Shanghai authorities on Monday reported the first COVID-19 deaths in the latest outbreak in China’s most populous and wealthiest city.
All three people who died were elderly, had underlying diseases such as diabetes and hypertension and had not been vaccinated against COVID-19, city Health Commission inspector Wu Ganyu told journalists. “After entering hospital, their conditions grew worse and they died after attempts to save them were unsuccessful,” Wu said. Read more: COVID-19 lockdowns spread in China as infections rise The deaths raise to 4,641 the number of people that China says have succumbed to the disease since the virus was first detected in the central city of Wuhan in late 2019.
While China has an overall vaccination rate of around 90 per cent, a low rate among the elderly remains a concern. Only 62 per cent of Shanghai residents over age 60 have been vaccinated, according to the latest data available.
Some experts say China needs to raise that rate before it can safely live with the virus. While highly contagious, the Omicron BA.2 variant driving the Shanghai outbreak is less lethal than the previous Delta variant.