China: Doctor charged for treating fever patient
A doctor in China's Zhoukou city has been charged with a crime for allegedly treating a fever patient while working at a hospital without a fever clinic.
Patients with possible Covid symptoms in China can only get
treatment at specially designated hospitals.
The doctor, only known by their surname Guo, was charged on
suspicion of "obstructing the prevention and control of infectious
diseases".
China is pursuing a zero-Covid policy, with a tough elimination
strategy.
According to a notice by authorities in Henan province, Guo had
treated the patient at a hospital in Zhoukou from 29 October to 2 November last
year.
The hospital, of which Guo was the vice-director, had not set up
fever clinics as part of its operations.
In China, doctors are not allowed to treat patients exhibiting
Covid-like symptoms at hospitals that are not equipped with fever clinics.
Instead, patients are meant to be sent to "fever
clinics" - medical facilities initially set up to combat the severe acute
respiratory syndrome (Sars) outbreak in 2002 - to prevent further infection.
It is not clear how the alleged incident was uncovered, or why
Guo might have decided to treat the patient.
If convicted, Guo may face up to seven years' imprisonment,
according to state-run news agency Xinhua.
China has been battling sporadic outbreaks of Covid, along with
emerging cases of the highly contagious Omicron variant in cities like Xi'an
and Yuzhou - both of which were recently
placed into total lockdown.
Authorities are already advising people to stay put ahead of the
peak travel season of Chinese New Year that starts at the end of January and
runs well into February, during which millions of people are expected to make
trips.
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