China’s Chief Medical Consultant for the Wuhan Coronavirus Is Infected With the Disease

Olivia Li
By Olivia Li
January 23, 2020COVID-19
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China’s Chief Medical Consultant for the Wuhan Coronavirus Is Infected With the Disease
A Chinese woman wears a protective mask as she leaves a Beijing railway station in China on Jan. 23, 2020. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

A Chinese medical expert who assured the public that the “Wuhan pneumonia is controllable” has been diagnosed with the novel coronavirus after visiting Wuhan City as one of the chief medical consultants for this new viral pneumonia.

Wang Guangfa, Director of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine at Peking University First Hospital, confirmed with Chinese state media on Jan. 21 that he was diagnosed with the coronavirus, also known as Wuhan pneumonia.

Wang stayed in Wuhan for at least eight days as a member of the National Health Commission’s expert team, to investigate the SARS-related pneumonia caused by a newly identified coronavirus.

However, even China’s major newspapers have difficulty obtaining the exact dates of Wang’s stay in Wuhan. Some say the medical expert team was dispatched to Wuhan on Dec. 31, 2019, while other media outlets said the delegation had arrived before Dec. 31.

The discrepancy in these reports is worth noting, because the Chinese public has become increasingly outraged and is demanding that authorities disclose the exact dates of the first diagnosed case and when Wuhan medical personnel became aware of the dangers of this mysterious new disease. Many people have expressed their suspicion that the public has been kept in the dark since last November.

In addition, none of the Chinese state media revealed the exact date when Wang was diagnosed. The fact he was infected could be a strong evidence of human-to-human transmission, and the Chinese medical authorities were not forthcoming in confirming human-to-human transmission at all.

On Jan. 10, Wang announced on China Central TV that the Wuhan patients’ condition and the overall situation of the disease spreading were controllable, adding: “The majority of patients are classified as mild to moderate. As of now, there has not been a single case of medical personnel being infected by patients.”

Infection Through Conjunctiva

After Wang was found to be infected, he said he had visited patients twice during his stay in Wuhan.

Wang told Chinese state media that his first visit was at an ICU (intensive care unit) to check the status of a severely infected patient at Wuhan’s Jinyintan Hospital, a hospital dedicated to public health emergencies and contagious diseases under the direct jurisdiction of Wuhan Health Commission.

“Although I was close to the patient, I was completely protected, with a medical face mask (an acrylic shield covering the entire face). There was little chance that I would get infected from that patient,” Wang said.

On a different date, Wang visited several hospitals’ fever treatment clinics and temporary isolation wards for suspected pneumonia patients. This time, he was only wearing an N95 medical mask.

After his return to Beijing, the first illness symptom he noticed was conjunctivitis on the lower part of his left eye.

“A couple of hours later, I started to experience fever and catarrh symptoms,” Wang said.

The medical term “catarrh” refers to typical symptoms of upper respiratory viral infections, such as excess phlegm, mucus and coughing.

However, Wang had not heard of any cases among the Wuhan pneumonia patients whose first symptom was conjunctivitis. Therefore, he dismissed the possibility of being infected with the Wuhan coronavirus. He received treatment for influenza but it turned out ineffective. He then consulted his doctors to perform a virus gene sequencing test to find out if he had contracted Wuhan pneumonia.

In retrospect, Wang said the most likely route of him being infected was through his conjunctiva. “I didn’t wear protective eyewear. That was my vulnerable spot,” he said.

Netizens Question Wang’s Statement of ‘Controllable’

When Wang was confirmed to be another victim of the Wuhan coronavirus, Chinese social media users immediately notified their network friends to stay on high alert.

“Even an expert of contagious diseases, who knows how to protect himself, is infected. That tells us how contagious the new virus is!” was the typical message they sent out.

One social media user wrote a blog article that has since been widely shared, questioning Wang’s assurance that the disease is controllable:

“From the very beginning, we have been hearing the phrase, ‘preventable and controllable.’ I was wondering, have they identified the original source of the virus? How do we prevent it if we don’t even know where the virus came from? Now the virus has been identified as a coronavirus; then don’t even expect that we’ll have a vaccine or special treatment soon. In addition, Wuhan is a transportation hub that is capable of spreading the disease to the entire country. When there are not many screening measures in place at public transportation stations, what is the basis for the claim that it is controllable?”

“The very phrase, ‘preventable and controllable,’ has already wasted a lot of time to prevent and control the disease. It also occurred to me that the first P4 lab in China started operation in Wuhan, which is said to be the highest biosafety lab in the world. When the lab was launched in 2018, the publicity video produced by the government described it as ‘an important instrument of our great nation to provide protection for our citizens’ and ‘the Chinese people’s protective shield against viruses.’ What an irony!”

A P4 lab is a lab for the handling of biosafety level 4 (the highest level) diseases, which are diseases that have high fatality rates and no known treatments, such as ebola. Such a lab follows the highest microbiology safety standards and supports working with dangerous viruses and bacteria.

The P4 lab in Wuhan is not only the first of its kind in China, but also the first in Asia.

As of Jan. 23, the virus has spread to at least six other countries.

Officials locked down Wuhan, a city of roughly 11 million in central China, on Jan. 23. Public transportation was shuttered and airports were closed. Residents were told not to leave unless they had special circumstances.

In nearby Huanggang, with a population of 7.5 million, and Ezhou, which has around one million people, officials announced quarantines a few hours later, saying all public transportation, all theaters, internet bars, in-door entertainment sites, and resorts will be closed.

Meanwhile, In Beijing, all major events planned to celebrate the Chinese New Year were canceled.

From The Epoch Times

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