Lagatar24 Desk
New Delhi, Dec 25: As infections have risen following a sudden relaxing of severe restrictions, China’s National Health Commission (NHC) ceased providing daily COVID-19 data on Sunday. This decision was made over concerns about their validity.
“Relevant COVID information will be published by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention for reference and research,” the commission said in a statement. It did not specify the reasons for the change or how frequently China CDC will update COVID information.
Concerns about the lack of critical information since Beijing made significant changes to a zero-COVID policy that had placed hundreds of millions of its citizens under constant lockdowns and battered the second-largest economy in the world have led to the NHC’s decision to stop reporting daily infection and death totals.
The NHC stopped disclosing statistics after reporting no COVID deaths nationally for four days in a row despite the record-breaking spike in infections. World health experts expressed concern after China limited the definition of COVID deaths in its reporting, identifying only those caused by pneumonia or respiratory failure due to the virus.
According to Airfinity, a British company that collects health statistics, China has more than a million diseases and 5,000 fatalities every day.
The NHC ceased reporting asymptomatic infections this month, which has made it more difficult to follow cases when COVID cases began breaking daily records in late November.
Because of less testing was being conducted nationwide and because China has frequently been accused of exaggerating infections and fatalities, official statistics from China have ceased to be a credible indicator.
In order to lessen the reporting load on local communities, the United States has likewise reported COVID instances less frequently, switching from daily to weekly updates.
Since Beijing loosened its limitations, the World Health Organization has not received any information from China regarding new COVID hospitalisations. According to the organisation, the data gap may be caused by the authorities’ difficulties tallying instances in the nation with the largest population.