Vietnam reports biggest jump in COVID-19 cases

Health Ministry sent more health experts to the central city of Danang

July 31, 2020 08:05 am | Updated 08:05 am IST - HANOI

Medical specialists collect blood specimen from a person who has returned after travelling to Da Nang, at a rapid testing centre for coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outside Hanoi, Vietnam.

Medical specialists collect blood specimen from a person who has returned after travelling to Da Nang, at a rapid testing centre for coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outside Hanoi, Vietnam.

Vietnam on Friday reported 45 new coronavirus infections in the city of Danang, marking the country's biggest single-day jump in cases, as the Health Ministry sent more health experts to the central city in a bid to combat the outbreak.

The new patients, aged between 27 and 87, are linked to three hospitals and two clinics in Danang, a tourism hot spot where Vietnam last week detected its first locally transmitted infections in more than three months, the Ministry said in a statement.

Vietnam started mass coronavirus testing in the capital Hanoi, banned gatherings in its economic hub and urged tens of thousands of domestic travellers to report to authorities on Thursday, as the country scrambled to contain the new spread of the virus.

The Ministry overnight sent a special task force of health experts, along with more than 1,000 health workers, to Danang to help handle the deteriorating situation there, it said.

The task force includes 65 health experts who had previously helped fight coronavirus at other epicentres in Vietnam, the ministry said.

The newly confirmed cases in Danang have brought up the total number of cases in Vietnam to 509, with no deaths.

Some experts say Vietnam could be paying for complacency after its initial success stopping the virus, with normal service quickly resuming, facemasks used less and domestic travel activity surging.

Danang had been inundated with visitors taking advantage of promotions to revitalise a tourism sector hurt by border closures and international flight bans designed to keep the virus out. The current wave is traced to Danang, but the source is unclear.

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