| Wuhan Coronavirus: Death Toll Climbs, Including A Healthy Young Man, As China Races To Contain Outbreak  												The coronavirus has killed at least 26 people and  sickened more than 800 in China and at least six other countries. Travel  within and to China is being locked down as public health officials try  to quell panic while keeping the virus from spreading. Already,  criticism is bubbling up about how the government handled the start of  the outbreak. 
 The New York Times: 						China Expands Virus Lockdown, Encircling 22 Million					 					 					The authorities drastically expanded a travel lockdown in central  China on Thursday, essentially penning in more than 22 million residents  to contain a deadly virus that is overwhelming hospitals and fueling  fears of a pandemic. The new limits — abruptly decreed ahead of the  Lunar New Year holiday, China’s busiest travel season — were an  extraordinary step that underscored the ruling Communist Party’s  deepening fears about the outbreak of a little understood coronavirus.  It has killed at least 26 people and sickened more than 800 in China and  at least six other countries, including the United States, according to  statistics from health officials. (Buckley and Hernandez, 1/23)
 
 The New York Times: 						Coronavirus Live Updates: China Extends Travel Restrictions, Covering 35 Million People					 					 					The authorities are scrambling to contain a rapidly spreading  outbreak, restricting travel in 13 cities including Wuhan, the center of  the mysterious outbreak. The new virus has sickened more than 800  people in China. (1/24)
 
 The Wall Street Journal: 						Spreading Chinese Coronavirus Death Toll Rises As More Cities Are Locked Down					 					 					The tally of deaths and infections from the spread of China’s new  coronavirus mounted, further stretching hospital resources, leading to  canceled events and more locked-down cities near the center of the  outbreak. China’s National Health Commission confirmed 830 cases of  infection on Friday morning, logging more than 250 new cases since an  official count was released a day earlier. And the official death count  rose to 26, according to the commission and state media. (Yang, 1/24)
 
 The New York Times: 						Panic And Criticism Spread On Chinese Social Media Over Coronavirus					 					 					While China’s state-run media has urged calm and praised the  official response to the coronavirus outbreak, a different story is  playing out across the country’s tightly controlled social media  networks. In the digital world, China’s citizens are expressing panic  and frustration. They are overcoming a lack of reporting in the official  media by sharing their own videos and information — sometimes  inaccurately. (Victor, 1/24)
 
 The Washington Post: 						Healthy Young Man Dies Of Coronavirus In China; New Cases In Japan And South Korea					 					 					A young, healthy man from Wuhan and a person living 1,500 miles  from the epicenter of the coronavirus are among the latest victims of  the outbreak, which has incited fear and anger across China as the  important Spring Festival gets underway. Reports of eight new deaths  from the pneumonia-like virus, taking the total to 26, came as  authorities enforced a lockdown across large parts of the province of  Hubei, population 59 million. But they also came as the medical system  clearly struggled to cope with the outbreak, with reports of crowded  hospitals, stressed doctors and dwindling supplies. (Fifield, 1/24)
 
 Reuters: 						Wuhan To Build Designated Hospital To Treat Coronavirus Patients: Beijing News					 					 					The Chinese city of Wuhan, epicenter of a new coronavirus outbreak,  will build a dedicated hospital to treat patients, which it aims to  complete in six days, state media outlet Beijing News reported on  Thursday, citing an unnamed source at the construction company that will  build it. (1/23)
 
 The Associated Press: 						Social Controls, SARS Experience Help China Close Off Cities					 					 					Cutting off access to entire cities with millions of residents to  stop a new virus outbreak is a step few countries other than China would  consider, but it is made possible by the ruling Communist Party’s  extensive social controls and experience fighting the 2002-03 outbreak  of SARS. (1/24)
 
 The Wall Street Journal: 						China’s Coronavirus Response Is Questioned: ‘Everyone Was Blindly Optimistic’					 					 					On Sunday, more than 10,000 families gathered in Wuhan for a  banquet, sharing dishes including spicy duck necks and braised prawns,  in a tradition the government had held for years to mark the Lunar New  Year. Days later, Beijing made the unprecedented decision to lock down  the city of 11 million people, shutting public transportation, movie  theaters, internet cafes and other cultural centers, in an effort to  contain the spread of a virus that has killed at least 18 people. (Wei  and Deng, 1/24)
 
 The Wall Street Journal: 						Racing For The Last Train Out Of Wuhan: ‘If I Don’t Leave Now, I Won’t Be Able To’					 					 					As the sun rose Thursday morning, Wuhan’s streets filled with  people making their way to one of the main train stations, trying to  escape being trapped in the city with a virus that had already killed 17  people. Thousands of travelers packed the station’s waiting hall after  Chinese authorities announced plans to block travel out of the city, the  latest measure to stop the spread of a deadly new strain of coronavirus  believed to have emerged from an animal market in Wuhan. Some sat  calmly, eating and chatting, while others, late to hear about the  lockdown, rushed through in a panic. (Li, 1/23)
 
 Bloomberg: 						Coronavirus Death Toll Hits 25 As Travel Limits Expanded					 					 					The pressure is rising on China as it tries to come to grips with a  disease that some fear could rival SARS, which 17 years ago claimed  almost 800 lives. While global experts have mostly praised efforts to  contain the virus, Chinese citizens are increasingly critical and  anxious as travel restrictions grow to encompass a population bigger  than Australia. (Bloomberg News, 1/23)
 
 Reuters: 						Canada Girds For New Coronavirus, 17 Years After Deadly SARS Epidemic					 					 					The arrival of a new, sometimes deadly strain of coronavirus to  just outside Canada's borders has health officials determined not to  repeat the country's stumbling response to the SARS epidemic 17 years  ago. SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, killed 44 people in  Canada, the only country outside Asia to report deaths from that virus  in 2002-2003. Government health officials say Canada is better prepared  this time. (1/23)
 
 khn.org
 
 
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