| Beijing lowers COVID-19 restrictions China (China Daily) -- Beijing has  lowered the intensity of its response to the COVID-19 outbreak from the top  level to the second level based on the current situation, which will lead to  adjustments of prevention and control measures, a senior official said on  Wednesday.“Beijing has been taking strict  measures on both domestic and overseas travelers coming to the capital, as well  as community control to prevent infection risks, which has proved to be  effective,” Chen Bei, deputy secretary-general of the Beijing municipal  government, said at a news conference.
 
 
                    
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                      | A staffer from Beijing’s Chaoyang district checks  information with a passenger arriving at Beijing West Railway Station on April  8, 2020.        --Photo Xinhua |  In Beijing, the risk of outbreak  has been generally mitigated, she said.By the end of Tuesday, 15 of the  16 districts in Beijing had reported zero new local cases for more than 36  days. Chaoyang district, which was listed as the high-risk area for COVID-19  control, will have no new local cases for 14 days by Thursday, which means it  will no longer be considered a high-risk area. On April 14, Beijing reported a  cluster of infections involving four family members caused by a Chinese male  student who came home from Miami, Florida, in the United States.
 Chen also announced that people  who left Beijing for business trips and travelers who come to Beijing from  low-risk areas will not need to undergo a 14-day quarantine starting from  Thursday. People who need to check into hotels in Beijing no longer need to  provide nucleic acid testing results as long as they have a “green code”, which  is an indication that a person is free of COVID-19 symptoms according to a  health code app.According to Qunar, an online travel service provider, the  number of flight reservations from Beijing increased 15-fold within a half-hour  after the news was announced.
 Chen Qiulin, director of the  Institute of Population and Labor Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social  Sciences, was quoted by Beijing News as saying that lowering the response grade  will reduce people’s worries about going out, which will help to increase  consumption.
 As of Tuesday, 23 provinces and  municipalities have reported no new local cases for more than 28 successive  days. As many as 28 provinces and municipalities have lowered their emergency  grade, and no rebound of cases has occurred.
 China’s response for public  health emergencies has four grades, from 1 to 4, with the top being Grade 1.
 Neighboring Hebei province and  Tianjin municipality will also lower their emergency response to COVID-19 from  the top level to the second level starting on Thursday morning, according to  their governments, which means that by then, only Hubei province will still  maintain the Grade 1 response. Nine provinces and municipalities including  Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, Hebei and Guangdong are at Grade 2. Prevention and  control works will continue in the province to lower infection risks brought by  imported cases and to avert a rebound of local cases.
 As of Tuesday, Hebei had  reported 10 imported cases of COVID-19, six of which had been cured and  discharged from hospital, according to the Health Commission of Hebei. The  province had a total of 318 confirmed cases among local residents, with 312 of  the people surviving.
 (Latest Update May 1
 , 2020 |