Virus outbreak: news and analysis from 11 January

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China said an expert team from the World Health Organization visited on 14 January to investigate the origin of the coronavirus, following a rare rebuke from the global health group last week over a delay in travel permits.

A new group has broken out in the city of Suihua in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, while an attempt to prevent the spread of infections to the capital from nearby Hebei, a rise in food prices.

Three London transit workers have been killed in recent days, a trade union said, demanding more security guarantees. Germany has urged its citizens to drastically reduce social contact after the country’s death toll rose above 40,000.

Hospitals in Ireland are under increasing pressure as they struggle with a daily infection rate that is now one of the highest in the world, and ambulances are lagging behind one facility this past weekend.

Important developments:

  • Global Tracker: business is 90 million; deaths exceed 1.93 million
  • Vaccine Tracker: More than 25 million shots are given worldwide
  • Globe-Trotters promise to fly less to Covid to boost climate
  • Car manufacturers lose production because virus supply disrupts chips
  • UK increases vaccine deployment with hospitals under stress
  • Sign in to a daily update of the virus from Bloomberg’s Prognosis Team here. Click CVID on the Global Coronavirus Cases and Deaths Terminal for global data.

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London Transit Deaths (17:31 HK)

The National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers is looking for stronger security measures to protect Transport for London staff from the pandemic after three transit workers died in recent days. The union has demanded that the Mayor of London and the London Underground provide guarantees regarding worker safety, including allowing vulnerable employees to stay home if necessary. N95-style masks should be available on request, the union wrote.

China’s new group (17:15 HK)

A new group has broken out in the city of Suihua in the northeastern Chinese province of Heilongjiang. The city of more than 5 million people reported 20 asymptomatic infections after authorities tested more than 2,800 people. Health authorities are awaiting results for the rest of about 8,700 people who underwent tests after a woman tested positive in a county hospital on Saturday, Chinese News Services reported.

The detection of the new group took place when the outbreaks in the city of Shijiazhuang near the Chinese capital increased in less than ten days with more than 450 cases, and sporadic flare-ups in the northeastern provinces of the country.

China reported 85 local confirmed coronavirus infections on January 10, including 82 in the northern province of Hebei, 2 in Liaoning and 1 in Beijing.

Irish Hospital Press (17:05)

Ireland’s hospital system seemed almost overwhelmed as the numbers of coronavirus effects continued to explode. Doctors treated patients in ambulances outside one facility in the northwest of the country over the past weekend as patients suspected of having the virus filled the hospital, while the availability of intensive care beds dropped to 38.

Ireland’s 14-day incidence per 100,000 people is now one of the highest in the world.

Israel’s vaccination push (16:40 HK)

Israel broadens its vaccination campaign following the arrival of a new cargo of vaccine on Sunday. From Tuesday, the minimum qualifying age for vaccination will drop from 55 to 55.

The country has also started administering second doses to those who received the first dose three weeks earlier. According to the website Our World in Data, Israel administered approximately 1.87 million doses, or approximately 21 per 100 people, the highest percentage in the world.

New tribes spread in Europe (16:30 HK)

Finland on Monday reported a total of 49 cases of the British and South African variants of the coronavirus, with most of the infections detected in travelers over the past few weeks and their close contact. In Latvia, one case of the British variant was discovered, which is related to a recent trip to the country.

LA turns Dodgers Stadium into vaccination center (15:45 HK)

Los Angeles, the centerpiece of the latest wave, will turn Dodgers Stadium into the nation’s largest Covid-19 test site into a mass vaccination center to vaccinate as many as 12,000 people a day.

The stadium will cease to be a test venue on Monday, and the transition will take place by the end of the week.

The Greater LA area, where one in 11 is infected, has tested 5 million people or about half the population. With an increase in cases, Southern California and other parts of the state have run out of ICU capacity.

Bulgaria sees the fewest cases since October (15:43 HK)

Bulgaria reported 105 new virus cases on Monday, the lowest number since October 11.

The Balkan country imposed a partial exclusion at the end of November to limit the virus after reaching the highest death rate in the European Union. Last week, it reopened primary schools, and authorities are considering options to further ease restrictions.

France does not plan a new exclusion now (15:41 HK)

France is monitoring the daily situation of Covid-19 “very closely” and is taking the necessary measures to protect the health of its citizens, government spokesman Gabriel Attal said in a radio interview on Europe 1.

French has ‘put a lot of effort’ and taken steps early on, and although there are no current plans for a new exclusion, it is not ‘time to let our guard down’, Attal said.

Attal said France would reach its goal of vaccinating 1 million people by the end of January.

German minister urges less social contact (15:30 HK)

German Health Minister Jens Spahn said citizens should drastically curtail social contact after the death toll from viruses rose above 40,000 over the weekend.

“It does not make much sense to close shops, schools and public life if there are many private contacts at the same time,” Spahn said in an interview with ZDF television. “I know it’s hard, but especially in the private sphere, it’s very, very important to reduce contact in the next few weeks,” he said.

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