From the BBC:
“Covid China: Elderly deaths
contradict Shanghai figures”
(The Donghai Elderly Care
Hospital is one of the largest of its kind in Shanghai)
Dozens of elderly patients at a
hospital in Shanghai have died after contracting Covid-19, but official
government figures claim no deaths in the city have been caused by the disease
since 2020. The BBC has spoken to a hospital manager and had access to
correspondence sent to relatives of patients who've died during the Omicron
outbreak that is sweeping through China's biggest city. We've also had access
to official documents that suggest at least 27 patients from a single hospital,
who weren't vaccinated, have died from what it called "underlying health
problems".
Shanghai is enforcing a mammoth
lockdown as authorities try to contain a new wave of the virus. Most of the
city's almost 25 million population have been ordered to stay inside for three
weeks. The BBC has previously reported evidence that authorities in Shanghai
are struggling to deal with the outbreak. We spoke to a nurse and a health
worker at Donghai Elderly Care Hospital who, between them, described desperate
attempts to help dozens of elderly patients, some of whom have died. We've
contacted several other care homes or hospitals for the elderly since then,
after social media postings suggested there was evidence of widespread
infections among hundreds of patients in 12 other facilities here. One relative
of a patient at another care home in Shanghai has told us that doctors and
caregivers working there had informed her that everyone in the facility had
tested positive. It has capacity for around 300 patients.
In a phone conversation a manager
at Donghai Hospital told us: "Of course there would be deceased with
Covid. [In] Shanghai the situation is like this. How could there not be any
death[s] without Covid?" In a letter sent to relatives of patients who'd
died management at the hospital apologised and admitted a "lack of
professionalism". They also expressed their "deepest guilt". Official
figures say there have been no deaths during the current outbreak across the
city; none at all. China has a strict criteria for confirming Covid-19 cases,
which includes evidence in patients of lung damage caused by the virus. This
must be confirmed in a scan. Any underlying health conditions is also
considered before deaths are officially attributed to Covid.
One man whose 72-year-old sister
died at Donghai earlier this month told us that he had struggled to get a full
explanation from officials about the cause of death. He told us that she had
tested negative in the weeks before she died on 3 April. But he was not able to
get a record of her test results in the final days before she died. The man
said his sister was one of six patients in a room, five of whom died. He told
the BBC that "the outbreak [was] so bad in that care home". As far as
he could tell the official record said "she died with Covid
negative". He said he would not go ahead with her cremation until he knew
what the cause of death was.
Relatives of a 99-year-old woman
who died on 1 April have also raised concerns about the cause of death, given
that she tested positive in the final week of her life. In social media
postings seen by the BBC, with accompanying audio records, her granddaughter
said the woman had been transferred to Jinshan Public Health Clinical Centre in
Shanghai on 27 March, where she tested positive a day later. She was treated
for underlying health problems. Three days later she tested negative for Covid.
A day later she died. The woman described her death as due to "aggravation
of underlying disease due to Covid". The BBC tried multiple times to
contact authorities at Donghai and Jinshan regarding the various allegations,
but was not able to get a response.
China is facing its most serious
crisis since the virus first emerged here in early 2020, when the city of Wuhan
was locked down and sealed off. Despite efforts to limit the impact on the
economy in the country's financial capital the lockdown of Shanghai has
continued way beyond the initial nine day period planned for. Authorities have
used various terms to refer to the strict restrictions being imposed on people,
calling it "static management" and "closed management". State
media reported that President Xi Jinping said "prevention and control work
cannot be relaxed". The front page of the Communist Party mouthpiece
People's Daily said "persistence is victory".
^ China has long lied to its own
people and the rest of the world about Covid so this is no surprise. It seems
life means nothing to the Communist Government there. ^
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