COVID fever and emergency hospitalisations have peaked in China, and the number of hospitalised COVID patients is continuing to decline, a Chinese health official said on Saturday.
Nationwide, "the number of fever clinic visitors is generally in a declining trend after peaking, both in cities and rural areas," Jiao Yahui, an official from the National Health Commission, told a news conference.
Jiao said the number of emergency treatment patients was also declining, and the ratio of patients who had tested positive for COVID-19 was steadily falling as well.
She added that the number of severe cases has also peaked, though it remained at a high level, and patients were mostly elderly.
Wen Daxiang, a Shanghai Health Commission official, said China would strengthen health monitoring and management of the high-risk population.
He added that China would bolster the supply of drugs and medical equipment and beef up the training of grassroots medical workers to combat COVID in rural regions.


Iran names Mojtaba Khamenei as new supreme leader
Trump says he is 'nowhere near' deciding to send troops to Iran
Lebanon parliament extends its own mandate for two years as war intensifies
France to deploy almost dozen warships, mulls Hormuz mission, Macron says
32 civilians injured in Iranian drone attack in Bahrain's Sitra
Indonesia searches for five missing after landfill collapse kills four
GCC permanent representatives meet UN chief
Qatar arrests 313 individuals for spreading misinformation
