The city of Yangzhou in East China’s Jiangsu Province, has put all communities in the main urban area under closed management, starting from midnight Tuesday, while continuing its strict control of access routes to and out of the area to prevent from further spread of the COVID-19 epidemic.
The city reported 40 newly confirmed cases on Monday, among which 19 cases are mild and 21 are ordinary, the local health authority said during a press conference on Tuesday. The latest outbreak in the city was related to the resurgence in Nanjing, another city in Jiangsu.
Since its first two cases were reported on Wednesday, there are a total of 94 confirmed cases and two asymptomatic infections in the latest outbreak in the city, as of Tuesday. Two of the confirmed cases are in severe conditions.
The city has one high-risk area and 29 medium-risk areas as of press time.
The second round of large-scale nucleic acid testing in the main urban area has basically finished. As of 12 pm on Monday, about 1.5 million people had been sampled.
The city has upgraded its management on people involved in key urban areas and high-risk locations since July 21, and those with yellow or red health codes.
In this round of the epidemic, the first confirmed case in Yangzhou was a 64-year-old woman surnamed Mao from Jiangning district in Nanjing, Jiangsu. She came to Yangzhou by bus from Jiangning on July 21 and lived with her sister, who was also infected.
The trace report showed that Mao and her sister had gone to three local mahjong parlors to play cards, which made the parlors the “eye of the storm” in this round of the epidemic.
According to epidemiological survey statistics, as of Sunday, 43 confirmed cases in Yangzhou had been to mahjong parlors.
Local authority has asked all people who went to chess rooms after July 21 to report to community staff or police for further investigation.
The trajectory of cases before Monday showed that the confirmed cases in Yangzhou were mainly elderly people, mainly those who were associated with the mahjong parlors.
Such places are enclosed spaces and have relatively poor air quality, which pose a great risk of infection. This can make the local prevention and control efforts more difficult.
Citizens in Yangzhou, East China’s Jiangsu Province are receiving nucleic acid testing on Sunday amid the latest epidemic outbreak with a total of 94 confirmed cases reported as of Tuesday. Photo: IC