China has reported a rise in new coronavirus infections as
doctors in the central city of Wuhan warned its behaviour was still not
well-understood.
Tough curbs imposed in China since January have reined in
infections sharply since the height of the pandemic in February, although it
has spread worldwide to infect 1.6 million people with 100,000 deaths.
But Chinese authorities fear the possibility of a second
wave triggered by arrivals from overseas or asymptomatic patients.
"We can't say that there is no such potential
risk," said Wang Xinghuan, president of Wuhan's Leishenshan hospital, its
second built especially for virus patients.
While some experts do not expect a big second wave, thanks
to China's stringent controls, the possibility could not be ignored, he told
reporters.
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"At present, from the hospital perspective, our
understanding of the virus is still very insufficient," Wang said, during
a hospital tour organised by Wuhan officials.
For instance, it was not immediately clear how infectious
asymptomatic people were, he added.
Doctors in China have seen some differences in virus
behaviour from that experienced in Europe and the United States, said Zhao Yan,
a doctor at Wuhan's Zhongnan Hospital.
"The most obvious one is that in Europe and the United
States quite a few people lost their sense of taste and smell, (but) we saw
very few such cases," Zhao told reporters.
The National Health Commission said 46 new cases were
reported on Friday, including 42 from abroad, up from 42 a day earlier, as
Hubei province, whose capital is Wuhan, reported no new cases for a seventh
successive day.
Of the new imported cases, 22 were in the northeastern
province of Heilongjiang, where Chinese nationals crossing over the border from
Russia figured in a recent spike in cases.
Provincial health officials said all the new imported cases
also involved such instances, though the province had one new local case in its
capital, Harbin.