New Wave of COVID-19 Infections Hits China

New Wave of COVID-19 Infections Hits China
A security personnel in a protective suit keeps watch as medical workers attend to patients at the fever department of Tongji Hospital, a major facility for patients of COVID-19 in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, on Jan. 1, 2023. (Reuters)
6/23/2023
Updated:
6/25/2023
0:00

Mainland China is experiencing a resurgence in COVID-19 cases, with the number of people testing positive for the virus rising significantly since April.

This follows a previous wave of infections and deaths that occurred from December 2022 to January.

A resident of the Pudong district of Shanghai told The Epoch Times on June 21 that his father recently developed “white lungs” from a COVID-19 infection and died.

Others reported COVID-19-related illness, deaths, and reinfections among family members.

Dr. Bai of Beijing Anzhen Hospital posted on Chinese social media that he had been reinfected with COVID-19, and the department director had also been infected and was suffering severe symptoms. They were both infected by patients.

In the southeastern city of Fuzhou, “the new wave of infections has been very serious in the past month or so,” A. Liang, a Fuzhou resident, told The Epoch Times.

Many people around him were infected.

“Although the symptoms are not as severe as the first wave, it’s very contagious,” Liang said.

A man wears a protective shield as he assists a loved one on a stretcher in the hallway of a busy hospital in Shanghai on Jan. 14, 2023. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
A man wears a protective shield as he assists a loved one on a stretcher in the hallway of a busy hospital in Shanghai on Jan. 14, 2023. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

“There are a lot of people being reinfected with COVID-19 and hospitalized,” Li Yu (a pseudonym), a doctor in Jiamusi in Heilongjiang province, told The Epoch Times. “Some elderly people died after being infected.”

Wang Yi (a pseudonym) from Nantong in the province of Jiangsu, was infected with the virus for the first time. She told The Epoch Times that her symptoms were severe, and she hadn’t recovered after more than 20 days.

“I don’t know how I got infected,” she said.

Wang said she started having headaches, bone pain, and body aches on May 25 and tested positive at the hospital the next day. Then she started to have a fever, sweating, insomnia, and diarrhea until she collapsed.

After being infected for 18 days, she had difficulty breathing.

Ms. Liao from Suzhou in Jiangsu told The Epoch Times that she tested positive on June 12 in a hospital and has been exhibiting severe symptoms such as fever, dizziness, and nausea, and then developed pneumonia.

“Many COVID-19 patients are having intravenous treatment in the hospital,“ she said. ”This virus is terrifying, it is an invisible killer, and people are having lingering symptoms and sequelae after being infected.”

Dr. Yu at Beijing University of Traditional Chinese Medicine posted an article online that stated the number of patients visiting fever clinics across the country has increased.

Patients with low immunity, older age, or serious underlying diseases are more likely to be infected and develop pneumonia, he said.

China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention issued an update on COVID-19 infection numbers from May on June 11, reporting 2,777 severe cases and 164 deaths. All of the cases were caused by Omicron mutant strains, with the top three being XBB.1.9, XBB.1.16, and XBB.1.5.

The Chinese communist regime has consistently concealed the true scale of the COVID-19 outbreak in China. It’s unclear how many people have been infected in the new outbreak.

Zhong Nanshan, the communist regime’s top health advisor, last month predicted a peak in infections to occur late this month, with as many as 65 million people infected weekly.
Hong Ning contributed to this report.