Hong Kong has had its third Covid-19 death, a 76-year old woman who had an underlying health condition who had been diagnosed early this month, the Hospital Authority said on Sunday. Her husband has also been confirmed to have the virus. The two lived in Sham Shui Po in Kowloon.
Hong Kong’s Centre for Health Protection said on Sunday that it was investigating five new cases, bringing the total confirmed infections in the city to 115. Two of the five new cases are related to a tour group that travelled to India.
Hong Kong stocks saw their worst fall in two years on Monday, with the Hang Seng index dropping by more than 4%, its worst one-day decline since February 2018.
As China reported no new cases outside of Hubei province, optimism is growing in Wuhan. According to CCTV, 11 out of 14 temporary hospitals built to take patients with milder conditions have now closed. The three remaining hospitals have about 100 patients in each.
Party secretary Chen Yixin said at a meeting on Sunday: “We cannot be blindly optimistic.. we must concentrate our efforts in wiping out [the virus] and at the same time plan ahead for the resumption of work and allow people to leave Wuhan orderly and in batches.”
The message to doctors has always been clear: if you get sick, do it on your own time, writes Ranjana Srivastava.
“The rule of thumb in medicine is that if you aren’t sicker than your patients, you turn up to work.
After all, a temporary viral illness is nothing compared to conditions that some other doctors endure: the death of a parent; a complicated pregnancy; and of course, mental illness whose manifestations are far harder to share than a fractured arm or a blinding headache.
Organisations are splashed with well-intentioned messages highlighting the importance of self-care and even offering free help, because we know all too well that illness doesn’t distinguish between patients and doctors.
Unfortunately, like all attractive offers, there is a huge catch: in order to get better, you must be prepared to tax your fellow doctors. No one says you can’t take a day off, but it is an unspoken expectation that you will not be covered.”
ASX down 6.5%
The stock market rout won’t reach the bottom until the coronavirus is contained in the United States, according to an Australian economist.
The Australian share market is now down 6.5% on what is proving to be one of the most disastrous days for the ASX200 in recent history. The mounting concerns about a global recession caused by the virus have been compounded by the shock decision by Saudi Arabia to start an oil price war, sparking a 20% fall in the cost of benchmark Brent crude. Stocks in Japan, Korea and Hong Kong are also deep in the red.
But despite an emergency rate cut by the US Federal Reserve last week there has been no let up in the selloff which is now into its third week.
David Bassnesse, chief economist at BetaShares Capital in Sydney, said on Monday that there could be buying opportunities for investors after such large falls but the market would not bottom out until the situation in the US was clearer.
“We need a cellar sign that the outbreak in the US is contained but we’re not there yet because the number of cases and deaths is still on the rise. We have to see what happens with containment measures there, such as travel restrictions and shutdowns.
“It’s hard to say that we’ve seen the last of the bad news. We need to see in the US the sort of containment of the virus that we’ve seen in China, if you believe the figures.
“What is the mortality rate of this virus? They need to do more testing in the US. That is the key. Is it Spanish flu [that killed millions after the first world war], or is it swine flu, that infected 60 million people in the US in 209 according to some estimates but killed ‘only’ 12,000 people?”