niman Posted February 5, 2020 Report Posted February 5, 2020 3,219 of the severe cases - 490 deaths, and 892 cases were cured and discharged http://www.chinacdc.cn/jkzt/crb/zl/szkb_11803/jszl_11809/202002/t20200205_212241.html
niman Posted February 5, 2020 Author Report Posted February 5, 2020 Update on pneumonia of new coronavirus infections as of 24:00 on February 4 2020-02-05 At 04:00 on February 4th, 31 provinces (autonomous regions, municipalities) and the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps reported 3887 newly confirmed cases (3156 cases in Hubei Province), and 431 new severe cases (377 cases in Hubei Province). There were an increase of 65 death cases (65 cases in Hubei Province), 262 newly cured cases (125 cases in Hubei Province), and 3,971 suspected cases (1957 cases in Hubei Province). As of 24:00 on February 4, the National Health and Health Commission has received a total of 24,324 confirmed cases (one reduction in Hainan Province) of confirmed cases, and 3,219 of the severe cases, with cumulative deaths, in 31 provinces (autonomous regions, municipalities) and Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps. There were 490 cases, and 892 cases were cured and discharged (1 case each in Hainan Province and Hubei Province). There are 23260 suspected cases. At present, a total of 252,154 close contacts have been tracked, 18,457 medical observations have been lifted that day, and 185,555 people are currently receiving medical observations. A total of 39 confirmed cases were reported from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan: 18 in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (1 death), 10 in the Macao Special Administrative Region, and 11 in Taiwan. (Information comes from the official website of the National Health Commission)
Luis C. Elizondo L. Posted February 6, 2020 Report Posted February 6, 2020 There must be a local cause in the Province of Hubei that aggravates the sensitivity to the virus. In India and Mexico, sensitivity to H1N1 was aggravated by arsenic in drinking water, even a few parts per million. I do not think there is a relation to race, rather to the staples and the contaminants prevailing in them. Maybe it is not arsenic but something related to fish farms, some chemical or medication used for fish that is reaching the drinking water sources.
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