Wuhan is experiencing a new round of influenza outbreaks at the five-year mark of COVID-19, with some schools suspending classes.
Chen Banghua, a representative from the Wuhan CDC, explained that influenza spreads through various channels and is highly contagious. Asymptomatic carriers of the influenza virus are common, accounting for up to 30 percent of cases.
However, the online discussion among parents in Wuhan indicate that multiple viruses besides influenza A are spreading simultaneously.
Another Wuhan mother responded to the post, “I have influenza A, and my child has norovirus. I hadn’t recovered from influenza A when I caught norovirus from my child. That’s how I spent the last day of 2024.”
On Jan. 2, a parent from Wuchang District in Wuhan told The Epoch Times that many students at her child’s school were infected. Three classes in the third grade had to suspend classes, and her child’s fourth-grade class was also affected, with over 30 students taking sick leave before the New Year holiday.
Schools Suspend Classes
On Dec. 28, 2024, an online message circulated among Wuhan parents indicated that an influenza outbreak had led several primary schools to suspend classes.The message cited internal news from a primary school in Jiang'an District and urged parents to stay vigilant, take protective measures, and try to avoid illnesses that could affect midterm exams.
Expert: No Need for Panic
Sean Lin—a microbiologist, assistant professor of Biomedical Science, and member of the Committee on the Present Danger: China, who has been monitoring the situation in China—advised the Chinese public not to panic.“The problem is the Chinese government didn’t provide systematic data for the outside world to understand what is the real situation.”
“For the general public, the first thing is [you] don’t have to be panicked,” he added. “[You] need to be cautious, to do more regular exercises, have a good rest, and try to be more optimistic—that will also boost your immune system. And then you have a healthy diet ... and do regular hygiene protections: washing hands more or wearing a mask in some public gatherings.”
Lin attributed the apparent high severity of flu symptoms in China to the Chinese population’s weakened immune system after COVID-19.
“Because many people had multiple COVID infections, many people have maybe long COVID, many people have even Chinese versions of vaccine side effects, so I think many Chinese people have a weakened immune system. That’s why even just a regular respiratory pathogen like RSV, mycoplasma pneumoniae, or HMPV ... it can cause more people to be more sick than many other countries,” he said.
“I think that’s what’s unique inside China.”