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COVID-19 pandemic

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COVID-19 pandemic
Animated map of confirmed 2019-nCoV cases spreading from 12 January 2020 to 5 February 2020
Date1 December 2019–ongoing[1][2]
(4 years, 11 months, 1 week and 3 days)
LocationFirst identified in
Wuhan, Hubei, China[3]
Casualties
As of 5 February 2020[4][5]
Confirmed cases: 24,584[4]
Deaths: 493[4]
Affected territories: 28


Animation showing the spread of confirmed 2019-nCoV cases since 22 January (high resolution)

The 2019–20 Wuhan coronavirus outbreak is an ongoing viral epidemic primarily affecting Mainland China, along with isolated cases in 27 other countries and territories.[6] In early December 2019 a new coronavirus, designated 2019-nCoV,[7] was identified in Wuhan, the capital of China's Hubei province, after 41 people developed pneumonia without a clear cause.[3][8] The virus is capable of spreading from person to person.[9][10][11] The incubation period of the virus (time from exposure to onset of symptoms) ranges from 2 to 14 days,[12] but it may be contagious during this period and after recovery.[13] Symptoms include fever, coughing and breathing difficulties, and the virus can be fatal.[14][15]

As of 5 February 2020, 24,584 cases have been confirmed,[4][16] including in every province-level division of China.[4] A larger number of people may have been infected, but not detected (especially mild cases).[17][18] The first local transmission of the virus outside China occurred in Vietnam between family members,[19] while the first local transmission not involving family occurred in Germany, on 22 January, when a German man contracted the disease from a Chinese business visitor at a meeting.[20] As of 5 February 2020, 493 deaths have been attributed to the virus since the first confirmed death on 9 January, with 990 recoveries.[21][4] The first death outside China was reported in the Philippines, in a 44-year-old Chinese male on 1 February.[22]

A number of countries have issued warnings against travel to Wuhan and Hubei.[23] Travellers who have visited Mainland China have been asked to monitor their health for at least two weeks and contact their healthcare provider to report any symptoms of the virus.[24] Anyone who suspects that they are carrying the virus is advised to wear a protective mask and seek medical advice by calling a doctor rather than directly visiting a clinic in person.[25] The travel sector has provided refunds and no-fee cancellations for reservations in China or by people from China.[26] Airports and train stations have implemented temperature checks, health declarations and information signage in an attempt to identify carriers of the virus.[27] Many Lunar new year events and tourist attractions have been closed to prevent mass gatherings, including the Forbidden City in Beijing and traditional temple fairs.[28] Hong Kong raised its infectious disease response level to the highest and declared an emergency, closing schools until March and cancelling its New Year celebrations.[29][30]

Xenophobia and racism against people of Chinese and East Asian descent have been noted due to the outbreak, fuelling fear and hostility across various countries.[31][32][33][34] The outbreak has been declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) by the World Health Organization (WHO), based on the possible effects the virus could have if it spreads to countries with weaker healthcare systems. The declaration was the sixth time that the measure has been invoked since the H1N1 pandemic in 2009.[35][36][37][38] Misinformation spread primarily online about the coronavirus has led the WHO to declare an "infodemic" on 2 February.[39] On 1 February 2020, CNBC[better source needed] indicated that half of China, at least 24 regions, was shutting down until at least 10 February.[40][41] These regions represent 80% of the country's GDP and 90% of exports.[41]

Background

Wuhan is the capital of Hubei and is the seventh-largest city in China, with a population of more than 11 million people. It has been a major transport hub of the country throughout the ages, long known[when?] as the "Nine Provinces' Thoroughfare" (九省通衢),[42] and the Wuhan Railway Hub is one of the four most important railway hubs in China[citation needed]. It is approximately 1,100 km (700 miles) south of Beijing,[43] 800 km (500 miles) west of Shanghai, and 970 km (600 miles) north of Hong Kong.[44] Direct international flights from Wuhan connect it to major cities in Europe and North America.[45]

In Wuhan, during December 2019, a cluster of cases displaying the symptoms of a "pneumonia of unknown cause" was linked to Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, which had a thousand stalls selling fish, chickens, pheasants, bats, marmots, venomous snakes, spotted deer, and other wild animals (ye wei, bushmeat). The immediate hypothesis was that this was a novel coronavirus from an animal source (a zoonosis).[46][47][48][49]

Coronaviruses mainly circulate among other animals but have been known to evolve and infect humans as in the cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) together with four further coronaviruses that cause mild respiratory symptoms similar to the common cold. 2019-nCoV's genome sequence is 75- to 80-percent identical to SARS-CoV, and more than 85-percent similar to several bat coronaviruses.[50][51] All coronaviruses known to infect humans have been shown to spread between people.[52][53] Transmission of coronaviruses is primarily thought to occur among close contacts via respiratory droplets generated by sneezing and coughing.[54]

Epidemiology


COVID-19 cases in Mainland China  ()
     Deaths        Recoveries        Tested        Clinically diagnosed (C.D.)        Tested or C.D.
20192019202020202021202120222022
DecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJan
Last 15 daysLast 15 days
Date
Number of cases
(excluding C.D.)
Number of cases
(including C.D.)
2019-12-31
27(n.a.)
27(=)
2020-01-03
44(+63%)
2020-01-04
44(=)
2020-01-05
59(+34%)
59(=)
2020-01-10
41(n.a.)
2020-01-11
41(=)
2020-01-12
41(=)
41(=)
2020-01-15
41(=)
2020-01-16
45(+9.8%)
2020-01-17
62(+38%)
2020-01-18
121(+95%)
2020-01-19
198(+64%)
2020-01-20
291(+47%)
2020-01-21
440(+51%)
2020-01-22
571(+30%)
2020-01-23
830(+45%)
2020-01-24
1,287(+55%)
2020-01-25
1,975(+53%)
2020-01-26
2,744(+39%)
2020-01-27
4,515(+65%)
2020-01-28
5,974(+32%)
2020-01-29
7,711(+29%)
2020-01-30
9,692(+26%)
2020-01-31
11,791(+22%)
2020-02-01
14,380(+22%)
2020-02-02
17,205(+20%)
2020-02-03
20,438(+19%)
2020-02-04
24,324(+19%)
2020-02-05
28,018(+15%)
2020-02-06
31,161(+11%)
2020-02-07
34,546(+11%)
2020-02-08
37,198(+7.7%)
2020-02-09
40,171(+8%)
2020-02-10[i]
42,638(+6.1%) 48,315(n.a.)
2020-02-11
44,653(+4.7%) 55,220(+14%)
2020-02-12[ii]
46,472(+4.1%) 58,761(+6.4%)
2020-02-13
48,467(+4.3%) 63,851(+8.7%)
2020-02-14
49,970(+3.1%) 66,492(+4.1%)
2020-02-15
51,091(+2.2%) 68,500(+3.0%)
2020-02-16
70,548(+3.0%)
2020-02-17
72,436(+2.7%)
2020-02-18[iii]
74,185(+2.4%)
2020-02-19[iv]
75,002(+1.1%)
2020-02-20
75,891(+1.2%)
2020-02-21
76,288(+0.52%)
2020-02-22
76,936(+0.85%)
2020-02-23
77,150(+0.28%)
2020-02-24
77,658(+0.66%)
2020-02-25
78,064(+0.52%)
2020-02-26
78,497(+0.55%)
2020-02-27
78,824(+0.42%)
2020-02-28
79,251(+0.54%)
2020-02-29
79,824(+0.72%)
2020-03-01
80,026(+0.25%)
2020-03-02
80,151(+0.16%)
2020-03-03
80,270(+0.15%)
2020-03-04
80,409(+0.17%)
2020-03-05
80,552(+0.18%)
2020-03-06
80,651(+0.12%)
2020-03-07
80,695(+0.05%)
2020-03-08
80,735(+0.05%)
2020-03-09
80,754(+0.02%)
2020-03-10
80,778(+0.03%)
2020-03-11
80,793(+0.02%)
2020-03-12
80,813(+0.02%)
2020-03-13
80,824(+0.01%)
2020-03-14
80,844(+0.02%)
2020-03-15
80,860(+0.02%)
2020-03-16
80,881(+0.03%)
2020-03-17
80,894(+0.02%)
2020-03-18
80,928(+0.04%)
2020-03-19
80,967(+0.05%)
2020-03-20
81,008(+0.05%)
2020-03-21
81,054(+0.06%)
2020-03-22
81,093(+0.05%)
2020-03-23
81,171(+0.1%)
2020-03-24
81,218(+0.06%)
2020-03-25
81,285(+0.08%)
2020-03-26
81,340(+0.07%)
2020-03-27
81,394(+0.07%)
2020-03-28
81,439(+0.06%)
2020-03-29
81,470(+0.04%)
2020-03-30
81,518(+0.06%)
2020-03-31
81,554(+0.04%)
2020-04-01
81,589(+0.04%)
2020-04-02
81,620(+0.04%)
2020-04-03
81,639(+0.02%)
2020-04-04
81,669(+0.04%)
2020-04-05
81,708(+0.05%)
2020-04-06
81,740(+0.04%)
2020-04-07
81,802(+0.08%)
2020-04-08
81,865(+0.08%)
2020-04-09
81,907(+0.05%)
2020-04-10
81,953(+0.06%)
2020-04-11
82,052(+0.12%)
2020-04-12
82,160(+0.13%)
2020-04-13
82,249(+0.11%)
2020-04-14
82,295(+0.06%)
2020-04-15
82,341(+0.06%)
2020-04-16
82,692(+0.43%)
2020-04-17
82,719(+0.03%)
2020-04-18
82,735(+0.02%)
2020-04-19
82,747(+0.01%)
2020-04-20
82,758(+0.01%)
2020-04-21
82,788(+0.04%)
2020-04-22
82,798(+0.01%)
2020-04-23
82,804(+0.01%)
2020-04-24
82,816(+0.01%)
2020-04-25
82,827(+0.01%)
2020-04-26
82,830(=)
2020-04-27
82,836(+0.01%)
2020-04-28
82,858(+0.03%)
2020-04-29
82,862(=)
2020-04-30
82,874(+0.01%)
2020-05-01
82,875(=)
2020-05-02
82,877(=)
2020-05-03
82,880(=)
2020-05-04
82,881(=)
2020-05-05
82,883(=)
2020-05-06
82,885(=)
2020-05-07
82,886(=)
2020-05-08
82,887(=)
2020-05-09
82,901(+0.02%)
2020-05-10
82,918(+0.02%)
2020-05-11
82,919(=)
2020-05-12
82,926(+0.01%)
2020-05-13
82,929(=)
2020-05-14
82,933(=)
2020-05-15
82,941(+0.01%)
2020-05-16
82,947(+0.01%)
2020-05-17
82,954(+0.01%)
2020-05-18
82,960(+0.01%)
2020-05-19
82,965(+0.01%)
2020-05-20
82,967(=)
2020-05-21
82,971(=)
2020-05-22
82,971(=)
2020-05-23
82,974(=)
2020-05-24
82,985(+0.01%)
2020-05-25
82,992(+0.01%)
2020-05-26
82,993(=)
2020-05-27
82,995(=)
2020-05-28
82,995(=)
2020-05-29
82,999(=)
2020-05-30
83,001(=)
2020-05-31
83,017(+0.02%)
2020-06-01
83,022(+0.01%)
2020-06-02
83,021(=)
2020-06-03
83,022(=)
2020-06-04
83,027(+0.01%)
2020-06-05
83,030(=)
2020-06-06
83,036(+0.01%)
2020-06-07
83,040(=)
2020-06-08
83,043(=)
2020-06-09
83,046(=)
2020-06-10
83,057(+0.01%)
2020-06-11
83,064(+0.01%)
2020-06-12
83,075(+0.01%)
2020-06-13
83,132(+0.07%)
2020-06-14
83,181(+0.06%)
2020-06-15
83,221(+0.05%)
2020-06-16
83,265(+0.05%)
2020-06-17
83,293(+0.03%)
2020-06-18
83,325(+0.04%)
2020-06-19
83,352(+0.03%)
2020-06-20
83,378(+0.03%)
2020-06-21
83,396(+0.02%)
2020-06-22
83,418(+0.03%)
2020-06-23
83,430(+0.01%)
2020-06-24
83,449(+0.02%)
2020-06-25
83,462(+0.02%)
2020-06-26
83,483(+0.03%)
2020-06-27
83,500(+0.02%)
2020-06-28
83,512(+0.01%)
2020-06-29
83,531(+0.02%)
2020-06-30
83,534(=)
2020-07-01
83,537(=)
2020-07-02
83,542(+0.01%)
2020-07-03
83,545(=)
2020-07-04
83,553(+0.01%)
2020-07-05
83,557(=)
2020-07-06
83,565(+0.01%)
2020-07-07
83,572(+0.01%)
2020-07-08
83,581(+0.01%)
2020-07-09
83,585(=)
2020-07-10
83,587(=)
2020-07-11
83,594(+0.01%)
2020-07-12
83,602(+0.01%)
2020-07-13
83,605(=)
2020-07-14
83,611(+0.01%)
2020-07-15
83,612(=)
2020-07-16
83,622(+0.01%)
2020-07-17
83,644(+0.03%)
2020-07-18
83,660(+0.02%)
2020-07-19
83,682(+0.03%)
2020-07-20
83,693(+0.01%)
2020-07-21
83,707(+0.02%)
2020-07-22
83,729(+0.03%)
2020-07-23
83,750(+0.03%)
2020-07-24
83,784(+0.04%)
2020-07-25
83,830(+0.05%)
2020-07-26
83,891(+0.07%)
2020-07-27
83,959(+0.08%)
2020-07-28
84,060(+0.12%)
2020-07-29
84,165(+0.12%)
2020-07-30
84,292(+0.15%)
2020-07-31
84,337(+0.05%)
2020-08-01
84,385(+0.06%)
2020-08-02
84,428(+0.05%)
2020-08-03
84,464(+0.04%)
2020-08-04
84,491(+0.03%)
2020-08-05
84,528(+0.04%)
2020-08-06
84,565(+0.04%)
2020-08-07
84,596(+0.04%)
2020-08-08
84,619(+0.03%)
2020-08-09
84,668(+0.06%)
2020-08-10
84,712(+0.05%)
2020-08-11
84,737(+0.03%)
2020-08-12
84,756(+0.02%)
2020-08-13
84,786(+0.04%)
2020-08-14
84,808(+0.03%)
2020-08-15
84,827(+0.02%)
2020-08-16
84,849(+0.03%)
2020-08-17
84,871(+0.03%)
2020-08-18
84,888(+0.02%)
2020-08-19
84,895(+0.01%)
2020-08-20
84,917(+0.03%)
2020-08-21
84,939(+0.03%)
2020-08-22
84,951(+0.01%)
2020-08-23
84,967(+0.02%)
2020-08-24
84,981(+0.02%)
2020-08-25
84,996(+0.02%)
2020-08-26
85,004(+0.01%)
2020-08-27
85,013(+0.01%)
2020-08-28
85,022(+0.01%)
2020-08-29
85,031(+0.01%)
2020-08-30
85,048(+0.02%)
2020-08-31
85,058(+0.01%)
2020-09-01
85,066(+0.01%)
2020-09-02
85,077(+0.01%)
2020-09-03
85,102(+0.03%)
2020-09-04
85,112(+0.01%)
2020-09-05
85,122(+0.01%)
2020-09-06
85,134(+0.01%)
2020-09-07
85,144(+0.01%)
2020-09-08
85,146(=)
2020-09-09
85,153(+0.01%)
2020-09-10
85,168(+0.02%)
2020-09-11
85,174(+0.01%)
2020-09-12
85,184(+0.01%)
2020-09-13
85,194(+0.01%)
2020-09-14
85,202(+0.01%)
2020-09-15
85,214(+0.01%)
2020-09-16
85,223(+0.01%)
2020-09-17
85,255(+0.04%)
2020-09-18
85,269(+0.02%)
2020-09-19
85,279(+0.01%)
2020-09-20
85,291(+0.01%)
2020-09-21
85,297(+0.01%)
2020-09-22
85,307(+0.01%)
2020-09-23
85,314(+0.01%)
2020-09-24
85,322(+0.01%)
2020-09-25
85,337(+0.02%)
2020-09-26
85,351(+0.02%)
2020-09-27
85,372(+0.02%)
2020-09-28
85,384(+0.01%)
2020-09-29
85,403(+0.02%)
2020-09-30
85,414(+0.01%)
2020-10-01
85,424(+0.01%)
2020-10-02
85,434(+0.01%)
2020-10-03
85,450(+0.02%)
2020-10-04
85,470(+0.02%)
2020-10-05
85,482(+0.01%)
2020-10-06
85,489(+0.01%)
2020-10-07
85,500(+0.01%)
2020-10-08
85,521(+0.02%)
2020-10-09
85,536(+0.02%)
2020-10-10
85,557(+0.02%)
2020-10-11
85,578(+0.02%)
2020-10-12
85,591(+0.02%)
2020-10-13
85,611(+0.02%)
2020-10-14
85,622(+0.01%)
2020-10-15
85,646(+0.03%)
2020-10-16
85,659(+0.02%)
2020-10-17
85,672(+0.02%)
2020-10-18
85,685(+0.02%)
2020-10-19
85,704(+0.02%)
2020-10-20
85,715(+0.01%)
2020-10-21
85,729(+0.02%)
2020-10-22
85,747(+0.02%)
2020-10-23
85,775(+0.03%)
2020-10-24
85,790(+0.02%)
2020-10-25
85,810(+0.02%)
2020-10-26
85,826(+0.02%)
2020-10-27
85,868(+0.05%)
2020-10-28
85,915(+0.05%)
2020-10-29
85,940(+0.03%)
2020-10-30
85,973(+0.04%)
2020-10-31
85,997(+0.03%)
2020-11-01
86,021(+0.03%)
2020-11-02
86,070(+0.06%)
2020-11-03
86,087(+0.02%)
2020-11-04
86,115(+0.03%)
2020-11-05
86,151(+0.04%)
2020-11-06
86,184(+0.04%)
2020-11-07
86,212(+0.03%)
2020-11-08
86,245(+0.04%)
2020-11-09
86,267(+0.03%)
2020-11-10
86,284(+0.02%)
2020-11-11
86,299(+0.02%)
2020-11-12
86,307(+0.01%)
2020-11-13
86,325(+0.02%)
2020-11-14
86,338(+0.02%)
2020-11-15
86,346(+0.01%)
2020-11-16
86,361(+0.02%)
2020-11-17
86,369(+0.01%)
2020-11-18
86,381(+0.01%)
2020-11-19
86,398(+0.02%)
2020-11-20
86,414(+0.02%)
2020-11-21
86,431(+0.02%)
2020-11-22
86,442(+0.01%)
2020-11-23
86,464(+0.03%)
2020-11-24
86,469(+0.01%)
2020-11-25
86,490(+0.02%)
2020-11-26
86,495(+0.01%)
2020-11-27
86,501(+0.01%)
2020-11-28
86,512(+0.01%)
2020-11-29
86,530(+0.02%)
2020-11-30
86,542(+0.01%)
2020-12-01
86,551(+0.01%)
2020-12-02
86,567(+0.02%)
2020-12-03
86,584(+0.02%)
2020-12-04
86,601(+0.02%)
2020-12-05
86,619(+0.02%)
2020-12-06
86,634(+0.02%)
2020-12-07
86,646(+0.01%)
2020-12-08
86,661(+0.02%)
2020-12-09
86,673(+0.01%)
2020-12-10
86,688(+0.02%)
2020-12-11
86,701(+0.01%)
2020-12-12
86,725(+0.03%)
2020-12-13
86,741(+0.02%)
2020-12-14
86,758(+0.02%)
2020-12-15
86,770(+0.01%)
2020-12-16
86,777(+0.01%)
2020-12-17
86,789(+0.01%)
2020-12-18
86,806(+0.02%)
2020-12-19
86,829(+0.03%)
2020-12-20
86,852(+0.03%)
2020-12-21
86,867(+0.02%)
2020-12-22
86,882(+0.02%)
2020-12-23
86,899(+0.02%)
2020-12-24
86,913(+0.02%)
2020-12-25
86,933(+0.02%)
2020-12-26
86,955(+0.03%)
2020-12-27
86,976(+0.02%)
2020-12-28
87,003(+0.03%)
2020-12-29
87,027(+0.03%)
2020-12-30
87,052(+0.03%)
2020-12-31
87,071(+0.02%)
2021-01-01
87,093(+0.03%)
2021-01-02
87,117(+0.03%)
2021-01-03
87,150(+0.04%)
2021-01-04
87,183(+0.04%)
2021-01-05
87,215(+0.04%)
2021-01-06
87,278(+0.07%)
2021-01-07
87,331(+0.06%)
2021-01-08
87,364(+0.04%)
2021-01-09
87,433(+0.08%)
2021-01-10
87,536(+0.12%)
2021-01-11
87,591(+0.06%)
2021-01-12
87,706(+0.13%)
2021-01-13
87,844(+0.16%)
2021-01-14
87,988(+0.16%)
2021-01-15
88,118(+0.15%)
2021-01-16
88,227(+0.12%)
2021-01-17
88,336(+0.12%)
2021-01-18
88,454(+0.13%)
2021-01-19
88,557(+0.12%)
2021-01-20
88,701(+0.16%)
2021-01-21
88,804(+0.12%)
2021-01-22
88,911(+0.12%)
2021-01-23
88,991(+0.09%)
2021-01-24
89,115(+0.14%)
2021-01-25
89,197(+0.09%)
2021-01-26
89,272(+0.08%)
2021-01-27
89,326(+0.06%)
2021-01-28
89,378(+0.06%)
2021-01-29
89,430(+0.06%)
2021-01-30
89,522(+0.1%)
2021-01-31
89,564(+0.05%)
2021-02-01
89,594(+0.03%)
2021-02-02
89,619(+0.03%)
2021-02-03
89,649(+0.03%)
2021-02-04
89,669(+0.02%)
2021-02-05
89,681(+0.01%)
2021-02-06
89,692(+0.01%)
2021-02-07
89,706(+0.02%)
2021-02-08
89,720(+0.02%)
2021-02-09
89,734(+0.02%)
2021-02-10
89,736(=)
2021-02-11
89,748(+0.01%)
2021-02-12
89,756(+0.01%)
2021-02-13
89,763(+0.01%)
2021-02-14
89,772(+0.01%)
2021-02-15
89,788(+0.02%)
2021-02-16
89,795(+0.01%)
2021-02-17
89,806(+0.01%)
2021-02-18
89,816(+0.01%)
2021-02-19
89,824(+0.01%)
2021-02-20
89,831(+0.01%)
2021-02-21
89,842(+0.01%)
2021-02-22
89,852(+0.01%)
2021-02-23
89,864(+0.01%)
2021-02-24
89,871(+0.01%)
2021-02-25
89,877(+0.01%)
2021-02-26
89,887(+0.01%)
2021-02-27
89,893(+0.01%)
2021-02-28
89,912(+0.02%)
2021-03-01
89,923(+0.01%)
2021-03-02
89,933(+0.01%)
2021-03-03
89,943(+0.01%)
2021-03-04
89,952(+0.01%)
2021-03-05
89,962(+0.01%)
2021-03-06
89,975(+0.01%)
2021-03-07
89,994(+0.02%)
2021-03-08
90,002(+0.01%)
2021-03-09
90,007(+0.01%)
2021-03-10
90,018(+0.01%)
2021-03-11
90,027(+0.01%)
2021-03-12
90,034(+0.01%)
2021-03-13
90,044(+0.01%)
2021-03-14
90,049(+0.01%)
2021-03-15
90,062(+0.01%)
2021-03-16
90,066(=)
2021-03-17
90,072(+0.01%)
2021-03-18
90,083(+0.01%)
2021-03-19
90,087(=)
2021-03-20
90,099(+0.01%)
2021-03-21
90,106(+0.01%)
2021-03-22
90,115(+0.01%)
2021-03-23
90,125(+0.01%)
2021-03-24
90,136(+0.01%)
2021-03-25
90,147(+0.01%)
2021-03-26
90,159(+0.01%)
2021-03-27
90,167(+0.01%)
2021-03-28
90,182(+0.02%)
2021-03-29
90,190(+0.01%)
2021-03-30
90,201(+0.01%)
2021-03-31
90,217(+0.02%)
2021-04-01
90,226(+0.01%)
2021-04-02
90,252(+0.03%)
2021-04-03
90,273(+0.02%)
2021-04-04
90,305(+0.04%)
2021-04-05
90,329(+0.03%)
2021-04-06
90,341(+0.01%)
2021-04-07
90,365(+0.03%)
2021-04-08
90,386(+0.02%)
2021-04-09
90,400(+0.02%)
2021-04-10
90,410(+0.01%)
2021-04-11
90,426(+0.02%)
2021-04-12
90,435(+0.01%)
2021-04-13
90,447(+0.01%)
2021-04-14
90,457(+0.01%)
2021-04-15
90,468(+0.01%)
2021-04-16
90,483(+0.02%)
2021-04-17
90,499(+0.02%)
2021-04-18
90,510(+0.01%)
2021-04-19
90,520(+0.01%)
2021-04-20
90,541(+0.02%)
2021-04-21
90,547(+0.01%)
2021-04-22
90,566(+0.02%)
2021-04-23
90,575(+0.01%)
2021-04-24
90,588(+0.01%)
2021-04-25
90,599(+0.01%)
2021-04-26
90,610(+0.01%)
2021-04-27
90,622(+0.01%)
2021-04-28
90,642(+0.02%)
2021-04-29
90,655(+0.01%)
2021-04-30
90,671(+0.02%)
2021-05-01
90,686(+0.02%)
2021-05-02
90,697(+0.01%)
2021-05-03
90,714(+0.02%)
2021-05-04
90,721(+0.01%)
2021-05-05
90,726(+0.01%)
2021-05-06
90,739(+0.01%)
2021-05-07
90,746(+0.01%)
2021-05-08
90,758(+0.01%)
2021-05-09
90,769(+0.01%)
2021-05-10
90,783(+0.02%)
2021-05-11
90,799(+0.02%)
2021-05-12
90,808(+0.01%)
2021-05-13
90,815(+0.01%)
2021-05-14
90,829(+0.02%)
2021-05-15
90,847(+0.02%)
2021-05-16
90,872(+0.03%)
2021-05-17
90,894(+0.02%)
2021-05-18
90,908(+0.02%)
2021-05-19
90,920(+0.01%)
2021-05-20
90,944(+0.03%)
2021-05-21
90,954(+0.01%)
2021-05-22
90,973(+0.02%)
2021-05-23
90,991(+0.02%)
2021-05-24
91,006(+0.02%)
2021-05-25
91,019(+0.01%)
2021-05-26
91,038(+0.02%)
2021-05-27
91,045(+0.01%)
2021-05-28
91,061(+0.02%)
2021-05-29
91,072(+0.01%)
2021-05-30
91,099(+0.03%)
2021-05-31
91,122(+0.03%)
2021-06-01
91,146(+0.03%)
2021-06-02
91,170(+0.03%)
2021-06-03
91,194(+0.03%)
2021-06-04
91,218(+0.03%)
2021-06-05
91,248(+0.03%)
2021-06-06
91,267(+0.02%)
2021-06-07
91,300(+0.04%)
2021-06-08
91,316(+0.02%)
2021-06-09
91,337(+0.02%)
2021-06-10
91,359(+0.02%)
2021-06-11
91,394(+0.04%)
2021-06-12
91,428(+0.04%)
2021-06-13
91,451(+0.03%)
2021-06-14
91,471(+0.02%)
2021-06-15
91,492(+0.02%)
2021-06-16
91,511(+0.02%)
2021-06-17
91,534(+0.03%)
2021-06-18
91,564(+0.03%)
2021-06-19
91,587(+0.03%)
2021-06-20
91,604(+0.02%)
2021-06-21
91,629(+0.03%)
2021-06-22
91,653(+0.03%)
2021-06-23
91,669(+0.02%)
2021-06-24
91,693(+0.03%)
2021-06-25
91,718(+0.03%)
2021-06-26
91,732(+0.02%)
2021-06-27
91,753(+0.02%)
2021-06-28
91,771(+0.02%)
2021-06-29
91,780(+0.01%)
2021-06-30
91,792(+0.01%)
2021-07-01
91,810(+0.02%)
2021-07-02
91,833(+0.03%)
2021-07-03
91,847(+0.02%)
2021-07-04
91,869(+0.02%)
2021-07-05
91,892(+0.03%)
2021-07-06
91,949(+0.06%)
2021-07-07
91,966(+0.02%)
2021-07-08
91,989(+0.03%)
2021-07-09
92,015(+0.03%)
2021-07-10
92,039(+0.03%)
2021-07-11
92,066(+0.03%)
2021-07-12
92,095(+0.03%)
2021-07-13
92,119(+0.03%)
2021-07-14
92,147(+0.03%)
2021-07-15
92,183(+0.04%)
2021-07-16
92,213(+0.03%)
2021-07-17
92,246(+0.04%)
2021-07-18
92,277(+0.03%)
2021-07-19
92,342(+0.07%)
2021-07-20
92,364(+0.02%)
2021-07-21
92,414(+0.05%)
2021-07-22
92,462(+0.05%)
2021-07-23
92,497(+0.04%)
2021-07-24
92,529(+0.03%)
2021-07-25
92,605(+0.08%)
2021-07-26
92,676(+0.08%)
2021-07-27
92,762(+0.09%)
2021-07-28
92,811(+0.05%)
2021-07-29
92,875(+0.07%)
2021-07-30
92,930(+0.06%)
2021-07-31
93,005(+0.08%)
2021-08-01
93,103(+0.11%)
2021-08-02
93,193(+0.1%)
2021-08-03
93,289(+0.1%)
2021-08-04
93,374(+0.09%)
2021-08-05
93,498(+0.13%)
2021-08-06
93,605(+0.11%)
2021-08-07
93,701(+0.1%)
2021-08-08
93,826(+0.13%)
2021-08-09
93,969(+0.15%)
2021-08-10
94,080(+0.12%)
2021-08-11
94,161(+0.09%)
2021-08-12
94,260(+0.11%)
2021-08-13
94,326(+0.07%)
2021-08-14
94,379(+0.06%)
2021-08-15
94,430(+0.05%)
2021-08-16
94,472(+0.04%)
2021-08-17
94,500(+0.03%)
2021-08-18
94,546(+0.05%)
2021-08-19
94,579(+0.03%)
2021-08-20
94,599(+0.02%)
2021-08-21
94,631(+0.03%)
2021-08-22
94,652(+0.02%)
2021-08-23
94,687(+0.04%)
2021-08-24
94,707(+0.02%)
2021-08-25
94,733(+0.03%)
2021-08-26
94,765(+0.03%)
2021-08-27
94,786(+0.02%)
2021-08-28
94,819(+0.03%)
2021-08-29
94,842(+0.02%)
2021-08-30
94,879(+0.04%)
2021-08-31
94,898(+0.02%)
2021-09-01
94,926(+0.03%)
2021-09-02
94,954(+0.03%)
2021-09-03
94,982(+0.03%)
2021-09-04
95,010(+0.03%)
2021-09-05
95,028(+0.02%)
2021-09-06
95,064(+0.04%)
2021-09-07
95,083(+0.02%)
2021-09-08
95,111(+0.03%)
2021-09-09
95,128(+0.02%)
2021-09-10
95,153(+0.03%)
2021-09-11
95,199(+0.05%)
2021-09-12
95,248(+0.05%)
2021-09-13
95,340(+0.1%)
2021-09-14
95,413(+0.08%)
2021-09-15
95,493(+0.08%)
2021-09-16
95,577(+0.09%)
2021-09-17
95,623(+0.05%)
2021-09-18
95,689(+0.07%)
2021-09-19
95,738(+0.05%)
2021-09-20
95,810(+0.08%)
2021-09-21
95,851(+0.04%)
2021-09-22
95,894(+0.04%)
2021-09-23
95,948(+0.06%)
2021-09-24
95,986(+0.04%)
2021-09-25
96,015(+0.03%)
2021-09-26
96,050(+0.04%)
2021-09-27
96,081(+0.03%)
2021-09-28
96,106(+0.03%)
2021-09-29
96,128(+0.02%)
2021-09-30
96,162(+0.04%)
2021-10-01
96,203(+0.04%)
2021-10-02
96,231(+0.03%)
2021-10-03
96,258(+0.03%)
2021-10-04
96,284(+0.03%)
2021-10-05
96,310(+0.03%)
2021-10-06
96,335(+0.03%)
2021-10-07
96,357(+0.02%)
2021-10-08
96,374(+0.02%)
2021-10-09
96,398(+0.02%)
2021-10-10
96,423(+0.03%)
2021-10-11
96,435(+0.01%)
2021-10-12
96,457(+0.02%)
2021-10-13
96,478(+0.02%)
2021-10-14
96,488(+0.01%)
2021-10-15
96,502(+0.01%)
2021-10-16
96,522(+0.02%)
2021-10-17
96,546(+0.02%)
2021-10-18
96,571(+0.03%)
2021-10-19
96,601(+0.03%)
2021-10-20
96,622(+0.02%)
2021-10-21
96,665(+0.04%)
2021-10-22
96,715(+0.05%)
2021-10-23
96,758(+0.04%)
2021-10-24
96,797(+0.04%)
2021-10-25
96,840(+0.04%)
2021-10-26
96,899(+0.06%)
2021-10-27
96,938(+0.04%)
2021-10-28
97,002(+0.07%)
2021-10-29
97,080(+0.08%)
2021-10-30
97,151(+0.07%)
2021-10-31
97,243(+0.09%)
2021-11-01
97,314(+0.07%)
2021-11-02
97,423(+0.11%)
2021-11-03
97,527(+0.11%)
2021-11-04
97,605(+0.08%)
2021-11-05
97,660(+0.06%)
2021-11-06
97,734(+0.08%)
2021-11-07
97,823(+0.09%)
2021-11-08
97,885(+0.06%)
2021-11-09
97,939(+0.06%)
2021-11-10
98,001(+0.06%)
2021-11-11
98,099(+0.1%)
2021-11-12
98,174(+0.08%)
2021-11-13
98,263(+0.09%)
2021-11-14
98,315(+0.05%)
2021-11-15
98,337(+0.02%)
2021-11-16
98,368(+0.03%)
2021-11-17
98,403(+0.04%)
2021-11-18
98,427(+0.02%)
2021-11-19
98,450(+0.02%)
2021-11-20
98,467(+0.02%)
2021-11-21
98,505(+0.04%)
2021-11-22
98,524(+0.02%)
2021-11-23
98,546(+0.02%)
2021-11-24
98,570(+0.02%)
2021-11-25
98,583(+0.01%)
2021-11-26
98,608(+0.03%)
2021-11-27
98,631(+0.02%)
2021-11-28
98,672(+0.04%)
2021-11-29
98,711(+0.04%)
2021-11-30
98,824(+0.11%)
2021-12-01
98,897(+0.07%)
2021-12-02
98,993(+0.1%)
2021-12-03
99,083(+0.09%)
2021-12-04
99,142(+0.06%)
2021-12-05
99,203(+0.06%)
2021-12-06
99,297(+0.09%)
2021-12-07
99,371(+0.07%)
2021-12-08
99,454(+0.08%)
2021-12-09
99,517(+0.06%)
2021-12-10
99,604(+0.09%)
2021-12-11
99,679(+0.08%)
2021-12-12
99,780(+0.1%)
2021-12-13
99,856(+0.08%)
2021-12-14
99,923(+0.07%)
2021-12-15
100,000(+0.08%)
2021-12-16
100,076(+0.08%)
2021-12-17
100,201(+0.12%)
2021-12-18
100,284(+0.08%)
2021-12-19
100,386(+0.1%)
2021-12-20
100,467(+0.08%)
2021-12-21
100,544(+0.08%)
2021-12-22
100,644(+0.1%)
2021-12-23
100,731(+0.09%)
2021-12-24
100,871(+0.14%)
2021-12-25
101,077(+0.2%)
2021-12-26
101,277(+0.2%)
2021-12-27
101,486(+0.21%)
2021-12-28
101,683(+0.19%)
2021-12-29
101,890(+0.2%)
2021-12-30
102,083(+0.19%)
2021-12-31
102,314(+0.23%)
2022-01-01
102,505(+0.19%)
2022-01-02
102,666(+0.16%)
2022-01-03
102,841(+0.17%)
2022-01-04
102,932(+0.09%)
2022-01-05
103,121(+0.18%)
2022-01-06
103,295(+0.17%)
2022-01-07
103,454(+0.15%)
2022-01-08
103,619(+0.16%)
2022-01-09
103,776(+0.15%)
2022-01-10
103,968(+0.19%)
2022-01-11
104,189(+0.21%)
2022-01-12
104,379(+0.18%)
2022-01-13
104,580(+0.19%)
2022-01-14
104,745(+0.16%)
2022-01-15
104,864(+0.11%)
2022-01-16
105,087(+0.21%)
2022-01-17
105,258(+0.16%)
2022-01-18
105,345(+0.08%)
2022-01-19
105,411(+0.06%)
2022-01-20
105,484(+0.07%)
2022-01-21
105,547(+0.06%)
2022-01-22
105,603(+0.05%)
2022-01-23
105,660(+0.05%)
2022-01-24
105,705(+0.04%)
2022-01-25
105,749(+0.04%)
2022-01-26
105,811(+0.06%)
2022-01-27
105,875(+0.06%)
2022-01-28
105,934(+0.06%)
2022-01-29
106,015(+0.08%)
2022-01-30
106,073(+0.05%)
2022-01-31
106,139(+0.06%)
From 10 February 2020 onwards, the data includes the cases in Hubei that were not tested for the virus but clinically diagnosed based on medical imaging showing signs of pneumonia.[55]
The lab-tested data was also separately available for 10–15 February 2020.[56]
Data from 16 February 2020 onwards did not include a separate number of lab-tested cases.
From 19 February 2020 onwards, only new lab-tested cases were counted towards the total (but clinically diagnosed cases counted earlier were not discarded).[57]
On 17 April 2020, following the Wuhan government's issuance of a report on accounting for COVID-19 deaths that occurred at home that went previously unreported, as well as the subtraction of deaths that were previously double-counted by different hospitals, the NHC revised their cumulative totals dating to 16 April, adding 325 cumulative cases and 1,290 deaths.[58]
Data sourced from NHC daily reports. (In another link before January 25, on Wuhan MHC website before January 10)
  1. ^ The 02-10 and 02-11 clinically diagnosed data has been based on appendix in the 02-11 Hubei WJW data, with 02-10's data obtained from deducting the number of new C.D. cases on that day from the total.
  2. ^ The 02-12 data has been corrected based on the 02-13 NHC subtraction data and corresponding 02-13 Hubei data.
  3. ^ The 02-18 number of tested cases is calculated based on the 02-19 subtraction data.
  4. ^ Data from 02-19 excludes clinical diagnoses, so the calculation is made provisionally for ease of understanding the progression of the situation.
Updated November 10, 2024.
COVID-19 pandemic by location[59]
Location Cases Deaths
World[a] 776,753,553 7,073,453
European Union European Union[b] 186,262,640 1,265,282
United States United States 103,436,829 1,206,141
China China[c] 99,381,078 122,367
India India 45,044,196 533,653
France France 39,024,965 168,091
Germany Germany 38,437,756 174,979
Brazil Brazil 37,511,921 702,116
South Korea South Korea 34,571,873 35,934
Japan Japan 33,803,572 74,694
Italy Italy 26,826,486 197,542
United Kingdom United Kingdom 25,010,212 232,112
Russia Russia 24,572,846 403,557
Turkey Turkey 17,004,729 101,419
Spain Spain 13,980,340 121,852
Australia Australia 11,861,161 25,236
Vietnam Vietnam 11,624,000 43,206
Argentina Argentina 10,106,404 130,697
Taiwan Taiwan 9,970,937 17,672
Netherlands Netherlands 8,644,647 22,986
Iran Iran 7,627,863 146,837
Mexico Mexico 7,622,283 334,783
Indonesia Indonesia 6,829,704 162,059
Poland Poland 6,758,426 120,897
Colombia Colombia 6,394,361 142,727
Austria Austria 6,082,860 22,534
Greece Greece 5,727,906 39,639
Portugal Portugal 5,669,567 29,027
Ukraine Ukraine 5,541,305 109,923
Chile Chile 5,403,559 64,482
Malaysia Malaysia 5,318,418 37,351
Belgium Belgium 4,889,242 34,339
Israel Israel 4,841,558 12,707
Canada Canada 4,819,055 55,282
Czech Republic Czech Republic 4,811,887 43,687
Thailand Thailand 4,803,632 34,734
Peru Peru 4,526,977 220,975
Switzerland Switzerland 4,468,044 14,170
Philippines Philippines 4,173,631 66,864
South Africa South Africa 4,072,813 102,595
Romania Romania 3,566,594 68,899
Denmark Denmark 3,442,484 9,919
Singapore Singapore 3,006,155 2,024
Hong Kong Hong Kong 2,876,106 13,466
Sweden Sweden 2,765,204 28,006
New Zealand New Zealand 2,652,096 4,442
Serbia Serbia 2,583,470 18,057
Iraq Iraq 2,465,545 25,375
Hungary Hungary 2,236,219 49,092
Bangladesh Bangladesh 2,051,463 29,499
Slovakia Slovakia 1,883,895 21,249
Georgia (country) Georgia 1,864,383 17,151
Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland 1,750,138 9,900
Jordan Jordan 1,746,997 14,122
Pakistan Pakistan 1,580,631 30,656
Norway Norway 1,524,523 5,732
Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 1,504,370 19,072
Finland Finland 1,499,712 11,466
Lithuania Lithuania 1,400,088 9,848
Slovenia Slovenia 1,359,884 9,914
Croatia Croatia 1,348,642 18,775
Bulgaria Bulgaria 1,337,733 38,751
Morocco Morocco 1,279,115 16,305
Puerto Rico Puerto Rico 1,252,713 5,938
Guatemala Guatemala 1,250,392 20,203
Lebanon Lebanon 1,239,904 10,947
Costa Rica Costa Rica 1,235,724 9,374
Bolivia Bolivia 1,212,149 22,387
Tunisia Tunisia 1,153,361 29,423
Cuba Cuba 1,113,662 8,530
Ecuador Ecuador 1,078,795 36,055
United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates 1,067,030 2,349
Panama Panama 1,044,987 8,756
Uruguay Uruguay 1,041,682 7,686
Mongolia Mongolia 1,011,489 2,136
Nepal Nepal 1,003,450 12,031
Belarus Belarus 994,038 7,118
Latvia Latvia 977,765 7,475
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia 841,469 9,646
Azerbaijan Azerbaijan 836,474 10,353
Paraguay Paraguay 735,759 19,880
Cyprus Cyprus 708,580 1,492
State of Palestine Palestine 703,228 5,708
Bahrain Bahrain 696,614 1,536
Sri Lanka Sri Lanka 672,809 16,907
Kuwait Kuwait 667,290 2,570
Dominican Republic Dominican Republic 661,103 4,384
Moldova Moldova 650,609 12,281
Myanmar Myanmar 643,215 19,494
Estonia Estonia 612,467 2,998
Venezuela Venezuela 552,695 5,856
Egypt Egypt 516,023 24,830
Qatar Qatar 514,524 690
Libya Libya 507,269 6,437
Ethiopia Ethiopia 501,239 7,574
Réunion Réunion 494,595 921
Honduras Honduras 472,909 11,114
Armenia Armenia 453,016 8,778
Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina 403,960 16,402
Oman Oman 399,449 4,628
Luxembourg Luxembourg 396,017 1,000
North Macedonia North Macedonia 352,043 9,990
Zambia Zambia 349,892 4,078
Brunei Brunei 349,279 181
Kenya Kenya 344,109 5,689
Albania Albania 337,195 3,608
Botswana Botswana 330,696 2,801
Mauritius Mauritius 329,121 1,074
Kosovo Kosovo 274,279 3,212
Algeria Algeria 272,173 6,881
Nigeria Nigeria 267,189 3,155
Zimbabwe Zimbabwe 266,396 5,740
Montenegro Montenegro 251,280 2,654
Afghanistan Afghanistan 235,214 7,998
Mozambique Mozambique 233,845 2,252
Martinique Martinique 230,354 1,104
Laos Laos 219,060 671
Iceland Iceland 210,675 186
Guadeloupe Guadeloupe 203,235 1,021
El Salvador El Salvador 201,960 4,230
Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago 191,496 4,390
Maldives Maldives 186,694 316
Uzbekistan Uzbekistan 175,081 1,016
Namibia Namibia 172,556 4,110
Ghana Ghana 172,210 1,462
Uganda Uganda 172,159 3,632
Jamaica Jamaica 157,326 3,618
Cambodia Cambodia 139,325 3,056
Rwanda Rwanda 133,266 1,468
Cameroon Cameroon 125,279 1,974
Malta Malta 123,136 925
Barbados Barbados 108,835 593
Angola Angola 107,482 1,937
Democratic Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo 100,976 1,474
French Guiana French Guiana 98,041 413
Senegal Senegal 89,312 1,972
Malawi Malawi 89,168 2,686
Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan 88,953 1,024
Ivory Coast Ivory Coast 88,448 835
Suriname Suriname 82,503 1,406
New Caledonia New Caledonia 80,203 314
French Polynesia French Polynesia 79,451 650
Eswatini Eswatini 75,356 1,427
Guyana Guyana 74,491 1,302
Belize Belize 71,430 688
Fiji Fiji 69,047 885
Madagascar Madagascar 68,575 1,428
Jersey Jersey 66,391 161
Cape Verde Cabo Verde 64,474 417
Sudan Sudan 63,993 5,046
Mauritania Mauritania 63,876 997
Bhutan Bhutan 62,697 21
Syria Syria 57,423 3,163
Burundi Burundi 54,569 15
Guam Guam 52,287 419
Seychelles Seychelles 51,892 172
Gabon Gabon 49,056 307
Andorra Andorra 48,015 159
Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea 46,864 670
Curaçao Curaçao 45,883 305
Aruba Aruba 44,224 292
Tanzania Tanzania 43,263 846
Mayotte Mayotte 42,027 187
Togo Togo 39,533 290
The Bahamas Bahamas 39,127 849
Guinea Guinea 38,582 468
Isle of Man Isle of Man 38,008 116
Lesotho Lesotho 36,138 709
Guernsey Guernsey 35,326 67
Faroe Islands Faroe Islands 34,658 28
Haiti Haiti 34,556 860
Mali Mali 33,171 743
Federated States of Micronesia Federated States of Micronesia 31,765 65
Cayman Islands Cayman Islands 31,472 37
Saint Lucia Saint Lucia 30,288 410
Benin Benin 28,036 163
Somalia Somalia 27,334 1,361
Solomon Islands Solomon Islands 25,954 199
United States Virgin Islands United States Virgin Islands 25,389 132
San Marino San Marino 25,292 126
Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo 25,234 389
East Timor Timor-Leste 23,460 138
Burkina Faso Burkina Faso 22,146 400
Liechtenstein Liechtenstein 21,605 89
Gibraltar Gibraltar 20,550 113
Grenada Grenada 19,693 238
Bermuda Bermuda 18,860 165
South Sudan South Sudan 18,847 147
Tajikistan Tajikistan 17,786 125
Monaco Monaco 17,181 67
Equatorial Guinea Equatorial Guinea 17,130 183
Samoa Samoa 17,057 31
Tonga Tonga 16,992 13
Marshall Islands Marshall Islands 16,297 17
Nicaragua Nicaragua 16,194 245
Dominica Dominica 16,047 74
Djibouti Djibouti 15,690 189
Central African Republic Central African Republic 15,443 113
Northern Mariana Islands Northern Mariana Islands 14,985 41
The Gambia Gambia 12,627 372
Collectivity of Saint Martin Collectivity of Saint Martin 12,324 46
Vanuatu Vanuatu 12,019 14
Greenland Greenland 11,971 21
Yemen Yemen 11,945 2,159
Caribbean Netherlands Caribbean Netherlands 11,922 41
Sint Maarten Sint Maarten 11,051 92
Eritrea Eritrea 10,189 103
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 9,674 124
Guinea-Bissau Guinea-Bissau 9,614 177
Niger Niger 9,528 315
Comoros Comoros 9,109 160
Antigua and Barbuda Antigua and Barbuda 9,106 146
American Samoa American Samoa 8,359 34
Liberia Liberia 8,090 294
Sierra Leone Sierra Leone 7,985 126
Chad Chad 7,702 194
British Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands 7,628 64
Cook Islands Cook Islands 7,375 2
Turks and Caicos Islands Turks and Caicos Islands 6,824 40
São Tomé and Príncipe Sao Tome and Principe 6,771 80
Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Kitts and Nevis 6,607 46
Palau Palau 6,372 10
Saint Barthélemy Saint Barthélemy 5,507 5
Nauru Nauru 5,393 1
Kiribati Kiribati 5,085 24
Anguilla Anguilla 3,904 12
Wallis and Futuna Wallis and Futuna 3,760 9
Macau Macau 3,514 121
Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Pierre and Miquelon 3,426 2
Tuvalu Tuvalu 2,943 1
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha 2,166 0
Falkland Islands Falkland Islands 1,923 0
Montserrat Montserrat 1,403 8
Niue Niue 1,092 0
Tokelau Tokelau 80 0
Vatican City Vatican City 26 0
Pitcairn Islands Pitcairn Islands 4 0
Turkmenistan Turkmenistan 0 0
North Korea North Korea 0 0
  1. ^ Countries which do not report data for a column are not included in that column's world total.
  2. ^ Data on member states of the European Union are individually listed, but are also summed here for convenience. They are not double-counted in world totals.
  3. ^ Does not include special administrative regions (Hong Kong and Macau) or Taiwan.

Areas affected

Of the first 41 confirmed cases, two-thirds were found to have a link with the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, which also sold live animals.[60][61][62][63] Of the first 41 confirmed 2019-nCoV cases, the earliest reported symptoms occurred 1 December 2019, in a person who did not have any exposure to the market or to the remaining 40 affected people.[64] As the number of cases have increased, the significance of the market lessened.[64][60] In an article published in The Lancet on 29 January 2020, it was reported that, of the first 99 people confirmed with 2019-nCoV in Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital between 1 January and 20 January 2020, 49 had a history of exposure to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, of which most worked at the market. Most of these 99 were men, none were healthcare workers and 11 died.[65]

On 20 January, China reported a sharp rise in cases with nearly 140 new patients, including two people in Beijing and one in Shenzhen.[66] On 25 January, the number of laboratory-confirmed cases stood at 2,062, including 2,016 in Mainland China, seven in Thailand, six in Hong Kong, five in Macau, five in Australia, four in Malaysia, four in Singapore, three in France, three in Japan, three in South Korea, three in Taiwan, three in the United States, two in Vietnam, one in Nepal, and one in Sweden.[67][68][69] The virus spread to other Chinese provinces in early and mid-January 2020, helped by the Chinese new year migration. Cases started to be detected in other countries, carried by international travellers, typically to major trade partners: Thailand (13 January); Japan (15 January); South Korea (20 January); Taiwan and the United States (21 January); Hong Kong and Macau (22 January); Singapore (23 January); France, Nepal and Vietnam (24 January); Australia and Malaysia (25 January); Canada (26 January); Cambodia (27 January); Germany (28 January); Finland, Sri Lanka and the United Arab Emirates (29 January); India, Italy and Philippines (30 January); the United Kingdom, Russia, Sweden and Spain (31 January); Belgium (4 February).[70][67] As of 5 February, 24,584 cases have been confirmed worldwide, 99% in China proper.[70]

While spread between people has been confirmed,[71][72] no active centres of propagation have been confirmed outside China as of 30 January. On 30 January, citing 7,711 cases essentially in China and 83 cases abroad across 18 countries on 29 January, the World Health Organization declared the novel coronavirus outbreak to be a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.[73]

Deaths

493 deaths have been attributed to the virus, with the first death outside of China occurring in the Philippines.[74][70] In the Philippines, a 44-year-old Chinese male citizen with coronavirus, developed severe pneumonia and died on 1 February.[22]

Estimates

On 17 January, a research group from the Imperial College London in the United Kingdom published a report that there had been 1,723 cases (95% confidence interval, 427–4,471) with onset of symptoms by 12 January. This was based on the pattern of the initial spread to Thailand and Japan. They also concluded that "self-sustaining human-to-human transmission should not be ruled out",[75][76] which has since been confirmed. As further cases came to light, they later recalculated that there may be 4,000 symptomatic cases of 2019-nCoV in Wuhan City by 18 January (uncertainty range of 1,000 to 9,700).[77][17][78] A Hong Kong University group has reached a similar conclusion as the earlier study, with additional detail on transport within China.[18]

Based on cases reported and assuming a 10-day delay between infection and detection, researchers at Northeastern University estimated that the number of actual infections may be much higher than those confirmed at the time of reporting. Northeastern University estimated 21,300 infections by 26 January, increasing to 31,200 infections by 29 January (with a confidence of 95% within the interval 23,400–40,400]).[79] On 31 January 2020, an article in The Lancet estimated that 75,815 individuals have been infected in Wuhan as of 25 January.[80]

There are concerns about whether adequate medical personnel and equipment are available in regions affected by the outbreak for hospitals to correctly identify coronavirus cases instead of misdiagnosing suspected cases as "severe pneumonia".[81][82][83] Many of those experiencing symptoms were told to self-quarantine at home instead of going to a hospital to avoid close contact with other patients with different levels of symptoms.[84] After 2 repatriation flights were conducted from Wuhan to Japan in late January, 5 out of approximately 400 persons repatriated were diagnosed with the virus, of whom 1 was symptomatic and 4 were not.[85]

Signs and symptoms

Symptoms of 2019-nCoV (2019 novel coronavirus). There are reports that it may spread even without symptoms.[86]

Those infected may be asymptomatic or have mild to severe symptoms, like fever, cough, shortness of breath, and diarrhoea.[14][87][88] The time from exposure to onset of symptoms is estimated at 2 to 10 days by the World Health Organization,[89] and 2 to 14 days by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).[12] Upper respiratory symptoms such as sneezing, a runny nose or sore throat are less frequent.[60][61]

Cases of severe infection can result in pneumonia, kidney failure, and death.[90][91] Among the first 41 confirmed cases admitted to hospitals in Wuhan, 13 (32%) individuals required intensive care, and 6 (15%) individuals died.[60] Many of those who died had other conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, or cardiovascular disease that impaired their immune systems.[92] As of 5 February 2020, the number of severe cases is 3,223 (13%)[93] out of 24,567 with 990 having recovered.[4]

Cause

Semi-log plot of cumulative incidence of confirmed cases and deaths in China.[94]
Semi-log plot of daily new confirmed cases and deaths in China.[95]

Spread

Coronaviruses are spread through air droplets expelled when an infected individual coughs or sneezes within a range of about 6 feet (1.8 m), which can contaminate surfaces like door handles or railings.[96][97][98][99] Viral RNA was also detected in stool specimens collected from the first confirmed case though it was unclear if infectious virus was present to suggest fecal-oral transmission.[100] Of the initial 41 cases, two-thirds had a history of exposure to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.[60]

There have been various estimates for the basic reproduction number (the average number of people an infected person is likely to infect), ranging from 2.13[101] to 3.11.[102] The new coronavirus has been reportedly able to transmit down a chain of up to four people so far.[103] This is similar to severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (SARS-CoV).[104] There are disputed reports that some of the infected may be super-spreaders.[105][106]

Virology

The natural wildlife reservoir of the 2019‐nCoV and intermediate host that transmitted the 2019-nCoV to humans has not been confirmed.[107] However, it is likely that the primary reservoir for the virus is bats.[51] Research suggests that the 2019 novel coronavirus has possible bat origins, as 2019-nCoV is 96% identical at the whole genome level to a bat coronavirus identified in 2013.[108] Earlier reports that snakes might have been the natural reservoir for the virus[109][110][111] have been widely disputed. Some argued that the reservoir must be bats and the intermediate host, bird or mammal, not snakes (as snakes, unlike humans, are poikilotherms),[112][112][113] while others used data on recombination and SARS/MERS codon usage bias to refute the reasoning. The recombination event mentioned probably happened in bats.[114]

Phylogenetic studies of 2019-nCoV examine the evolutionary history of the virus and its relationships with other organisms. The seventh member of the family of coronaviruses that can infect humans, 2019-nCoV has been reported to have a genome sequence 75% to 80% identical to the SARS-CoV and to have more similarities to several bat coronaviruses.[50][51] At least five genomes of the novel coronavirus have been isolated and reported.[115][116][117] Like Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (SARS-CoV), it is a member of Beta-CoV lineage B.[118]

Genomic analysis by Benvenuto et al. shows that the Nucleocapsid and the Spike Glycoprotein have some sites under positive selective pressure.[how?] Homology modelling indicated certain molecular and structural differences among the viruses. The phylogenetic tree showed that 2019-nCoV significantly clustered with a Bat SARS-like Coronavirus sequence, whereas structural analysis revealed mutations in Spike Glycoprotein and nucleocapsid protein. The authors concluded 2019-nCoV is a coronavirus distinct from SARS virus that probably was transmitted from bats or another host that provided the ability to infect humans.[119]

Diagnosis

On 15 January 2020, the WHO published a protocol for testing 2019-nCoV.[120] Since then, several other testing protocols have been proposed, and published by the WHO.[121]

Testing uses real time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR).[122] The test can be done on respiratory or blood samples.[123] Results are generally available within a few hours to days.[124][125]

Chinese scientists were able to isolate a strain of the coronavirus and publish the genetic sequence so that laboratories across the world could independently develop PCR tests to detect infection by the virus.[126][46][127][128][129]

Prevention

A doctor in a protective bunny suit sees a patient in a Wuhan hospital.

Recommended measures to prevent infection depend on the likelihood of a person coming into contact with the disease. Basic recommendations include good personal hygiene and regular hand washing. Those who suspect themselves to be infected are asked to wear a surgical mask and call a doctor for medical advice.[130][131] The WHO recommends regular hand washing, covering the mouth and nose when coughing, and avoiding close contact with anyone who has a respiratory illness.[115]

A number of countries have issued advisories warning against travel to either Mainland China, the province of Hubei, or just Wuhan.[23] However, some people have been avoiding contact with Mainland Chinese people in places as far away as the United States.[132]

Reports that people are panic-buying sanitary products such as hand sanitizers and disinfectants relate to the public preferring to keep their hands and laundry "clean" with antiseptic products.[133][134]

The Government of Hong Kong warned anyone travelling outside the city to not touch animals; not eat game meat; and avoid visiting wet markets, live poultry markets or farms.[130]

Surgical masks

The use of a surgical mask by people showing symptoms helps to prevent the spread of the disease but is not sufficient for adequate protection.[135] Masks are also recommended for those taking care of someone who may have the disease.[135] There is no evidence on whether masks protect non-sick persons and wearing them may cause a false sense of security that leads to neglecting other measures.[135] Surgical masks are not recommended by the US CDC as a preventative measure by the general public.[136]

There, however, is widespread use of surgical masks by healthy people in Hong Kong,[137] Japan,[138] Singapore[139][140] and Malaysia.[141]

Quarantines

Place Province Start date End date City level Population Cases Deaths Recoveries Active
Wuhan Hubei 2020-01-23 2020-04-08[142][143][144] Sub-provincial 11,081,000 50,340 3,869 46,471 0
Xiaogan Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 4,920,000 3,518 129 3,389 0
Huanggang Hubei 2020-01-23 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 6,330,000 2,907 125 2,782 0
Jingzhou Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-17[146] Prefectural 5,590,200 1,580 52 1,528 0
Ezhou Hubei 2020-01-23 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 1,077,700 1,394 59 1,335 0
Suizhou Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 2,216,700 1,307 45 1,262 0
Xiangyang Hubei 2020-01-28[147] 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 5,669,000 1,175 40 1,135 0
Huangshi Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-13[148] Prefectural 2,470,700 1,015 39 976 0
Yichang Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 4,135,850 931 37 894 0
Jingmen Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 2,896,500 928 41 887 0
Xianning Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 2,543,300 836 15 821 0
Shiyan Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 3,406,000 672 8 664 0
Xiantao Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Sub-prefectural 1,140,500 575 22 553 0
Tianmen Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Sub-prefectural 1,272,300 496 15 481 0
Enshi Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-25[145] Prefectural 3,378,000 252 7 245 0
Qianjiang Hubei 2020-01-24 2020-03-13[149] Sub-prefectural 966,000 198 9 189 0
Shennongjia Hubei 2020-01-27 2020-03-25[145] Sub-prefectural 78,912 11 0 11 0
Wenzhou Zhejiang 2020-02-02 2020-02-20[150] Prefectural 9,190,000 507 1 503 3
Ürümqi Xinjiang 2020-07-18 2020-08-26[151] Prefectural 3,519,600 845 0 845 0
Shijiazhuang Hebei 2021-01-07 2021-01-31[152] Prefectural 11,031,200 977 1 962 14
Xi'an Shaanxi 2021-12-22[153] 2022-01-16[154] Sub-provincial 8,467,838 2,265 3 2,185 77
Yuzhou Henan 2022-01-04[155] 2022-01-31[156] County 1,167,000 - - - -
Anyang Henan 2022-01-10[157] 2022-02-03[158] Prefectural 5,477,614 522 0 522 0
Shenzhen Guangdong 2022-03-14[159][160] 2022-03-21[161][162] Sub-provincial 17,560,000 982 3 428 551
Shanghai Shanghai 2022-04-01[163] 2022-06-01[164] Direct-administered municipality 24,870,895
Lockdown total 101,602,895 68,135 4,512 63,623 0
Outbreak ongoing: Infection and fatality data as of 24:00 (UTC+8) 4 June 2020.[165][166] Totals will evolve.

On 23 January 2020, a quarantine on travel in and out of Wuhan was imposed in an effort to stop the spread of the virus out of Wuhan. Flights and trains in and out of Wuhan, public buses, the metro system and long-distances coaches were suspended until further notice. Large-scale gatherings and group tours were also suspended.[167] By 24 January 2020, a total of 15 cities in the Hubei, including Wuhan, were placed under similar quarantine measures.[168] On 27 and 28 January 2020, Xiangyang respectively closed its railway stations and suspended all ferry operations, after shutting down its airport and intercity bus services earlier. Thus, the entire Hubei province entered a city-by-city quarantine, save for the Shennongjia Forestry District.

Due to quarantine measures, Wuhan residents rushed to stockpile essential goods, food, and fuel; prices rose significantly.[169][170][171] Medical staff faced difficulties in commuting to their hospitals, as they were now limited to walking and private cars.[172] Taxis and private-hire vehicles shunned them upon learning of the destination.[172] 5,000,000 people left Wuhan, with 9,000,000 left in the city.[173]

Guan Yi, an epidemiologist and SARS virologist with teams consisting of medical specialists who just flew back to Hong Kong after their one-day inspection in Wuhan, told correspondents that "the Wuhan outbreak is at least 10 times larger than that of SARS", calling people to stay away from Wuhan as soon as possible.[174][175][176][177] Some posts on Weibo showed that as early as 12 January, hospitals in Wuhan were overwhelmed with patients suffering from fever, many of them having to sleep on the floor.[178] Some were also highly critical of the reliability of the figures from the Chinese government as well as the government response, with some calling for quarantine,[179] and a post also showed sick people and three dead bodies covered in white sheets on the floor of a hospital on 24 January, although many such posts in Weibo about the epidemic have been deleted.[180][181]

On 26 January, the city of Shantou in Guangdong declared a partial lockdown,[182] though this was reversed two hours later.[183] This created chaos, as residents rushed to supermarkets to stock food as soon as the lockdown was declared, until the authorities reversed their decision. Caixin said, that the wording of Shantou's initial declaration was "unprecedentedly strict" and will severely affect residents' lives, if implemented as-is. Shantou's Department for Outbreak Control later clarified, that they will not restrict travelling, and all they would do, is to sterilise vehicles used for transportation.[184]

Local authorities of the capital Beijing and several other major cities, including Hangzhou, Guangzhou, Shanghai and Shenzhen announced on 26 January, that these cities will not impose a lockdown similar to those in Hubei province. Rumours of these potential lockdowns had spread widely prior to the official announcements.[185] A spokesperson of Beijing's Municipal Transportation Commission claimed, that the expressways and highways, as well as subways and buses were operating normally. To ease the residents' panic, the Hangzhou city government stressed that the city would not be locked down from the outside world, and both cities said that they would introduce precautions against potential risks.[186]

On 2 February 2020, the city of Wenzhou in Zhejiang also implemented a partial lockdown, closing 46 of the 54 highway checkpoints.[187]

Evacuation of foreign citizens

Due to the effective lockdown of public transport in Wuhan and Hubei, several countries have planned to evacuate their citizens and/or diplomatic staff from the area, primarily through chartered flights of the home nation that have been provided clearance by Chinese authorities. Japan, India, the United States, France, Australia, Sri Lanka, Germany and Thailand were among the first to plan the evacuation of their citizens.[188][189][190][191][192][193][194] Pakistan has said that it will not be evacuating any citizens from China.[195]

Vaccine research

Several organisations around the world are developing vaccines or testing antiviral medicine. In China, the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CCDC) has started developing vaccines against the novel coronavirus and is testing existing drug effectiveness for pneumonia.[196][197] Also, Hong Kong researcher Yuen Kwok-yung and his team in the University of Hong Kong announced that a new vaccine is developed, but needs to be tested on animals before conducting clinical tests on humans.[198] The Russian consumer health watchdog Rospotrebnadzor started the development of a vaccine, relying on the WHO's recommendations.[199]

In Western countries, The United States' National Institutes of Health (NIH) is hoping for human trials of a vaccine by April 2020,[200][201] and the Cambridge, Massachusetts–based Moderna is developing a mRNA vaccine with funding from CEPI.[202][203] Inovio Pharmaceuticals received a grant from CEPI and designed a vaccine in two hours after receiving the gene sequence.[204] The vaccine is being manufactured so that it can be first tested on animals.[204] The Norwegian Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) is funding three vaccine projects[205] and hopes to have a vaccine in trials by June 2020 and approved and ready in a year. The University of Queensland in Australia has received AU$10.6 million in funding from CEPI to develop a "molecular clamp"[206] vaccine platform.[207][208]

Management

Infrared cameras were installed in Wuhan railway station to check passengers' body temperature before they board the trains.

As of 3 February 2020, there were no effective medications for or vaccines against 2019-nCoV, though development efforts were underway.[209][210] Attempts to relieve the symptoms include taking regular (over-the-counter) flu medications,[211] drinking fluids, and resting.[212] Oxygen therapy, intravenous fluids, and breathing support may be required.[213] Some countries require people to report flu-like symptoms to their doctor, especially if they have visited mainland China.[214]

Domestic responses

'Aerial photography of roads after motor vehicles are banned in central urban areas of Wuhan: few vehicle traces' – Video news from China News Service
Passengers wearing masks going through an extra body temperature check as part of airport security. Captured on 26 January in NE China's Changchun Longjia Airport
Hong Kong residents queueing to refund their bullet train tickets to the mainland in West Kowloon railway station

On 25 January, Politburo of the Communist Party of China met to discuss novel coronavirus prevention and control. Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping stated that the country is facing a "grave situation" as the number of infected people is accelerating.[215] In the evening, the authorities banned the use of private vehicles in Wuhan. Only vehicles that are transporting critical supplies or emergency response vehicles are allowed to move within the city.[216]

On 26 January, a leading group on the prevention and control of the novel coronavirus outbreak was established, led by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang. Premier Li visited Wuhan to direct the epidemic prevention work on 27 January.[217][218] The leading group has decided to extend Spring Festival holiday to contain coronavirus outbreak.[citation needed]

China Customs started to require all passengers entering and exiting China to fill in an extra health declaration form starting 26 January. The health declaration form was mentioned in China's Frontier Health and Quarantine Law, granting the customs rights to require it if needed. The customs said it will "restart this system" as it was not a requirement before.[219][220][221]

Authorities across China announced school closures and delayed the spring semester. All schools ranging from kindergartens to universities in the whole of Hubei province will have their winter break prolonged and the exact date of the new semester will be announced later, according to a statement made on 24 January.[222] China's Ministry of Education also asked all schools to halt public assemblies and delay major exams. Some universities with open campuses also banned the public from visiting.[223] The education department in Hunan, which neighbours the centre of the outbreak Hubei province, stressed on the official newspaper Hunan Daily on 23 January, claiming it will strictly ban off-school tutors and restrict unapproved student gatherings, which are all common practices in China for students to get better grades.[224] Education departments in Shanghai and Shenzhen also imposed bans on off-school tutoring and ask schools to track and report students who have been to Wuhan or Hubei province during the winter break.[225][226] Several universities, including China's top-ranking Peking University and Tsinghua University, announced the spring semesters will be delayed on 26 January.[227] The semi-autonomous regions Hong Kong and Macau also announced adjustments on schooling schedules. Hong Kong's Chief Executive Carrie Lam declared an emergency at a press conference on 25 January, saying the government will close primary and secondary schools for two more weeks on top of the previously scheduled Lunar New Year holiday, pushing the date for school reopening to 17 February.[228][229] Macau closed several museums and libraries, and prolonged the Lunar New Year holiday break to 11 February for higher education institutions and 10 February for others.[230] The University of Macau said they would track the physical conditions of students who have been to Wuhan during the Lunar New Year break.[231]

On 27 January, the General Office of the State Council of China, one of the top governing bodies of the People's Republic, officially declared a nation-wide extension on the Lunar New Year holiday and the postponement of the coming spring semester. The Office extended the previously scheduled public holiday from 30 January to 2 February, while it said school openings for the spring semester will be announced in the future.[232]

After the Chinese Lunar New Year on 25 January, there would be another peak of people travelling back from their hometowns to workplaces as a part of Chunyun. Several provinces and cities started to encourage people to stay in their hometowns and not travel back. Eastern China's Suzhou also encouraged remote working via the Internet and further prolonged the spring festival break.[233]

The Civil Aviation Administration of China and the China State Railway Group, which regulates China's civil aviation and operates rail services, announced on 24 January that passengers could have full refunds for their plane and train tickets without any additional surcharges, regardless of whether their flight or train will go through Wuhan or not. Some hotel chains and online travel agencies also allowed more flexibility in cancellations and changes.[234][235] China's Ministry of Culture and Tourism ordered travel agencies and online tourism firms to suspend package tours and stop offering "flight+hotel" bundles.[236][233]

More provinces and cities outside the most contaminated Hubei started to restrict travel. Beijing suspended all Intercity bus services on 25 January,[237] with several others following suit. Shanghai, Tianjin, Shandong, Xi'an, and Sanya all announced suspension of intercity or inter-province bus services on 26 January.[233]

On 1 February 2020, Xinhua News reported that China's Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP) has "asked procuratorates nationwide to fully play their role to create a favourable judicial environment in the fight against the novel coronavirus outbreak." This includes severe punishments for those found guilty of dereliction of duty and the withholding of information for officials. Intensified charges were proscribed for commercial criminal activities such as "the pushing up of prices, profiteering and severely disturbing market order" along with the "production and sale of fake and shoddy protective equipment and medicines." Prosecuting actions against patients who deliberately spread the infection or refuse examination or compulsory isolation along with threats of violence against medical personnel were also urged. The statement also included urging to prosecute those found "fabricating coronavirus-related information that may lead to panic among the public, making up and spreading rumors about the virus, sabotaging the implementation of the law and endangering public security" and also stressed harsh punishment for the illegal hunting of wildlife under state protection, as well as improving inspection and quarantine measures for fresh food and meat products."[238]

Museums across the country are temporarily closed.[239][240] In order to provide service cultural and heritage seekers some form of service, the Chinese Nation Cultural Heritage Administration (NCHA) has asked museums around the country during a special meeting, to move their exhibits and galleries temporarily online.[241] This is done via a specific program that the NCHA is launching.[239][242] Some museums are also putting the content on their own website, social media, or even social chat apps and rooms like WeChat.[243] The majority of the content will be available on a NCHA website web page, however it is only accessible to those inside China and not outside.[239][242] However, there are a few excerpts form the main created exhibition website that are on the NCHA general information page that are linked too, that is accessible outside of China.[239]

Censorship and police responses

Although the first known infection of a new virus was reported in Wuhan on 1 December 2019, the early response of the city authorities was to limit information on the outbreak, telling the residents of Wuhan that only those who came into contact with infected animals could catch the virus with no guidance given to doctors.[244] A group of eight medical personnel who posted warnings later that month being warned by Wuhan police for allegations of "spreading rumours." By the time China had informed the World Health Organization of the new coronavirus on 31 December 2019, the New York Times reported that the government was still keeping "its own citizens in the dark".[245][246] While by a number of measures, China's initial handling of 2019-nCoV crisis has improved compared to SARS in 2003, China has been criticized for cover-ups and downplaying the initial discovery and severity of the outbreak. This has been attributed[by whom?] to the censorship modus operandi of the country's press and internet, with some[who?] noting that it was exacerbated by Xi Jinping's crackdown on "independent oversight" that left senior officials with inaccurate information on the outbreak.[247][248] Hu Xijin, editor of Global Times, accused the Wuhan government on their willingness to announce a confirmation of the human-to-human transmission factor of the virus if Zhong Nanshan, a leading national expert on respiratory diseases, had not already revealed it on 20 January.[249]

On 20 January, Xi Jinping made his first public remark on the outbreak and spoke of "the need for the timely release of information".[215][250] Chinese premier Li Keqiang also urged efforts to prevent and control the epidemic.[251] One day later, the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission, the most powerful political organ in China overseeing legal enforcement and the police, wrote "self-deception will only make the epidemic worse and turn a natural disaster that was controllable into a man-made disaster at great cost," and "only openness can minimise panic to the greatest extent." The commission then added, "anyone who deliberately delays and hides the reporting of cases out of self-interest will be nailed on a pillar of shame for eternity."[252][253]

Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at SOAS University of London, observed "the minute Xi Jinping said something, things were put into overdrive. That's what people in China will be seeing and a lot will be made out of that.[247][254][255][256] As part of the central government's "bifurcated approach to diffuse discontent", citizens were permitted to criticize local officials so long as they did not "question the basic legitimacy of the party", while the propaganda machinery was going into "overdrive...to protect [Xi Jinping's] reputation".[257]

News articles and social media posts deemed to hold negative tones about the coronavirus and the governmental response were censored, such as those mocking Xi Jinping for not visiting areas of the epidemic[258], an article that predicted negative effects of the epidemic on the economy, and calls to remove local government officials.[247][259][260] Such incident led to allegations that even private news outlets were required to use "planned and controlled publicity" from the authorities' consent,[261] alongside state media which has been alleged by some to be focussing on exclusively pro-government coverage.[262] Reports have described how police have detained people for online posts critical of authorities' response to the epidemic, with an case on 25 January in Tianjin where a man was detained for 10 days for "maliciously publishing aggressive, insulting speech against medical personnel."[263]

Human Rights Watch, an international advocacy group, noted "considerable misinformation on Chinese social media", and that "authorities have legitimate reasons to counter false information that can cause public panic," but has also noted censorship by the authorities including social media posted by families of infected people who were potentially seeking help as well as by people living in cordoned cities allegedly only documenting their daily lives amidst the lockdown.[264]

On 30 January, China's Supreme Court, which rarely criticised the country's police forces, said the "unreasonably harsh crackdown on online rumours" as undermining public trust. Supreme court judge Tang Xinghua said that if police had been lenient against rumours and allowed the public to have taken heed of them, an earlier adoption of "measures like wearing masks, strictly disinfecting and avoiding wildlife markets" might have been beneficial against the epidemic.[265]

International responses

Countries/regions with imposed travel restrictions in response to the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak as of 2 February 2020. These include entry bans on Chinese citizens or recent visitors to China, halted issuing of visas to Chinese citizens or reimposed visa requirements on Chinese citizens and also countries that have responded with border closures with China.

Since 31 December 2019, some regions and countries near China tightened their screening of selected travellers.[128] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the United States later issued a Level 1 travel watch.[47][266] Guidances and risk assessments were shortly posted by others including the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control and Public Health England.[267] In China, airports, railway stations and coach stations installed infrared thermometers. People with fevers are subsequently taken to medical institutions after being registered and given masks.[268] Real time Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (rRT-PCR) test was used to confirm new cases of coronavirus infection.[269]

An analysis of air travel patterns was used to map out and predict patterns of spread and was published in the Journal of Travel Medicine in mid-January 2020. Based on information from the International Air Transport Association (2018), Bangkok, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Taipei had the largest volume of travellers from Wuhan. Dubai, Sydney and Melbourne were also reported as popular destinations for people travelling from Wuhan. Using the validated tool, the Infectious Disease Vulnerability Index (IDVI), to assess the ability to manage a disease threat, Bali was reported as least able in preparedness, while cities in Australia were considered most able.[270][271]

As a result of the outbreak many countries including most the Schengen area, Armenia, Australia, Iraq, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Malaysia, Maldives, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and the United States have imposed temporary entry bans on Chinese citizens or recent visitors to China, or have ceased issuing visas and reimposed visa requirements on Chinese citizens.[272][273][274][275][276][277][278][279][280][281][282][excessive citations]

In the neighbourhood, countries and territories namely Hong Kong, Mongolia, Nepal, North Korea, Russia and Vietnam have also responded with border tightening/closures with the mainland China.[283] On 22 January 2020, North Korea closed its borders to international tourists to prevent the spread of the virus into the country. Chinese visitors make up the bulk of foreign tourists to North Korea.[284]

Also on 22 January, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) announced that it would be moving the matches in the third round of the 2020 AFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament from Wuhan to Nanjing, affecting the women's national team squads from Australia, China PR, Chinese Taipei and Thailand.[285] A few days later, the AFC announced that together with Football Federation Australia they would be moving the matches to Sydney.[286] The Asia-Pacific Olympic boxing qualifiers, which were originally set to be held in Wuhan from 3–14 February, were also cancelled and moved to Amman, Jordan to be held between 3–11 March.[287][288]

On 27 January 2020, the United States CDC issued updated travel guidance for China, recommending that travellers avoid all nonessential travel to all of the country. The CDC has directed U.S. Customs and Border Protection to check individuals for symptoms of the coronavirus.[289]

On 29 January 2020, British Airways cancelled all their flights to mainland China as a reaction to the spread of the virus.[290] Lufthansa followed hours later by also suspending all their flights.[291] Lion Air and Air Seoul also suspended all their flights.[292] The same day, The Czechia, stopped issuing Schengen visa to the Chinese citizens.[293]

On 30 January 2020 Belgium, Greece and Italy closed all Schengen Visa application centres in China.[294][295][296] The same day, Egyptair announced suspension of flights between Egypt and Hangzhou starting 1 February 2020 while those to Beijing and Guangzhou will be suspended starting 4 February 2020 until further notice.[297]

On 31 January 2020, Italy closed all passenger air traffic between Italy and China and Taiwan. The Italian Civil Aviation Authority NOTAM says that effective 31 January, all passenger flights from China, including the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau, and Taiwan are suspended until further notice, on request of the Italian health authorities. Aircraft that were flying to Italy when the NOTAM was published, were cleared to land.[296][298]

On 1 February 2020, after Belgium, Czechia, Greece and Italy, all other Schengen countries' visa application centres were closed, with the exception of France, suspending the issuing of visas to Chinese citizens.[272]

Qatar Airways took the decision to suspend flights to mainland China from 3 February until further notice, due to significant operational challenges caused by entry restrictions imposed by several countries.[299] Qatar Airways is the first carrier in the Middle East to do so. An ongoing review of operations will be conducted weekly with the intention to reinstate flights as soon as the restrictions are lifted.[299]

Though some of the airlines cancelled flights to Hong Kong as well, British Airways, Finnair and Lufthansa have not, and American Airlines continues operating a limited service to the area. Hong Kong's four airlines halved the flights to mainland China.[300] The following airlines have so far reduced or cancelled flights to and from China:[301][302][303][304][305][306][307][308]

On 31 January 2020, the United States declared the virus a public health emergency. Starting 2 February, all inbound passengers who have been to Hubei in the previous 14 days will be put under quarantine for up to 14 days. Any U.S. Citizen who has travelled to the rest of mainland China will be allowed to continue their travel home if they are asymptomatic, but will be monitored by local health departments.[309]

On 1 February 2020, Vietnam suspended all flights to and from China.[304]

On 2 February 2020, India issued a travel advisory that warned all people residing in India to not travel to China, suspended E-visas from China, and further stated anyone who has travelled to China starting 15 January (to an indefinite point in the future) could be quarantined.[310] New Zealand announced that it will deny entry to all travellers from China and that it will order its citizens to self-isolate for 14 days if they are returning from China.[311] Indonesia and Iraq followed by also banning all travellers that visited China within the past 14 days.[311]

On 3 February 2020, Indonesia announced it would ban passenger flights and also sea freights from and to China start on 5 February until further notice. In addition, live animal imports and other products followed by this decision. Minister of Trade Agus Suparmanto "We will obviously stop live animals imports from China and are still considering banning other products"[312][313][314] Turkey announced it would suspend all flights from China till the end of February and begin scanning passengers coming from South Asian countries at airports.[315][316]

International aid

The United States city of Pittsburgh announced plans to promptly send aid to Wuhan, with its mayor Bill Peduto stating that "Our office has reached out to the mayor of Wuhan, which is our sister city" and promising that "over the next two days we should be able to have a care package that has been put together." He speculated that the contents of such a package will be coordinated with the consultation of medical experts, but that it will likely consist of "face masks, rubber gloves and other material that could be hard to find in the future."[317] Additionally, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) announced plans to provide help, with UPMC spokesman Paul Wood stating that "UPMC has a significant presence in China and has been in contact with our partners there", also declaring that "we stand ready to assist them and others in China with their unmet humanitarian needs."[318]

The humanitarian aid organisation Direct Relief, in co-ordination with FedEx transportation and logistics support, sent 200,000 face masks along with other personal protective equipment, including gloves and gowns, by emergency airlift to arrive in Wuhan Union Hospital, who requested the supplies by 30 January.[319] The Gates Foundation stated on 26 January that it would donate US$5 million in aid to support the response in China that will be aimed at assisting "emergency funds and corresponding technical support to help front-line responders."[320]

Japan, in the process of co-ordinating a plane flight to Wuhan to pick up Japanese nationals in the city, has promised that the plane will first carry into Wuhan aid supplies that Japanese foreign minister Toshimitsu Motegi stated will consist of "masks and protective suits for Chinese people as well as for Japanese nationals".[321] On 26 January, the plane arrived in Wuhan, donating its supply of one million face masks to the city.[322] Also among the aid supplies were 20,000 protective suits for medical staff across Hubei donated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government.[323]

Support efforts have sprung across Japan to help aid residents in Wuhan. On 27 January, the city of Oita, a sister city to Wuhan for 40 years, sent 30,000 masks from its own disaster relief stockpile to its sister city through the Red Cross network with boxes labelled "Wuhan Jiayou!," meaning "Hang in there, Wuhan!" in Chinese. Its International Affairs Office division head, Soichiro Hayashi, said that "The people of Wuhan are like family" and expressed hopes that "people can return to their ordinary lives as quickly as possible." Peace Winds Japan has declared it will send a staff member to China to help distribute the face masks and other goods that the NGO will send to the country.[323]

On 31 January 2020, Malaysia said it would donate 18 million medical gloves to China as announced by the Minister of Primary Industries Teresa Kok.[324] The Philippine Red Cross also donated $1.4 million worth of Philippine-made face masks, which were shipped to Wuhan.[325]

On 1 February 2020, Turkey dispatched medical equipment[326] and Germany delivered various aids for China to fight the virus, including 10,000 protective suits.[327]

On 3 February 2020, Sriwijaya Air sent 15,000 face masks and protective suits to China.[328] BNI sent 25000 face masks to be distributed for Indonesian who lives in Hongkong.[329]

By 3 February 2020, many international (and Chinese) airports screened for fever with monitors and used other methods like having test kits ready and separate arrival of passengers from Wuhan. No methods were mentioned for many other international airports.[330]

Specialty hospitals

File:Wuhan Jinyintan Hospital (retouched).jpg
Jinyintan Hospital had initially been tasked with treating those with the coronavirus.
Construction site of Huoshenshan Hospital as it appeared on 24 January.

A speciality hospital named Huoshenshan Hospital has been constructed as a countermeasure against the outbreak and to better quarantine the patients. Wuhan City government had demanded that a state-owned enterprise construct such a hospital "at the fastest speed" comparable to that of the SARS outbreak in 2003.[331] On 24 January, Wuhan authorities specified its planning, saying they planned to have Huoshenshan Hospital built within six days of the announcement and it will be ready to use on 3 February. Upon opening, the speciality hospital has 1,000 beds[332] and takes up 30,000 square metres. The hospital is modelled after the Xiaotangshan Hospital [zh], which was fabricated for the SARS outbreak of 2003, itself built in only seven days.[333][334] State media reported that there were 7,000 workers and nearly 300 units of construction machinery on the site at peak.[335]

Authorities announced plans for a second speciality hospital on 25 January which will be named Leishenshan Hospital, with a capacity of 1,600 beds;[336] operations are scheduled to start by 6 February.[337][338] Some people voiced their concerns through social media services, saying the authorities' decision to build yet another hospital in such little time showed the severity of the outbreak could be a lot worse than expected.[339]

On 24 January 2020, the authority announced that they would convert an empty building in Huangzhou District, Huanggang to a 1,000-bed hospital named Dabie Mountain Regional Medical Centre. Works began the next day by 500 personnel and the building began accepting patients on 28 January 2020 at 10:30 pm.[340]

The British Government and National Health Service have set up a Coronavirus isolation facility at Arrowe Park Hospital in The Wirral for British people coming back on a special flight from Wuhan.[citation needed]

Reactions to prevention efforts

WHO response

The World Health Organization (WHO) has commended the efforts of Chinese authorities in managing and containing the epidemic with its Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus expressing "confidence in China's approach to controlling the epidemic" and calling for the public to "remain calm".[341]

The WHO noted the contrast between the 2003 epidemic, where Chinese authorities were accused of secrecy that impeded prevention and containment efforts, and the current crisis where the central government "has provided regular updates to avoid panic ahead of Lunar New Year holidays."[342] In reaction to the central authorities' decision to implement a transportation ban in Wuhan, WHO representative Gauden Galea remarked that while it was "certainly not a recommendation the WHO has made", it was also "a very important indication of the commitment to contain the epidemic in the place where it is most concentrated" and called it "unprecedented in public health history".[342] Unlike the recommendations of other agencies[213], Tedros states that "there is no reason for measures that unnecessarily interfere with international travel and trade" and that "WHO doesn't recommend limiting trade and movement".[343]

On 30 January 2020, following confirmation of human-to-human transmission outside of China and the increase in number of cases in other countries, the WHO declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), the sixth PHEIC since the measure was first invoked during the 2009 Swine flu pandemic. Tedros clarified that the PHEIC in this case was "not a vote of no confidence in China", but because of the risk of global spread, especially to low- and middle-income countries without robust health systems capable.[35][344]

International reactions

On 29 January, Russian President Vladimir Putin held a meeting on measures to counter the spread of coronavirus in Russia.[345]
On 30 January, US President Donald Trump received a briefing on the Coronavirus in China.

China's response to the virus, in comparison to the 2003 SARS outbreak, has been praised by some foreign leaders.[346] US President Donald Trump thanked Chinese President Xi Jinping "on behalf of the American People" on 24 January 2020 on Twitter, stating that "China has been working very hard to contain the Coronavirus. The United States greatly appreciates their efforts and transparency" and declaring that "It will all work out well."[347] Germany's health minister Jens Spahn, in an interview on Bloomberg TV, said with comparison to the Chinese response to SARS in 2003: "There's a big difference to SARS. We have a much more transparent China. The action of China is much more effective in the first days already." He also praised the international cooperation and communication in dealing with the virus.[348][349]

At a Sunday mass at St. Peter's Square in Vatican City on 26 January 2020, Pope Francis praised "the great commitment by the Chinese community that has already been put in place to combat the epidemic" and commenced a closing prayer for "the people who are sick because of the virus that has spread through China".[350]

Criticism of local response

Local officials in Wuhan and the province of Hubei have faced criticism, both domestically and internationally, for mishandling the initial outbreak.[351] Allegations included insufficient medical supplies, lack of transparency to the press and censorship of social media during the initial weeks of the outbreak.[352][353] On 1 January 2020, the Wuhan police interviewed eight residents for "spreading false information" (characterising the new infection as SARS-like).[354][181] One of them, a doctor named Li Wenliang who informed his former medical school classmates of the coronavirus in a WeChat group after treating a patient with symptoms of the illness, was warned by the police on 3 January for "making untrue comments" that had "severely disturbed the social order" and made to sign a statement of acknowledgment.[355][356][357] The Wuhan police later stated through a post on its official Weibo account that "eight people had been dealt with according to the law."[358][359] The police later clarified through Weibo that they had only given out "education and criticism" and refrained from harsher punishments such as "warnings, fines, or detention."[247]

Criticism was directed at Hubei Governor Wang Xiaodong after he twice claimed at a press conference that 10.8 billion face masks were produced each year in the province, rather than the accurate number of 1.8 billion.[360]

Wuhan Police detained several Hong Kong media correspondents for over an hour when they were conducting interviews at Wuhan's Jinyintan Hospital on 14 January. Reports said the police brought the correspondents to a police station, where the police checked their travel documents and belongings, then asked them to delete video footage taken in the hospital before releasing them.[361][362]

Authorities in Wuhan and Hubei provinces have been criticised for downplaying the severity of the outbreak and responding slower than they could have. The Beijing-based media journal, Caixin noted that Hubei did not roll out the first level of "public health emergency response mechanism" until 24 January, while several other provinces and cities outside of the centre of the outbreak have already done so the day before.[363]

On 19 January, four days before the city's lockdown, a "Wan jia yan" (Chinese: 万家宴; lit. 'ten-thousand family banquet') was held in Wuhan, with over 40,000 families turning out at the banquet tables which attracted retrospective criticism. The domestic The Beijing News argued that the local authorities should not have held such a public assembly while attempting to control the outbreak. The paper also argued that the time when their journalists visited the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market where the coronavirus likely originated, most residents and merchants there weren't even donning face masks.[364] Zhou Xianwang, the Mayor of Wuhan, later spoke to China Central Television defending that this banquet was held annually, and it is a "sample of the people's self-autonomy." He asserted that the decision of allowing such a banquet was made based on the fact that the scientists used to falsely believe that the ability of the virus to spread human-to-human was limited.[365][366] Meanwhile, on 20 January, Wuhan's municipal department for culture and tourism was giving out 200,000 tickets for visiting all tourist attractions in Wuhan to its citizens for free, which was then criticised for disregarding the outbreak.[364]

Notable in relation to the widespread criticism of the local response, the central government's response has been contrasted with praise for their handling of the crisis by international experts,[367] but also especially by state media.[368] This has led to suggestions, in particular by "sections of the international media", as an attempt by the official press to shift public anger away from the central government and towards local authorities.[369] It has been noted historically that the tendency of provincial governments to minimise reporting local incidents have been because of the central governments directing the large proportion of the blame onto them.[370] Critics, such as Wu Qiang, a former professor at Tsinghua University and Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the University of London, have further argued this with the latter suggesting that it was also exacerbated through local officials being "apprehensive about taking sensible preventive measures without knowing what Xi and other top leaders wanted as they feared that any missteps would have serious political consequences," a sentiment that Tsang argued was difficult to avoid when "power is concentrated in the hands of one top leader who is punitive to those who make mistakes"[371][372][369] Mayor of Wuhan, Zhou Xianwang, in particular, as response to those criticisms defended himself, referring to those suggestions by publicly blaming regulatory requirements where local governments must first seek Beijing's approval which delayed disclosure of the epidemic, stating in an interview that "as a local government, we may disclose information only after we are given permission to do so. That is something that many people do not understand."[373][374]

Tang Zhihong, the chief of the health department in Huanggang, the city with the second most cases in Hubei after Wuhan, was fired hours after she was unable to answer questions on how many people in her city were being treated. During an interview on state television, she responded to a central government inspection team who queried how many sick people may be in the city's care: "I don't know, I'm unclear, I only know how many beds there are. Don't ask me how many people are being treated."[375]

Disinformation

After the initial break-out, rumours spread online regarding the origin and scale of the coronavirus outbreak.[376] Examples included that the virus was a bio-weapon, a population control scheme, or the result of a spy operation.[377][378][379] Facebook, Twitter and Google have announced that they will crack down on possible misinformation.[380][381]

On 2 February, the WHO declared that there was a "massive infodemic" accompanying the outbreak and response, citing an over-abundance of reported information, accurate and false, about the virus that "makes it hard for people to find trustworthy sources and reliable guidance when they need it." The WHO stated that the high demand for timely and trustworthy information has incentivised the creation of a direct WHO 24/7 myth-busting hotline where its "technical risk communication and social media teams have been working closely to track and respond to myths and rumors" and posting those refutations on its various social media accounts along with its website.[39]

Specific false claims include:

  • Bat eating. Some media, including Daily Mail and RT, spread misinformation by promoting a video showing a woman biting into a bat, falsely suggesting it was shot in Wuhan and that the cause of the outbreak was people eating bats there.[382][383] The widely circulated video features a Chinese travel vlogger eating bat soup in the island country Palau in 2016.[382][383][384][385] She said that she wanted to document the local Palauan cuisine.[384][385] She received abuse, including death threats, for the video.[384]
  • Biological weapon. The BBC published an article summarising the misinformation about the virus.[386] It cited two 24 January articles from the The Washington Times, which claimed the virus was part of China's biological weapons program.[376] On 29 January, The Washington Post published an article debunking the biological weapons theory.[387] ZeroHedge suggested that a team of scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology researched the novel coronavirus' potential as a biological agent, providing the scientists' contact information for others to "pay [the Chinese scientist] a visit." Upon BuzzFeed's request, Twitter permanently suspended the account of ZeroHedge due to violation of the platform's harassment policy.[388][389]
  • Nurse whistleblower. A video circulated on the Internet featuring an alleged whistleblower, a woman named Jin Hui, who claims to be a nurse in Hubei province and describes the desperate situation in Wuhan. The video attracted millions of views on various social media platforms but the BBC noted that unlike the English subtitles, the woman does not claim to be either a nurse or a doctor in the video and her uniform and mask does not match the type worn by medical staff in Hubei region. Her claim of 100,000 infected cases and contagious rate of one to 14 people is also noted to be incorrect.[376][379][390]
  • Population control. Some conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers and alternative news media have alleged that the coronavirus was stolen from a Canadian virus research lab by Chinese scientists, citing a news article by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) in July 2019.[388] CBC claimed their early report was distorted by misinformation, and the conspiracy theory had 'no factual basis'.[391][392][393] Supporters of the QAnon conspiracy theorists movement and the anti-vax community also claimed the outbreak was a population control scheme created by Pirbright Institute in England, by comedian Sam Hyde, and by former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates.[376][394][395]

Impact

The epidemic coincided with the Lunar New Year, which marks a major festival season for the region and the busiest travel period in China. A number of events involving large crowds were cancelled by national and regional governments, including the annual New Year festival in Hong Kong, with private companies also independently closing their shops and tourist attractions such as Hong Kong Disneyland.[396]

As Mainland China is a major economy and a manufacturing hub, the viral outbreak has been seen to pose a major destabilising threat to the global economy. Agathe Demarais of the Economist Intelligence Unit has forecast that markets will remain volatile until a clearer image emerges on potential outcomes. Some analysts have estimated that the economic fallout of the epidemic on global growth could surpass that of the SARS outbreak.[397]

Mainland China

The tourism in China has been hit hard by travel restrictions and fears of contagion, including a ban on both domestic and international tour groups.[398] Many airlines have either cancelled or greatly reduced flights to China and several travel advisories now warn against travel to China. Many countries, including France, the United Kingdom, United States and Japan, have evacuated their nationals from Wuhan and Hubei province.[399]

The majority of schools and universities have extended their annual holidays to mid-February.[400] Overseas students enrolled at Chinese universities have been returning home over fears of being infected—the first cases to be reported by Nepal and Kerala, a southern state of India, were both of students who had returned home.[401][401][402]

The Finance Ministry of China announced it would fully subsidise personal medical cost incurred by patients.[403]

Hong Kong

Hong Kong has seen high-profile protests that saw tourist arrivals from Mainland China plummet over an eight-month period. The viral epidemic put additional pressure on the travel sector to withstand a prolonged period of downturn.[citation needed] A drop in arrivals from third countries more resilient during the previous months has also been cited as a concern.[399] The city is already in recession[404] and Moody has lowered the city's credit rating, also stating that the government had failed to respond to "to the concerns that have contributed to the continuing protests" and that decreasing autonomy of its economic and political system from Mainland China was undermining its credentials.[405][406] The worst economic effects from the outbreak are expected for Australia, Hong Kong and China.[407]

There has also been a renewed increase in protest activity as hostile sentiment against Mainland Chinese strengthened over fears of viral transmission from Mainland China, with many calling for the border ports to be closed and for all Mainland Chinese travellers to be refused entry. Incidents have included a number of petrol bombs being thrown at police stations,[408] a homemade bomb exploding in a toilet,[409] and foreign objects being thrown onto transit rail tracks between Hong Kong and the Mainland Chinese border.[410] Political issues raised have included concerns that Mainland Chinese may prefer to travel to Hong Kong to seek free medical help (which has since been addressed by the Hong Kong government).[411][412]

Since the outbreak of the virus, a significant number of products have been sold out across the city, including face masks and disinfectant products (such as alcohol and bleach).[413] An ongoing period of panic buying has also caused many stores to be cleared of non-medical products such as bottled water, vegetables and rice.[414] The Government of Hong Kong had its imports of face masks cancelled as global face masks stockpiles decline.[415]

In view of the coronavirus outbreak, the Education Bureau closed all kindergartens, primary schools, secondary schools and special schools until 17 February.[416] This was later extended to 1 March due to further development of the epidemic.[417] The disruption has raised concerns over the situation of students who are due to take examinations at the end of the year, especially in light of the protest-related disruption that happened in 2019.[418]

Macau

All casinos in Macau have been ordered to be termporarily shutdown for 15 days.[419][420]

Japan

Shelves in a pharmacy in Japan sold out of masks on 3 February 2020

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said that "the new coronavirus is having a major impact on tourism, the economy and our society as a whole".[421][422] There have been reports that face masks have been selling out across the nation and that there has been pressure placed on the healthcare system as demands for medical checkups increase.[423] Shops have said that their stocks of face masks are depleted within a day of new arrivals.[424]Chinese, or people assumed to be Chinese, have reported discrimination in Japan as Japanese people fear possible viral contagion.[425] The health minister has pointed out that the situation has not reached a point where mass gathering must be called off.[426]

The epidemic is expected to have a negative impact on the economy of Japan. Mitsubishi, UFJ, Morgan Stanley predicted that the economic fallout of the epidemic would be worse than that of SARS since tourism plays a larger part in the current Japanese economy.[427] Economic politician Yasutoshi Nishimura also warned that the viral epidemic could have a strong impact on the Japanese economy due to disruption of logistics and factory operations.[428] Japanese airlines have started suspending flights to China[429] and JTB, the country's largest travel agency, has cancelled all tours to China.[430] Manufacturers, including Toyota, have halted all their production lines in Mainland China[431] and Honda has evacuated all its staff from Wuhan.[432] Prime Minister Abe has considered using emergency funds to mitigate the outbreak's impact on tourism, of which Chinese nationals account for 40%.[433] S&P Global noted that the worst hit shares were from companies spanning travel, cosmetics and retail sectors which are most exposed to Chinese tourism.[434] It is noted that increased sales of face masks and protective gear are unlikely to compensate for the economic downturn.[435]

2020 Summer Olympics

The outbreak itself has been a concern for the 2020 Summer Olympics which is scheduled to take place in Tokyo, and due to the Olympics the country's government has been taking extra precautions to help minimise the outbreak's worst impact.[436][437] The Tokyo organising committee and the International Olympic Committee have been monitoring the outbreak's impact in Japan.[436]

Australia

Australia is expected to be one of three economies worst affected by the epidemic, along with Mainland China and Hong Kong[407]. It will cost the Australian economy billions of dollars.[438] Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said that the country would be impacted by the events unfolding in Mainland China and that he would no longer be able to promise a budget surplus.[439] Bloomberg opined it was clear that the country, a major exporter of coal to China, would certainly "take a hit".[440] The economic cost of the coronavirus in Australia "almost wholly depends on the indirect effects of the decisions that many millions of individuals make to minimise their chance of catching the virus, and the decision of governments on how to react to the threat" according to a quotation in ABC News.[441] PricewaterhouseCoopers estimated in late January that 20,000 jobs would be lost.[442]

An estimate on the total cost to the Australian economy placed it as being "far higher" than $1 billion, a figure calculated from the cost to the tourism sector of a two-month travel ban.[438] Shares in companies in the tourism, consumer and mining stocks "tumbled" over fears surrounding the outbreak[443] and it is thought to have contributed to a fall in the value of the Australian dollar.[444] In early February, the Australian dollar dropped to its lowest value in over eleven years, at 66.9 US cents to the dollar.[445] ANZ predicted that the GDP would reduce by 0.2%.[446] The Australian Stock Exchange was described as having a "dire day" over fears of negative economic growth in Australia as a result of the coronavirus outbreak.[447] The fishing industry is expected to be "devastated" by the coronavirus outbreak with staff lay offs and business closures,[448] with a fisherman's cooperative pricing lobster at $0 per kilogram.[449]

China is the primary market for the Australian mining industry. Shares in BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue Metals Group "tumbled" in the aftermath of the outbreak, wiping billions of the companies' market values. China is responsible for around one-third of all exports from Australia including 80% of iron ore exports and 70% of global seaborne supply of steel.[450] The iron ore shipping gauge dropped 99.9%.[451] The virus has also made shipping and logistic operations of mining companies more complicated.[452] A coal ship was detained off the coast of Gladestone over transmission fears.[453] The effect of the coronavirus on coal markets was expected to be complex, though coal prices were down and demand for coal from China was thought to be unlikely to sharply rebound.[454]

The education market, worth $35.2 billion to the economy of Australia, is also expected to suffer from the coronavirus outbreak.[455] A government estimate at the start of February estimated a US$5 billion loss to the sector.[456] The taxpayer is likely to be required to cover the shortfall in education budgets.[457] An estimated 100,000 students were not able to enroll at the start of the semester.[458] Nearly two-thirds of Chinese students were forced to quarantine themselves overseas due to visa restrictions on travelers from Mainland China.[459] A spokesperson said that a large number of their students and staff were unable to make it back for the start of semester. But despite the various problems faced by the universities, the industry body for universities, Universities Australia, said that universities will adhere to health and immigration authorities' advice.[460]

Asian Champions League matches and Olympic soccer matches that were expected to be held in Australia are being rescheduled.[461] A Chinese football team has been quarantined to a hotel in Brisbane.[462]

Southeast Asia

Among Association of Southeast Asian Nations countries, the city-state of Singapore was forecast to be one of the worst hit countries by Maybank.[463] Economists have advised that the viral outbreak would have an impact on the economy of the country, but that it was too soon to provide a certain answer. The tourism sector was considered to be an "immediate concern" along with the effects on production lines due to disruption to factories and logistics in mainland China.[464] Singaporeans have been stocking up on face masks, thermometers and sanitation products despite being advised against doing so by the government.[465][466]

Maybank economists rated Thailand as being most at risk, with the threat of the viral outbreak's impact on tourism causing the Baht to fall to a seven-month low.[467]

In Malaysia, economists predicted that the outbreak would affect the country's GDP, trade and investment flows, commodity prices and tourist arrivals.[468]

In Indonesia, 10,000 Chinese tourists cancelled trips to Bali over coronavirus fears.[469]

South Asia

India is highly dependent on trade across the Himalayas. The disruption in mainland China could adversely impact the economy of India, especially the electronics and pharmaceutical industries, with the closure of Chinese ports having a knock-on effect on Indian industry more widely.[470][471]Sri Lanka has warned of a short term impact on the tourism sector.[472]

United States

The viral outbreak was cited by many companies in their briefings to shareholders, but several maintained confidence that they would not be too adversely affected by short-term disruption due to "limited" exposure to the Chinese consumer market. Those with manufacturing lines in mainland China warned about possible exposure to supply shortages.[473]

Silicon Valley representatives expressed worries about serious disruption to production lines, as much of the technology sector relies on factories in Mainland China. Since there had been a scheduled holiday over Lunar New Year, the full effects of the outbreak on the tech sector were considered to be unknown as of 31 January 2020 according to The Wall Street Journal.[474]

Cities that have a high population of Chinese individuals have seen a lot of them purchasing face masks for the virus.[475] Many of them are purchasing it not just for their own use, but to mail it to their relatives back in China, Hong Kong, and Macau, where there is a shortage of the masks.[476]

Due to the large amount of masks being purchased in the United States, many stores already have a backorder in masks and now the mask shortage has reached the United States.[476] This mask shortage has caused an increase on the price of the mask in the United States.[477]

Research

On 5 February 2020, China started patenting a medication that they think could cure the disease.[478][479][480] The medication was created by Gilead Sciences.[479][481] The drug was made after it was discovered that remdesivir and chloroquine, which is used in malaria treatment, may have an effect.[478] China is planning to start clinical trials.[482] Remdesivir was given to the first US person to be confirmed to be infected by 2019-nCoV for "compassionate use" after he progressed to pneumonia.[100]

See also

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Further reading

Mainland China and Hong Kong

WHO

  • World Health Organization (2020). Surveillance case definitions for human infection with novel coronavirus (nCoV): interim guidance v1, January 2020 (Report). World Health Organization. hdl:10665/330376. WHO/2019-nCoV/Surveillance/v2020.1.
  • World Health Organization (2020). Laboratory testing of human suspected cases of novel coronavirus (nCoV) infection: interim guidance, 10 January 2020 (Report). World Health Organization. hdl:10665/330374. WHO/2019-nCoV/laboratory/2020.1.

Europe

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