Curbs On China Arrivals Due To Lack Of Adequate Covid Data: US

The US government, earlier, announced that it will require all visitors from China to present a negative Covid-19 test result before boarding a flight to the country.

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WHO has said that they will continue to closely monitor the situation in China. (Representational)
Washington:

The United States on Wednesday said that the restrictions imposed on flyers from China are because of the "lack of adequate and transparent" data from Beijing over the omicron subvariants that has the potential to spread beyond its borders.

While responding to a query on restrictions over travellers from China, States Department Spokesperson Ned Price said, "The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended this approach because of the spread of Covid within the People's Republic of China (PRC) and also because of the lack of adequate and transparent ethnological and viral genomic sequence data being reported from the PRC."

"It is the lack of transparency that has compounded our concern for the potential for a variant to emerge in the PRC and potentially to spread well beyond its border," he added.

The US government, earlier, announced that it will require all visitors from China to present a negative Covid-19 test result before boarding a flight to the country, CNN reported. Through a telehealth service, the testing can be either PCR tests or antigen self-tests.

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Price mentioned the meeting between China's officials and World Health Organization (WHO) that took place on December 3.

He recalled WHO's emergencies director's statement and said, "the statement from WHO's emergencies director that the current number being in public in China is 'under represent' to the true impact of disease in terms of hospital admissions, ICU admissions and particularly, in terms of deaths."

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Earlier, the WHO released a statement where it stated that the data submitted by China shows Omicron subvariants BA.5.2 and BF.7 are predominant that are account for 97.5 per cent of all local infections, according to the statement released by WHO.

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Looking at the data, WHO said that they will continue to closely monitor the situation in the People's Republic of China and globally and urges all countries to continue to be vigilant, to monitor and report sequences, as well as to conduct independent and comparative analyses of the different Omicron sublineages, including on the severity of disease they cause.

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In a statement, WHO said that the Technical Advisory Group on Virus Evolution (TAG-VE) held a meeting with the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday and said, "The China CDC analysis showed a predominance of Omicron lineages BA.5.2 and BF.7 among locally acquired infections. BA.5.2 and BF.7 together accounted for 97.5 per cent of all local infections per genomic sequencing."

Notably, China submitted the genomic data, which China's CDC described as imported as well as locally-acquired cases of SARS-CoV-2 infections.

The organization further said that a few other Omicron sublineages were also detected, albeit in low percentages in China; presently, no new variants of the coronavirus have been found.

According to the statement, "As of 3 January, 773 sequences from mainland China have been submitted to the GISAID EpiCoV database, with the majority (564 sequences) collected after 1 December 2022. Of those, only 95 are labelled as locally acquired cases, 187 as imported cases and 261 do not have this information provided. Of the locally acquired cases, 95% belong to BA.5.2 or BF.7 lineages. This is in line with genomes from travellers from China submitted to the GISAID EpiCoV database by other countries. No new variant or mutation of known significance is noted in the publicly available sequence data. "

At this time, the TAG-VE is also evaluating the rapidly increasing proportion of XBB.1.5 in the United States and other countries. Beyond the previous statement, an updated risk - assessment of XBB.1.5 is in progress.

"The TAG-VE reiterated the critical need for and importance of additional analysis as well as sharing of sequence data to understand the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 and the emergence of concerning mutations or variants. This should be done regardless of whether a sequence is assigned a Pango lineage or not. This is best accomplished by rapidly and regularly depositing data into publicly accessible databases," the statement reads.

"Maintaining high levels of representative genomic surveillance across China and globally, annotating genomic sequences with relevant clinical and epidemiological metadata, and rapid sharing of such data are the pillars of timely global risk assessment," WHO added.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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