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                      | Pharmacists  prepare traditional Chinese medicine at Affiliated Hospital of Gansu University  of Chinese Medicine in Lanzhou, northwest China’s Gansu Province, December 23,  2022. |  China enters new phase of COVID response
 BEIJING (Xinhua) -- From Sunday, China starts  managing COVID-19 with measures designed for combating Class B infectious  diseases, instead of Class A infectious diseases.
 In recent months, the country has  made an array of active adjustments in its COVID response, ranging from 20  measures in November, 10 new measures in December, changing the Chinese term  for COVID-19 from “novel coronavirus pneumonia” to “novel coronavirus  infection,” and downgrading COVID-19 management measures.
 Confronted with epidemic  uncertainties, China has always been putting people’s lives and health first,  adapting its COVID response in light of the evolving situation. These efforts  have bought precious time for a smooth transition in its COVID response.
 The year 2022 saw the rapid  spread of the highly-contagious Omicron variant.
 The fast-changing features of the virus and the  complicated evolution of epidemic response posed serious challenges for China’s  decision-makers, who have been closely following the epidemic situation and  putting the people’s lives and health first.
 Twenty adjusted measures were  announced as early as November 2022. They included the measure to adjust the  categories of COVID-19 risk areas from high, medium, and low, to only high and  low, in order to minimise the number of people under quarantine or requiring  health monitoring. The circuit breaker mechanism for inbound flights was also  canceled.
 The adjustment was made based on  a scientific evaluation of the Omicron variant which showed that the virus had  become less deadly, and the social cost of sustaining the prevailing epidemic  control which had rapidly increased.
 Meanwhile, task forces were  dispatched nationwide to supervise epidemic response and assess local  situations, and meetings were held to solicit suggestions from leading medical  experts and community epidemic control workers.
 On December 7, China released a  circular on further optimising its COVID-19 response, announcing 10 new  prevention and control measures to ease restrictions on visits to public venues  and travel, and to reduce the scope and frequency of mass nucleic acid testing.
 The annual Central Economic Work  Conference, held in Beijing in mid-December, demanded efforts to optimise  epidemic response based on the prevailing situation and with focus on the  elderly and those with underlying diseases.
 Under such guiding principles,  various sectors of the country, from hospitals to factories, have been  mobilised to support continuous adjustment of epidemic control.
 Considering factors including the  development of the epidemic, the increase in vaccination levels, and extensive  epidemic prevention experience, the country entered a new phase of COVID  response.
 Against such a backdrop, in late  December, the National Health Commission (NHC) made the announcement to downgrade the management  of COVID-19 and remove it from infectious disease management requiring quarantine as of January 8, 2023.
 “When an infectious disease  poses less harm to people’s health and leaves a lighter impact on the economy  and the society, it is a science-based decision to adjust the intensity of  prevention and control measures,” said Liang Wannian, head of the COVID-19 response expert panel  under the NHC.
 After fighting Omicron for nearly  a whole year, China has gained a profound understanding of this variant.
 The treatment and control  experience of the variant in multiple Chinese cities and foreign countries  revealed that the great majority of patients infected with the Omicron variant  had showed either no symptoms or mild symptoms -- with a very small proportion developing into  severe cases.
 Compared with the original  strain and other variants, the Omicron strains are becoming milder in terms of  pathogenicity, and the impact of the virus is changing into something more like  a seasonal infectious disease.
 The continued study of the  development of the virus has been an important precondition for China’s  optimisation of its control protocols, but it is not the only reason. To  safeguard people’s lives and health to the greatest extent, China has been  closely monitoring the threat of the virus, the immune level of the general  public and the capacity of the health care system, as well as the public health  intervention measures.
 Efforts have been made on all  fronts. By early November 2022, more than 90 percent of the population had been  fully vaccinated. Meanwhile, the country had facilitated the development of  drugs via various approaches, with many drugs and therapies introduced into the  diagnosis and treatment protocols.
 The unique strengths of  Traditional Chinese Medicine are also being leveraged to prevent severe cases.
 In addition, several other drugs  targeting COVID infection are being developed, covering all three technical  approaches, including blocking virus entry into cells, inhibiting virus  replication, and modulating the body’s immune system.
 The focus of China’s new phase  of COVID-19 response is on protecting people’s health and preventing severe  cases.
 The elderly, pregnant women,  children, and patients with chronic, underlying diseases are vulnerable groups  in the face of COVID-19.
 Efforts have been intensified to  facilitate the vaccination of the elderly against the virus. Services have been  improved. In some regions, the elderly can have medics visit their homes to  administer vaccine doses.
 Amid China’s efforts to improve  its preparedness, authorities have urged hospitals of various levels to ensure  that fever clinics are available to patients in need.
 As of December 25, 2022, there  were more than 16,000 fever clinics in hospitals at or above the level of grade  two across the country, and more than 41,000 fever clinics or consulting rooms  in community-based health institutions.
 In central Beijing’s Xicheng  District, a makeshift fever clinic was formally opened at the Guang’an  Gymnasium on December 14, 2022. Starting from December 22, 2022, many sidewalk  facilities, originally used as part of the nucleic acid testing process, were  converted into temporary fever consulting rooms in Xiaodian District of  northern China’s Taiyuan City. These fever rooms provide consultation services  and distribute fever reducers free of charge.
 From coordinating  medical resources to increasing the capacity of hospitals to receive severe cases,  hospitals across the country have  been operating in full swing and devoting more resources to the treatment of  severe cases.
 (Latest Update January 10, 2023)
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