Up to 14% of recovered coronavirus patients in China have
reportedly tested positive again after being discharged from the hospital.
Doctors at a hospital in Wuhan, China, where the virus
emerged reported that between 3 and 14% of cured patients became reinfected
with the illness, though it’s unclear whether they were contagious the second
time, the South China Morning Post reported.
The news comes as experts raised an alarm that China is
facing a second outbreak due to the increasing number of imported cases as well
as the 'silent carriers' who show no symptoms.
Tongji Hospital, which identified the first COVID-19 case,
confirmed that five of 145 patients, a little over 3% tested positive again in
nucleic acid tests, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
“So far there is no evidence to suggest that they are infectious,”
said Wang Wei, the hospital’s president.
According to him, five patients who tested positive again
did not have any symptoms and none of their close contacts had been infected.
He added that surveillance of similar patients showed that
80 to 90% had no trace of the virus in their system one month after being
discharged from the hospital, according to the report.
But he said: 'these are just “small samples” and “not enough
to assure us of the validity of our initial findings. We need a large-scale
epidemiological study to guide our disease surveillance and prevention works.”
Health news outlet Life Times, which is affiliated with
state-run newspaper People’s Daily also reported that other quarantine
facilities in Wuhan have seen about 5 to 10% of their recovered patients test
positive again.