The coronavirus that emerged from China’s Hubei province over a month
ago and has spread to two dozen countries is already fueling mistrust
from the U.S. government on whether China can provide accurate
information about the epidemic.
The White House said this week it does “not have high confidence in the information coming out of China” regarding the count of coronavirus cases, a senior administration official told CNBC. Meanwhile, China has reportedly been reluctant to accept help
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and has reportedly
suppressed information about the outbreak from scientists that it deems
alarming.
U.S. officials’ mistrust of China goes as far back as the 1950s, when national authorities set unrealistic production quotas
that led local officials to inflate data. Mishaps with the 2003
outbreak of SARS, which sickened 8,098 people and killed about 800 over
nine months, and discrepancies in reporting of economic data over the
past two decades has only hardened the U.S. government’s belief that
China cannot be trusted, experts say. White House advisor Peter Navarro
has even called China a “disease incubator.”
Since emerging from the city of Wuhan, the new virus has spread from
about 300 people as of mid-January to more than 64,000 as of Friday —
with the number of new cases growing by the thousands every day. World
health officials say China’s response to the virus is an improvement
from past outbreaks. China has been more transparent, World Health
Organization officials told reporters this week. Chinese health
authorities quickly isolated the virus’ genetic sequence and shared it
on a public database in a matter of weeks, they said, giving scientists a
chance to identify it.
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