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Wuhan one year later: An American’s perspective: WGN News

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Wuhan one year later: An American’s perspective: WGN News

by: Julie Unruh

Posted: Dec 17, 2020 / 05:55 PM CST /


EVANSTON, Ill. It was December of 2019 when a mysterious virus in China was quickly infecting and killing citizens fast. The epicenter of the outbreak was in the Hubei province, specifically in Wuhan, its capital city.

One American, Evanston native Kurt Mitenbuler, was vacationing with his Chinese wife and extended family in Wuhan when what was eventually identified as COVID-19 broke out in the city. Mitenbuler stayed in China for months, unable to return to the United States.

Mitenbuler has the unique perspective of seeing the initial outbreak of the pandemic up close in China, before seeing it back home in the U.S.

One major difference that Mitenbuler pointed out: everyone in China cooperated with the government when they were sent home for three months.

“Nobody in China denied anything. There is a disease, we must be careful, and ‘we’ means everybody,” Mitenbuler said.

The streets of Wuhan were a mere ghost town last February, with no one allowed outside their homes unless it was to sanitize or patrol city streets. Parks were deserted, shopping destinations were boarded up and roadways were abandoned.

Mitenbuler said the overall keys to success were masks, testing and contact tracing that involved color coated QR codes. The codes indicated you did not carry the virus with green, with yellow or red meaning you have the virus.

“Everybody was excited to go get tested. Within 36 hours of having been tested, I already had the info in my QR code and we were back in business. They tested 10 million people,” Mitenbuler said.

Mitenbuler said by the end of March, just three months after the lockdown that shut down the city, Wuhan opened back up.

Scooters were buzzing on the roads again, restaurants were open and highways and streets were filled with cars and pedestrians once more.

Mitenbuler owns two apartments in Wuhan and is familiar with the city, returning to the U.S. in September to vote in the November election.

While in Wuhan over the summer, Mitenbuler watched scooter and bike rentals soar. Public transportation is back, he said, but not preferred by locals.

The Yangtse River Bridge, an open road last spring during the lockdown, was packed with large crowds by mid-summer.

“It was just packed. I mean, huge crowds even when I was there in July. We’d go to the bridge because it was like a street fair. Everyday packed,” Mitenbuler said.

Mitenbuler noted the aspects of the lively atmosphere, saying there was ballroom dancing, roller blading and live music.

“A lot of people wearing masks, you know? No gloves, no hand sanitizers, just lots of masks,” Mitenbuler said.

He said there was no such thing as a super-spreader event due to everyone cooperating. Mitenbuler said the city was mostly back to normal by mid-March.

“I’ve had a half dozen friends tell me yeah, we can tell we are back in business cause the air pollution is back,” Mitenbuler said.

Their greatest fears one year ago are replaced with a wave of confidence today.

“Everybody is back in action on some level,” Mitenbuler said.

According to the World Health Organization, China has disclosed over 95,000 cases of COVID-19 since December 2019, with less than 5,000 deaths. The United States currently reports near 17 million cases of the virus, with over 300,000 deaths.

While the U.S. celebrates its first vaccinations this week, Americans are bracing for a long winter where numbers are expected to continue to increase.

 
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China's Covid-19 success

Almost a year ago, a novel coronavirus emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan, and quickly spread around the world. The disease it caused, COVID-19 has since infected tens of millions of people, and decimated livelihoods, businesses and economies. But China itself has not suffered nearly as much as other countries. Joel Flynn tells us why.

 
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Wuhan one year later: An American’s perspective: WGN News

by: Julie Unruh

Posted: Dec 17, 2020 / 05:55 PM CST /


EVANSTON, Ill. It was December of 2019 when a mysterious virus in China was quickly infecting and killing citizens fast. The epicenter of the outbreak was in the Hubei province, specifically in Wuhan, its capital city.

One American, Evanston native Kurt Mitenbuler, was vacationing with his Chinese wife and extended family in Wuhan when what was eventually identified as COVID-19 broke out in the city. Mitenbuler stayed in China for months, unable to return to the United States.

Mitenbuler has the unique perspective of seeing the initial outbreak of the pandemic up close in China, before seeing it back home in the U.S.

One major difference that Mitenbuler pointed out: everyone in China cooperated with the government when they were sent home for three months.

“Nobody in China denied anything. There is a disease, we must be careful, and ‘we’ means everybody,” Mitenbuler said.

The streets of Wuhan were a mere ghost town last February, with no one allowed outside their homes unless it was to sanitize or patrol city streets. Parks were deserted, shopping destinations were boarded up and roadways were abandoned.

Mitenbuler said the overall keys to success were masks, testing and contact tracing that involved color coated QR codes. The codes indicated you did not carry the virus with green, with yellow or red meaning you have the virus.

“Everybody was excited to go get tested. Within 36 hours of having been tested, I already had the info in my QR code and we were back in business. They tested 10 million people,” Mitenbuler said.

Mitenbuler said by the end of March, just three months after the lockdown that shut down the city, Wuhan opened back up.

Scooters were buzzing on the roads again, restaurants were open and highways and streets were filled with cars and pedestrians once more.

Mitenbuler owns two apartments in Wuhan and is familiar with the city, returning to the U.S. in September to vote in the November election.

While in Wuhan over the summer, Mitenbuler watched scooter and bike rentals soar. Public transportation is back, he said, but not preferred by locals.

The Yangtse River Bridge, an open road last spring during the lockdown, was packed with large crowds by mid-summer.

“It was just packed. I mean, huge crowds even when I was there in July. We’d go to the bridge because it was like a street fair. Everyday packed,” Mitenbuler said.

Mitenbuler noted the aspects of the lively atmosphere, saying there was ballroom dancing, roller blading and live music.

“A lot of people wearing masks, you know? No gloves, no hand sanitizers, just lots of masks,” Mitenbuler said.

He said there was no such thing as a super-spreader event due to everyone cooperating. Mitenbuler said the city was mostly back to normal by mid-March.

“I’ve had a half dozen friends tell me yeah, we can tell we are back in business cause the air pollution is back,” Mitenbuler said.

Their greatest fears one year ago are replaced with a wave of confidence today.

“Everybody is back in action on some level,” Mitenbuler said.

According to the World Health Organization, China has disclosed over 95,000 cases of COVID-19 since December 2019, with less than 5,000 deaths. The United States currently reports near 17 million cases of the virus, with over 300,000 deaths.

While the U.S. celebrates its first vaccinations this week, Americans are bracing for a long winter where numbers are expected to continue to increase.

It's not gonna get reported in mainstream news.
 
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Look at the comments in some of those videos. There are still idiots in denial of China's successful containment of COVID-19. They actually believe this is all fake CCP propaganda when it's western outlets that are reporting it. They think China is some kind of North Korea like hermit state when hundreds of thousands of Western expats are living there. Nearly everyone in China has a smartphone and access to internet. You cannot conceal a spreading pandemic for long, as it was seen in Wuhan.

China said aerosol transmission was the main culprit of COVID-19 spread back in February, but the West mostly insisted masks were not necessary until May. Donald Trump complained about China "hiding" the outbreak, and yet all WHO members was notified by China in early January. Whatever information China shared, it was looked upon with skepticism. When reality hit the West in the face, they cry about China withholding information.

My conclusion is that the West will continued to get slapped around by this virus until they get this "China bad" notion out of their heads. Not even the vaccines will save them.
 
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COVID isn't over and it seems like arrogance has already gotten into the heads of some the Chinese.
 
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COVID isn't over and it seems like arrogance has already gotten into the heads of some the Chinese.
China is largely virus free since March, we never take lightly of this virus, Trump did. We slowly and gradually gained the confidence over a span of almost a year.
 
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COVID isn't over and it seems like arrogance has already gotten into the heads of some the Chinese.
LEADER FOR COVID is over for China.
China have no hope of catching up with the US.

The US have such a COMMANDING LEAD, only other possible contender is SUPA POWA India.
Enjoy your position at the top, CONGRATS.
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COVID isn't over and it seems like arrogance has already gotten into the heads of some the Chinese.
On the contrary, it's preciously because we didn't let our success get to our head that we're able to quickly extinguish new clusters. Citizens of China actually take this seriously and obey public health measures.

Our success is the result of our vigilance.
 
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On the contrary, it's preciously because we didn't let our success get to our head that we're able to quickly extinguish new clusters. Citizens of China actually take this seriously and obey public health measures.

Our success is the result of our vigilance.
Hopefully this public and administrative seriousness translates and manifests into the swift enactions of sufficient public health measures on the outright restrictions on the consumption of disease-ridden creatures so such foul viruses can't take form again.
 
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Hopefully this public and administrative seriousness translates and manifests into the swift enactions of sufficient public health measures on the outright restrictions on the consumption of disease-ridden creatures so such foul viruses can't take form again.
I am assuming you're making a veiled reference to bats? That was consumed by an extreme small minority of the population, not some staple meat. You should be more concerned with this in Southeast Asian countries, as it's much more prominent. Mad Cow disease can also kill, but have you stopped eating beef entirely?

Additionally, with the discovery of the COVID-19 virus DNA in patient samples dating back to September in Italy and December in US, the origin is still up for debate. No intermediary animal has been found. Wuhan may have simply been the first site of a mass outbreak.
 
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I am assuming you're making a veiled reference to bats? That was consumed by an extreme small minority of the population, not some staple meat. You should be more concerned with this in Southeast Asian countries, as it's much more prominent. Mad Cow disease can also kill, but have you stopped eating beef entirely?
Of course, whoever eats it must be condemned and that includes SE Asian countries.

Also mad cow disease appears in and caused by a minority of industrial cattle farms. Mad cow disease does not appear in Zabiha Halal meat which is the ultimate quality beef consumed by followers of the Islamic faith. I am assuming Kosher beef also has some similar qualities of purity, freshness, and cleanliness.
 
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