On the morning of March 16, 48-year-old Huang Shunfang went to her local hospital located in Fanghu Township in the central Chinese province of Henan. Her doctor diagnosed her with gastritis, gave her a dose of antacids through an IV, and sent her on her way. Huang died suddenly that afternoon. In the hours after her death, Huang’s family went to the hospital for an
/PRNewswire/ The Namasia Minquan Elementary School campus, which was reconstructed as a green building by Delta following the devastation of Typhoon Morakot.
/PRNewswire/ The Namasia Minquan Elementary School campus, which was reconstructed as a green building by Delta following the devastation of Typhoon Morakot.
The Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) is this weekend reviewing the effectiveness of the level 3 COVID-19 alert and is to report its findings early this week, it said on Friday.
Minister of Health and Welfare Chen Shih-chung (陳時中), who heads the center, said that a declining trend had yet to emerge in the recent outbreak, despite the May 19 imposition of strict nationwide disease prevention measures, including closing schools and public venues, restricting gatherings to no more than five people indoors and 10 outdoors, and advising people to stay home.
The CECC would review the status of the outbreak in the
This is Wuhan now: A year later, the first post-pandemic city
13 minutes to read
By: Christopher Buckley, Keith Bradsher, Vivian Wang and Amy Qin The long months of harsh lockdown have faded from view in Wuhan, the first city in the world devastated by the new coronavirus. As residents look to move on, they cite a Chinese saying that warns against forgetting the pain after a scar heals.
To many in this central Chinese city, the saying sums up a temptation to let go of the bad memories while revelling in the recovery. To families grieving in the shadows, it means the danger of hastily forgetting without a public reckoning for the lives needlessly lost.