
    the state’s greater coercive and surveillance capabilities writ
    large, and the ability to mobilize enormous manpower in a pinch
    to build hospital space, conduct testing, or deliver food. The
    political stakes on the mainland, where Communist Party General
    Secretary Xi Jinping is poised to bid for an unprecedented third
    term later this year, are also arguably even higher than in Hong Kong.

    Shanghai’s struggle to deliver food to residents and staff
    medical facilities shows that these advantages can crumble quickly,
    however, if Omicron’s exponential growth isn’t halted in its early stages. At the very least China will pay an enormous economic price
    to bring the current outbreak under control. Cities under complete
    lockdown or very harsh control measures as of early April accounted
    for about 13% of China’s economy, according to Gavekal Dragonomics. China’s target of “around 5.5%” growth for 2022—which looked ambitious
    before the recent outbreak—now looks implausible.

    More important, even assuming this outbreak is controlled, the
    idea that China can achieve a “soft exit” from “zero Covid” at
    some future date without large-scale fatalities is seeming
    increasingly questionable.

    China invested heavily in healthcare for the past several years—
    to the tune of 30% growth in 2020 and 25% last year, both far
    faster than overall fixed asset investment, which only grew in
    the single digits both years. But in some important respects,
    that rapid investment is coming from a very low base. China had
    only 4.4 intensive care beds per 100,000 residents in 2021,
    according to Morgan Stanley—compared with around 11 in South
    Korea and the U.K., and 26 in the U.S.

    Mainland China also has some of the same weaknesses that led to
    Hong Kong’s disastrous Omicron outbreak. As in Hong Kong, and for
    reasons that aren’t entirely clear, a large proportion of the
    elderly remain unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated—about
    half of the population over 80.

    In Hong Kong, where government health expenditures are slightly
    higher than China’s as a percentage of gross domestic product,
    hospitals were easily overwhelmed by large numbers of elderly
    patients once Omicron broke through. Hong Kong also has 7.1 ICU
    beds per 100,000 residents, according to a February article in
    the Hong Kong Medical Journal—significantly more on a per capita
    basis than China. General government expenditure on healthcare
    in China amounted to less than 3% of GDP in 2019, according to
    the World Bank, below the upper-middle-income average of 3.3%
    and well below the nearly 8% typical of developed countries.

    China has also declined to approve foreign mRNA-based Covid-19
    vaccines, such as those developed by Pfizer and Moderna that
    appear to offer superior protection against the virus compared
    with vaccines developed using older technologies—including China’s
    own. The rationale has apparently been to create room for Chinese
    businesses to develop their own mRNA vaccines, a venture that could eventually be successful. By buying time for China’s domestic
    vaccine entrepreneurs, however, Beijing may have squandered time
    to get its most vulnerable vaccinated with the best protection available.

    For now, China’s outbreak appears to have only reached truly
    dangerous levels in Shanghai and the northern province of Jilin.
    But the days of “zero Covid”—so successful at preventing deaths
    and economic damage early in the pandemic—are now clearly numbered. Omicron is too contagious and the economic cost of containing it is unsustainable. If the Chinese government doesn’t use its remaining
    time to aggressively vaccinate and boost its vulnerable with the
    best protection available, build up intensive-care capacity, and
    motivate the populace to protect itself by articulating a clear
    intention to eventually move toward living with the virus, many
    more situations like Shanghai and Hong Kong might become inevitable.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483

    China is still growing well in a steady state from 4.0% at the end of December 2021 to 4.8% for the first quarter of this year 2922. It is within the world's analysts' forecasts even though the lockdown is still underway in the particular city of
    Shanghai. The rest of the country's economy is still going about their activities and is pose to grow to 5.4 % in mid term of June.

    China's method of containment of Omicron is doing well and is the best option for the big country on big cities with heavy population centres. People in China are fully aware of their needs to cooperate with their health authorities on containment of
    spreading of virus to other buildings and into other cities, too. If the spread goes beyond beyond their city, the spread of virus will be more serious than now. At this time, up to now, there was no death at all, despite the high number of infections
    found and infection is growing to 200,000.

    If containment is not successful, US and its Western media will be ready to chide at China and make new laughter and mock at China. US is ready in trying to disrupt China from growing its economy and hence is delighted to see how Chinese people will
    react against to their authorities. Make no mistake, the Chinese people has a trust of 97% on their government to manage the infection control well to expectation.

    With much orders still in production, delays of productions and deliveries will be expected for local and export markets, too. Most buyers around the world are fully aware of their expected delays but they are happy to see China is doing well in
    containment of infection as it is their correct priority to make their people safe first, like any country does that, too.

    What China is doing now is to accelerate the vaccination of the populations to the fullest completion. Elderly populated centers need to be vaccinated to prevent elderly infections and potential deaths. Additional booster vaccination may also be needed
    to address any potential spread of Omicron.

    At some point, new measures will be needed to relax some controls to allow batches of people in different blocks of buildings to go out to shop and relax. A control version in outdoor purchase and shopping and relaxing can relieve them from their
    tiresome life at home.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From mccoyrufus@gmail.com@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon Apr 18 03:36:08 2022
    On Monday, 18 April 2022 at 16:58:17 UTC+10, David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ

    After largely keeping out Covid-19 for two years, China’s
    largest city is battling an outbreak numbering over 100,000
    cases. And while the Shanghai government has yet to acknowledge
    any Covid fatalities, spiking deaths at some elderly care
    facilities suggest that the numbers are there, whether
    officially acknowledged or not.

    Is this a sign of things to come in the rest of China?

    Not necessarily, but if the government doesn’t move quickly
    to vaccinate and boost its elderly, and start spending much
    more heavily on hospital capacity, then the human and economic
    consequences could be disastrous.

    Events in Hong Kong and Shanghai have demonstrated that a
    “zero Covid” strategy can look very effective for a long time—
    until suddenly it isn’t, either because a more infectious variant
    changes the game or because success itself breeds overconfidence.

    To be sure, mainland China has tools that Hong Kong lacks. These
    include the network of neighborhood party committees that have
    formed the backbone of grass-roots monitoring and enforcement,
    the state’s greater coercive and surveillance capabilities writ
    large, and the ability to mobilize enormous manpower in a pinch
    to build hospital space, conduct testing, or deliver food. The
    political stakes on the mainland, where Communist Party General
    Secretary Xi Jinping is poised to bid for an unprecedented third
    term later this year, are also arguably even higher than in Hong Kong.

    Shanghai’s struggle to deliver food to residents and staff
    medical facilities shows that these advantages can crumble quickly,
    however, if Omicron’s exponential growth isn’t halted in its early stages. At the very least China will pay an enormous economic price
    to bring the current outbreak under control. Cities under complete
    lockdown or very harsh control measures as of early April accounted
    for about 13% of China’s economy, according to Gavekal Dragonomics. China’s target of “around 5.5%” growth for 2022—which looked ambitious
    before the recent outbreak—now looks implausible.

    More important, even assuming this outbreak is controlled, the
    idea that China can achieve a “soft exit” from “zero Covid” at
    some future date without large-scale fatalities is seeming
    increasingly questionable.

    China invested heavily in healthcare for the past several years—
    to the tune of 30% growth in 2020 and 25% last year, both far
    faster than overall fixed asset investment, which only grew in
    the single digits both years. But in some important respects,
    that rapid investment is coming from a very low base. China had
    only 4.4 intensive care beds per 100,000 residents in 2021,
    according to Morgan Stanley—compared with around 11 in South
    Korea and the U.K., and 26 in the U.S.

    Mainland China also has some of the same weaknesses that led to
    Hong Kong’s disastrous Omicron outbreak. As in Hong Kong, and for
    reasons that aren’t entirely clear, a large proportion of the
    elderly remain unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated—about
    half of the population over 80.

    In Hong Kong, where government health expenditures are slightly
    higher than China’s as a percentage of gross domestic product,
    hospitals were easily overwhelmed by large numbers of elderly
    patients once Omicron broke through. Hong Kong also has 7.1 ICU
    beds per 100,000 residents, according to a February article in
    the Hong Kong Medical Journal—significantly more on a per capita
    basis than China. General government expenditure on healthcare
    in China amounted to less than 3% of GDP in 2019, according to
    the World Bank, below the upper-middle-income average of 3.3%
    and well below the nearly 8% typical of developed countries.

    China has also declined to approve foreign mRNA-based Covid-19
    vaccines, such as those developed by Pfizer and Moderna that
    appear to offer superior protection against the virus compared
    with vaccines developed using older technologies—including China’s
    own. The rationale has apparently been to create room for Chinese
    businesses to develop their own mRNA vaccines, a venture that could eventually be successful. By buying time for China’s domestic
    vaccine entrepreneurs, however, Beijing may have squandered time
    to get its most vulnerable vaccinated with the best protection available.

    For now, China’s outbreak appears to have only reached truly
    dangerous levels in Shanghai and the northern province of Jilin.
    But the days of “zero Covid”—so successful at preventing deaths
    and economic damage early in the pandemic—are now clearly numbered. Omicron is too contagious and the economic cost of containing it is unsustainable. If the Chinese government doesn’t use its remaining
    time to aggressively vaccinate and boost its vulnerable with the
    best protection available, build up intensive-care capacity, and
    motivate the populace to protect itself by articulating a clear
    intention to eventually move toward living with the virus, many
    more situations like Shanghai and Hong Kong might become inevitable.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483

    Lockdown was a very good decision in early 2020, when the virus was unknown and vaccine unavailable.
    Unfortunately, the virus (new variants) are now very infectious, and lockdowns are very expensive. China should open up and rely on vaccines, like the rest of the world !!!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ltlee1@21:1/5 to mccoy...@gmail.com on Mon Apr 18 06:41:47 2022
    On Monday, April 18, 2022 at 6:36:10 AM UTC-4, mccoy...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Monday, 18 April 2022 at 16:58:17 UTC+10, David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ

    After largely keeping out Covid-19 for two years, China’s
    largest city is battling an outbreak numbering over 100,000
    cases. And while the Shanghai government has yet to acknowledge
    any Covid fatalities, spiking deaths at some elderly care
    facilities suggest that the numbers are there, whether
    officially acknowledged or not.

    Is this a sign of things to come in the rest of China?

    Not necessarily, but if the government doesn’t move quickly
    to vaccinate and boost its elderly, and start spending much
    more heavily on hospital capacity, then the human and economic consequences could be disastrous.

    Events in Hong Kong and Shanghai have demonstrated that a
    “zero Covid” strategy can look very effective for a long time—
    until suddenly it isn’t, either because a more infectious variant changes the game or because success itself breeds overconfidence.

    To be sure, mainland China has tools that Hong Kong lacks. These
    include the network of neighborhood party committees that have
    formed the backbone of grass-roots monitoring and enforcement,
    the state’s greater coercive and surveillance capabilities writ
    large, and the ability to mobilize enormous manpower in a pinch
    to build hospital space, conduct testing, or deliver food. The
    political stakes on the mainland, where Communist Party General
    Secretary Xi Jinping is poised to bid for an unprecedented third
    term later this year, are also arguably even higher than in Hong Kong.

    Shanghai’s struggle to deliver food to residents and staff
    medical facilities shows that these advantages can crumble quickly, however, if Omicron’s exponential growth isn’t halted in its early stages. At the very least China will pay an enormous economic price
    to bring the current outbreak under control. Cities under complete lockdown or very harsh control measures as of early April accounted
    for about 13% of China’s economy, according to Gavekal Dragonomics. China’s target of “around 5.5%” growth for 2022—which looked ambitious
    before the recent outbreak—now looks implausible.

    More important, even assuming this outbreak is controlled, the
    idea that China can achieve a “soft exit” from “zero Covid” at some future date without large-scale fatalities is seeming
    increasingly questionable.

    China invested heavily in healthcare for the past several years—
    to the tune of 30% growth in 2020 and 25% last year, both far
    faster than overall fixed asset investment, which only grew in
    the single digits both years. But in some important respects,
    that rapid investment is coming from a very low base. China had
    only 4.4 intensive care beds per 100,000 residents in 2021,
    according to Morgan Stanley—compared with around 11 in South
    Korea and the U.K., and 26 in the U.S.

    Mainland China also has some of the same weaknesses that led to
    Hong Kong’s disastrous Omicron outbreak. As in Hong Kong, and for reasons that aren’t entirely clear, a large proportion of the
    elderly remain unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated—about
    half of the population over 80.

    In Hong Kong, where government health expenditures are slightly
    higher than China’s as a percentage of gross domestic product,
    hospitals were easily overwhelmed by large numbers of elderly
    patients once Omicron broke through. Hong Kong also has 7.1 ICU
    beds per 100,000 residents, according to a February article in
    the Hong Kong Medical Journal—significantly more on a per capita
    basis than China. General government expenditure on healthcare
    in China amounted to less than 3% of GDP in 2019, according to
    the World Bank, below the upper-middle-income average of 3.3%
    and well below the nearly 8% typical of developed countries.

    China has also declined to approve foreign mRNA-based Covid-19
    vaccines, such as those developed by Pfizer and Moderna that
    appear to offer superior protection against the virus compared
    with vaccines developed using older technologies—including China’s own. The rationale has apparently been to create room for Chinese businesses to develop their own mRNA vaccines, a venture that could eventually be successful. By buying time for China’s domestic
    vaccine entrepreneurs, however, Beijing may have squandered time
    to get its most vulnerable vaccinated with the best protection available.

    For now, China’s outbreak appears to have only reached truly
    dangerous levels in Shanghai and the northern province of Jilin.
    But the days of “zero Covid”—so successful at preventing deaths
    and economic damage early in the pandemic—are now clearly numbered. Omicron is too contagious and the economic cost of containing it is unsustainable. If the Chinese government doesn’t use its remaining
    time to aggressively vaccinate and boost its vulnerable with the
    best protection available, build up intensive-care capacity, and
    motivate the populace to protect itself by articulating a clear
    intention to eventually move toward living with the virus, many
    more situations like Shanghai and Hong Kong might become inevitable.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483
    Lockdown was a very good decision in early 2020, when the virus was unknown and vaccine unavailable.
    Unfortunately, the virus (new variants) are now very infectious, and lockdowns are very expensive. China should open up and rely on vaccines, like the rest of the world !!!

    Two years is hardly seconds if viewed from the long history of virus. The virus may have more tricks to get into the human body to do harm. Long covid appears to be
    less age discriminatory and a small number of these patients can put a lot of pressure on the health care system.
    Anyway, lock down in China2022 is different from lock down in China 2020 because of past experience, accumulated medical expertise and vaccine availability .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David P.@21:1/5 to stoney on Mon Apr 18 09:35:27 2022
    stoney wrote:
    David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ
    [....] https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483
    China is still growing well in a steady state from 4.0% at the end of December 2021 to 4.8% for the first quarter of this year 2922. It is within the world's analysts' forecasts even though the lockdown is still underway in the particular city of
    Shanghai. The rest of the country's economy is still going about their activities and is pose to grow to 5.4 % in mid term of June.
    [....]
    ----------------
    There's nothing "Normal" about adding one billion every 12 years,
    like we've been doing since 1960! Nowhere else in Nature does a
    population increase indefinitely without a crash! Nature's plan is
    that every species has enemies that keep its numbers in check. Our plan
    is to suppress communicable diseases, and we're slowly discovering that
    this has significant costs. We should stop making flu, MMR, & Covid shots,
    to shorten the average life span by a few years, because we didn't
    listen to the scientists who called for Zero Population Growth 50 years ago! When you go too far out on a limb, you need to back up!
    --
    --

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 18 09:34:11 2022
    ltlee1 wrote:
    mccoy...@gmail.com wrote:
    David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ
    [...] https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483
    Lockdown was a very good decision in early 2020, when the virus was unknown and vaccine unavailable.
    Unfortunately, the virus (new variants) are now very infectious, and lockdowns are very expensive. China should open up and rely on vaccines, like the rest of the world !!!
    Two years is hardly seconds if viewed from the long history of virus. The virus may have more tricks to get into the human body to do harm. Long covid appears to be
    less age discriminatory and a small number of these patients can put a lot of pressure on the health care system.
    Anyway, lock down in China2022 is different from lock down in China 2020 because of past experience, accumulated medical expertise and vaccine availability .
    ------------
    There's nothing "Normal" about adding one billion every 12 years,
    like we've been doing since 1960! Nowhere else in Nature does a
    population increase indefinitely without a crash! Nature's plan is
    that every species has enemies that keep its numbers in check. Our plan
    is to suppress communicable diseases, and we're slowly discovering that
    this has significant costs. We should stop making flu, MMR, & Covid shots,
    to shorten the average life span by a few years, because we didn't
    listen to the scientists who called for Zero Population Growth 50 years ago! When you go too far out on a limb, you need to back up!
    --
    --

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon Apr 18 10:57:37 2022
    On Tuesday, April 19, 2022 at 12:35:28 AM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    stoney wrote:
    David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ
    [....] https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483
    China is still growing well in a steady state from 4.0% at the end of December 2021 to 4.8% for the first quarter of this year 2922. It is within the world's analysts' forecasts even though the lockdown is still underway in the particular city of
    Shanghai. The rest of the country's economy is still going about their activities and is pose to grow to 5.4 % in mid term of June.
    [....]
    ----------------
    There's nothing "Normal" about adding one billion every 12 years,
    like we've been doing since 1960! Nowhere else in Nature does a
    population increase indefinitely without a crash! Nature's plan is
    that every species has enemies that keep its numbers in check. Our plan
    is to suppress communicable diseases, and we're slowly discovering that
    this has significant costs. We should stop making flu, MMR, & Covid shots, to shorten the average life span by a few years, because we didn't
    listen to the scientists who called for Zero Population Growth 50 years ago! When you go too far out on a limb, you need to back up!
    --
    --

    Up to today latest media news said only 3 deaths of mainly elderly. This death is very small and is the first case after more than one month of lockdown of Shanghai. This death case may be due to the existing medical condition of the medical health of
    the elderly patients but can also be contributed in part by the Omicron infected condition.

    Henceforth, it goes to show that relaxation of lockdown can be possible and could be done soon if the Shanghai government has done the needed things to comply with the requisite public measures required by the central health authorities of China.

    Such needed things such as contact tracing system could be introduced to locate any infected persons to return to its nearest testing center for swab testing purposes. This means tracing measures could be put in place to trace and respond to any
    infection of individual.

    The health authorities in China can identify and differentiate different cities with infection allowances for infected patients, and not have to have zero infection rate in all of China's cities.

    Some population in some outer cities in China with sparsely populated density can have broader per square mile of infection rate, and some have to have tighter rate, too.

    Therefore, potential risk of infection rate can set to vary from day to day or week to week in order to meet the infection found for that city.

    Should there be any infection discovered, the tracing system can inform to go for swab testing to confirm it. By this way, the people can move around and carry on their activities such as shopping, marketing, and going to work too. The contact tracing
    system installed at entrances of offices, shopping malls, and markets can trace them when required to do so.

    In short, if Shanghai has a tracing system, the people can leave their homes and their mobile phone will be installed with their contact tracing system, in order to communicate through wifi by the health authorities at all times.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From ltlee1@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 19 10:33:59 2022
    On Monday, April 18, 2022 at 9:41:48 AM UTC-4, ltlee1 wrote:
    On Monday, April 18, 2022 at 6:36:10 AM UTC-4, mccoy...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Monday, 18 April 2022 at 16:58:17 UTC+10, David P. wrote:
    Is Shanghai’s Covid-19 Disaster China’s Future?
    By Nathaniel Taplin, April 13, 2022, WSJ

    After largely keeping out Covid-19 for two years, China’s
    largest city is battling an outbreak numbering over 100,000
    cases. And while the Shanghai government has yet to acknowledge
    any Covid fatalities, spiking deaths at some elderly care
    facilities suggest that the numbers are there, whether
    officially acknowledged or not.

    Is this a sign of things to come in the rest of China?

    Not necessarily, but if the government doesn’t move quickly
    to vaccinate and boost its elderly, and start spending much
    more heavily on hospital capacity, then the human and economic consequences could be disastrous.

    Events in Hong Kong and Shanghai have demonstrated that a
    “zero Covid” strategy can look very effective for a long time— until suddenly it isn’t, either because a more infectious variant changes the game or because success itself breeds overconfidence.

    To be sure, mainland China has tools that Hong Kong lacks. These
    include the network of neighborhood party committees that have
    formed the backbone of grass-roots monitoring and enforcement,
    the state’s greater coercive and surveillance capabilities writ
    large, and the ability to mobilize enormous manpower in a pinch
    to build hospital space, conduct testing, or deliver food. The
    political stakes on the mainland, where Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping is poised to bid for an unprecedented third
    term later this year, are also arguably even higher than in Hong Kong.

    Shanghai’s struggle to deliver food to residents and staff
    medical facilities shows that these advantages can crumble quickly, however, if Omicron’s exponential growth isn’t halted in its early stages. At the very least China will pay an enormous economic price
    to bring the current outbreak under control. Cities under complete lockdown or very harsh control measures as of early April accounted
    for about 13% of China’s economy, according to Gavekal Dragonomics. China’s target of “around 5.5%” growth for 2022—which looked ambitious
    before the recent outbreak—now looks implausible.

    More important, even assuming this outbreak is controlled, the
    idea that China can achieve a “soft exit” from “zero Covid” at some future date without large-scale fatalities is seeming
    increasingly questionable.

    China invested heavily in healthcare for the past several years—
    to the tune of 30% growth in 2020 and 25% last year, both far
    faster than overall fixed asset investment, which only grew in
    the single digits both years. But in some important respects,
    that rapid investment is coming from a very low base. China had
    only 4.4 intensive care beds per 100,000 residents in 2021,
    according to Morgan Stanley—compared with around 11 in South
    Korea and the U.K., and 26 in the U.S.

    Mainland China also has some of the same weaknesses that led to
    Hong Kong’s disastrous Omicron outbreak. As in Hong Kong, and for reasons that aren’t entirely clear, a large proportion of the
    elderly remain unvaccinated or only partially vaccinated—about
    half of the population over 80.

    In Hong Kong, where government health expenditures are slightly
    higher than China’s as a percentage of gross domestic product, hospitals were easily overwhelmed by large numbers of elderly
    patients once Omicron broke through. Hong Kong also has 7.1 ICU
    beds per 100,000 residents, according to a February article in
    the Hong Kong Medical Journal—significantly more on a per capita
    basis than China. General government expenditure on healthcare
    in China amounted to less than 3% of GDP in 2019, according to
    the World Bank, below the upper-middle-income average of 3.3%
    and well below the nearly 8% typical of developed countries.

    China has also declined to approve foreign mRNA-based Covid-19
    vaccines, such as those developed by Pfizer and Moderna that
    appear to offer superior protection against the virus compared
    with vaccines developed using older technologies—including China’s own. The rationale has apparently been to create room for Chinese businesses to develop their own mRNA vaccines, a venture that could eventually be successful. By buying time for China’s domestic
    vaccine entrepreneurs, however, Beijing may have squandered time
    to get its most vulnerable vaccinated with the best protection available.

    For now, China’s outbreak appears to have only reached truly
    dangerous levels in Shanghai and the northern province of Jilin.
    But the days of “zero Covid”—so successful at preventing deaths and economic damage early in the pandemic—are now clearly numbered. Omicron is too contagious and the economic cost of containing it is unsustainable. If the Chinese government doesn’t use its remaining time to aggressively vaccinate and boost its vulnerable with the
    best protection available, build up intensive-care capacity, and motivate the populace to protect itself by articulating a clear intention to eventually move toward living with the virus, many
    more situations like Shanghai and Hong Kong might become inevitable.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-shanghais-covid-disaster-chinas-future-11649867483
    Lockdown was a very good decision in early 2020, when the virus was unknown and vaccine unavailable.
    Unfortunately, the virus (new variants) are now very infectious, and lockdowns are very expensive. China should open up and rely on vaccines, like the rest of the world !!!
    Two years is hardly seconds if viewed from the long history of virus. The virus may have more tricks to get into the human body to do harm. Long covid appears to be
    less age discriminatory and a small number of these patients can put a lot of pressure on the health care system.

    At present, the covid virus is a lot less lethal. But long coivd could cause a lot of pain, suffering, and hopelessness.
    "Two years, three bouts of covid and 11 doctors later, no one seems to know why Lindsay Polega is still so ill.
    She’s only 28 years old and was the picture of health before her infections. Polega, who graduated from law
    school last year, is now suffering from chest pain, hypertensive spikes, hand numbness and numerous other
    symptoms.
    Her life has become a series of doctor’s appointments crisscrossing the towns around her home in St.
    Petersburg, Fla.: Her primary-care physician sent her to an immunologist. The immunologist referred her to
    a cardiologist. The cardiologist sent her to a nephrologist and an endocrinologist. The endocrinologist
    thought she might learn more from a neurologist. But when the neurologist’s tests failed to find any
    potential cause, Polega was sent back to the immunologist. ...
    “I wonder, ‘Is this going to be the rest of my life?’” Polega said. “I can’t live in my room forever. That’s not
    a good answer. That’s not treatment.” ...
    As the world enters its third year with the coronavirus, more than 425 million people have been infected,
    and researchers estimate that anywhere from 10 to 30 percent could experience symptoms of long covid
    months after recovering from their initial illness."

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2022/04/18/long-covid-medical-care-challenge/


    Anyway, lock down in China2022 is different from lock down in China 2020 because of past experience, accumulated medical expertise and vaccine availability .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)