
Covid to drop to lower level in a month or two: CHP
Health authorities say various indicators, including the number of Covid patients seeking help, have shown that coronavirus activity has dropped. File photo: AFP
Health authorities on Thursday said Covid activity in Hong Kong appears to be declining from its peak, but that it would take "a month or two" before reaching a lower level.
The Centre for Health Protection said the percentage of respiratory samples testing positive for the coronavirus and the viral load in sewage samples have gone down in the week ending on May 24, compared to the period between May 11 and 17.
The number of patients seeking medical help for Covid also dropped, the centre said in a statement.
But the centre's controller, Edwin Tsui, noted that coronavirus activity would remain "relatively high" in the meantime.
"Hong Kong has experienced an upsurge in Covid-19 cases since April this year, more than half a year after the last increase in July and August of last year. The current active period is expected," he said.
"Although the activity of Covid-19 has started to decline, with reference to previous data, we expect that it will remain at a relatively high level in the short term, and will take a month or two to gradually decline to a lower level."
Tsui noted XDV and variants descended from it, including NB.1.8.1, have become the most prevalent strains in the SAR, according to genetic analysis.
NB1.8.1 has been assigned as one of the "variants under monitoring" by the World Health Organization, but the body suggested that the risk it posed was low.
To that, Tsui said Covid vaccines currently used in Hong Kong "can effectively prevent infection and severe disease", while urging high-risk individuals to "not take this lightly" and get inoculated with a booster shot.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


HKFP
11 hours ago
- HKFP
Chikungunya fever poses ‘medium to high risk' of local transmission, warns Hong Kong health official
The mosquito-borne chikungunya fever poses a 'medium to high risk' of local transmission in Hong Kong, as thousands of cases were reported in the neighbouring Guangdong province, a city health official has warned. Albert Au, head of the Communicable Disease Branch of the Centre for Health Protection (CHP), said on an RTHK radio show on Thursday that Guangdong province had seen a 'localised outbreak' of chikungunya fever over the past few weeks following some imported cases. Based on the CHP's communication with Guangdong authorities, the southern Chinese province has logged around 6,100 cases so far, Au said. About 90 per cent of the cases were recorded in Foshan, but other cities such as Guangzhou, Zhongshan, and Dongguan have reported cases too, he added. While Hong Kong has not recorded any cases so far, authorities are 'on high alert,' Au said. 'It is a time for summer holidays, and Hongkongers love to travel to Guangdong province. With frequent travel, there is a high risk of imported cases,' the health official said. 'Hong Kong has more mosquitoes during summer,' he added. 'So if there are imported cases, there is a medium to high risk that it will lead to local transmission.' According to the CHP, chikungunya fever is most commonly transmitted to humans through the bites of infected female Aedes mosquitoes. While the vector Aedes aegypti is not found in Hong Kong, Aedes albopictus, another species that can also spread the disease, is commonly found in the city. Chikungunya fever causes rare fatalities, and its symptoms are milder than those of dengue fever, another mosquito-borne disease. However, chikungunya fever carries a higher transmission potential than dengue fever, Au said. Mosquito control measures Meanwhile, the Housing Department has stepped up measures to prevent and control mosquitoes in public housing estates in Hong Kong due to the chikungunya outbreak in Guangdong. According to a statement on Thursday, the department is conducting fogging operations to eliminate adult mosquitoes and has taken measures such as removing stagnant water and water-holding containers and keeping drains clear of blockages to prevent water accumulation.


RTHK
2 days ago
- RTHK
Imported Chikungunya cases unlikely to be endemic
Imported Chikungunya cases unlikely to be endemic Dr Albert Au says any Chikungunya cases will bring contact tracing, blood tests and mosquito elimination work in possible infection areas. Photo: RTHK The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) said on Thursday that there is a "moderate to high risk" that imported cases of Chikungunya fever will give rise to local transmission in some places in Hong Kong. Speaking on an RTHK radio show, the head of the communicable disease branch, Dr Alert Au, noted that there have been about 6,100 cases in Guangdong, about 90 percent of which were recorded in Foshan. The transmissibility of Chikungunya fever is even higher than dengue fever, Au said, and its incubation period is relatively short. While the SAR has not recorded any imported cases, Au said the CHP is on high alert. "Hongkongers like to go to Guangdong very much," he said. "Once there is frequent travel, we think there is quite a high risk of imported cases." "Also, as it's now summer in Hong Kong, even though the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department's (FEHD) index measuring mosquito breeding has shown improvements compared to last year, but because of summer, the mosquito problem might have worsened than in previous months." "So if there are imported cases, there is a moderate to high risk that it will lead to local transmission in some places or the emergence of local cases." However, Au went on to say that there is an "extremely low" chance that any imported Chikungunya cases will become endemic as the mosquito-borne disease is a statutory notifiable disease. Once the CHP is notified of any Chikungunya fever cases, Au said it will take measures, such as contact tracing, arranging blood tests, and have the FEHD carry out mosquito elimination work in areas within a 250-metre radius of places that a patient has gone to, in order to prevent the disease from spreading. Au stressed the virus will not spread from person to person.


South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- South China Morning Post
How an influencer in China lost 60kg in 5 years without weight-loss drugs or crash diets
Scroll through Shanghai-based Thomas Derksen's Instagram feed from the oldest post to the newest and you will notice a metamorphosis in the Mandarin-speaking German influencer. In the early days, there were a lot of photos of him enjoying food: a slap-up English breakfast, cookies while working at his laptop, a rich birthday cake in 2018 and what looks like an enormous bacon sandwich in 2019. Then there is a shift, with fewer photos of heavy meals and more photos that record him seemingly shrinking. The hefty young man grows slimmer and more active: kayaking on a lake, walking his dog and swimming. The start of the pandemic was the turning point. 'I started to lose weight when Covid happened,' the 36-year-old says. 'I knew I needed to lose weight and that my lifestyle was unhealthy. I had a fatty liver chest pains and sore joints 'Staying at home gave me time to do my research. All the information I needed was available online. There are many free resources. I collected what I found and put it into practice. Some ideas worked for me, some did not.'