A number of officials and grassroots doctors in two provinces that
are battling COVID-19 infections have been held accountable for a lack
of vigilance regarding the novel coronavirus and poor compliance with
standard diagnosis procedures, according to local governments. Since the outbreak was first detected in the eastern province of
Anhui on Thursday, seven confirmed cases have been reported there and 13
in Liaoning province as of 7 pm on Monday. Experts said these cases are
linked and the outbreak likely stems from Liaoning's port city of
Yingkou. Local governments have urged speeding up epidemiological
investigation and mass testing to identify all cases and pinpoint the
source of the outbreak. The governments have also called attention to possible common shortcomings in local disease control work. According to a circular released on Sunday evening by health
authorities in Lu'an, Anhui, a medical practitioner at a community-level
health clinic, surnamed Ou, violated rules and received the first
reported case of the current outbreak at a toy store managed by his
wife. Local public security officials have taken over the case. Later, a private hospital treating the case failed to implement
standard pre-examination and assessment procedures, as well as proper
isolation and testing measures, which resulted in "the severe
consequence of virus spreading", the circular said. The hospital and the health clinic have been ordered to cease
operating and medical workers involved have been barred from practicing
for a year. Local officials responsible for the incident have been
suspended or required to reflect deeply on their mistakes, it said. Since the initial wave of the epidemic was brought under control
earlier last year in China, the National Health Commission has urged
community-level health institutions to remain cautious to prevent
flare-ups of the virus. They have required grassroots doctors to
meticulously register patients with fever, report them to local health
authorities within an hour and to promptly guide suspicious cases to
designated fever clinics. Wang Wensong, vice-mayor of Hefei, Anhui's capital, said at a news
conference on Monday that the city has stepped up efforts to guarantee
all patients visiting fever clinics are given nucleic acid tests, and to
forbid medical facilities that lack designated fever clinics-especially
community-level, rural and private clinics-from receiving patients with
fever. Meanwhile, Liaoning's disease control task force said on Sunday that
an investigation into the outbreak has exposed weak supervision and poor
enforcement of treatment protocols. Information released by the Liaoning government shows that one of the
earliest cases involved a patient who visited a private clinic in
Yingkou's Bayuquan district complaining of a sore throat on May 3. Over
the next few days, the patient was given an intravenous drip four times,
but the clinic failed to report any of this to higher authorities. The patient traveled to Anhui on May 9 and was confirmed on May 13 to be infected with the virus. The Liaoning government said the clinic has been shut down and its
manager's license to practice has been revoked. A number of officials
were warned about their negligence. All private clinics in Bayuquan were temporarily closed from Sunday
in order to prevent cross infection between patients with fever and to
cut off transmission of the virus. The resurgence of the virus also triggered a run on vaccinations.
Anhui vaccinated about 1.19 million people on Sunday, and about one in
five people there had received at least one dose, Dong Mingpei, deputy
director of provincial health commission, said on Monday. He added that the province is now able to give nearly 1.3 million vaccinations a day. As of Sunday, China had administered nearly 407 million doses of the vaccine, the National Health Commission said.
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