Shanghai health workers broke down door of 92-year-old to take her into quarantine

The
men came after 2 a.m. on Tuesday in the dead of the night, banging on an
apartment door in a rundown housing complex in Shanghai. When nobody answered,
they pried open the lock and barged in, rousing a 92-year-old woman from her
bed.
The
visitors demanded to take the woman and her 74-year-old son to a quarantine
center, because, according to their records, both had tested positive for Covid-19 five
days earlier on April 14. When the old woman refused to go -- both she and her
son had since tested negative -- she was allegedly pulled out of bed and
dragged onto the floor. Fearing the worst, her son helped her dress and agreed
to comply.
The
account of events, as told in a series of online posts by the woman's
granddaughter Zhi Ye, a former journalist born and raised in Shanghai, has
sparked shock and fury across Chinese social media.
"There's
no limit to the cold-blooded cruelty and violence," said the top comment
under Zhi's post on
Weibo, China's Twitter-like service.
Amid
public outcry, the local government issued a statement on
Tuesday evening, confirming the late-night transfer of the two elderly
residents to a quarantine site. It said police and neighborhood committee
workers had a locksmith pry open an outer door to the apartment because they
feared "an accident had happened" to its occupants.
The
statement said the two elderly residents had agreed to the transfer after
communicating with police officers and "voluntarily went downstairs"
to get in the car.
Zhi
declined to be interviewed when reached by CNN.
Zhi's
grandmother is among many senior Shanghai citizens who have been hauled off to
government quarantine in recent days, as authorities step up efforts to remove
all positive cases from communities in a bid to end the spread of Covid outside
designated sites.
On
social media, some residents have called for help as
their elderly parents or grandparents were taken
into isolation facilities, sometimes without the medicine or equipment they
need.
A
patient at a quarantine center converted from a warehouse told CNN a group of
senior citizens, some in wheelchairs, was transported to his facility from a
nursing home on Monday night.
Some
senior citizens have attempted to push back. Several social media videos show
an elderly woman who appears to have left quarantine and is trying to enter a
neighborhood compound. She is seen walking around and arguing with Covid
workers in hazmat suits, who try to persuade her to go back to the government
facility. CNN has reached out to local officials for comment about the
situation, but they have not responded to calls.
The
mass transfer came as Chinese Vice Premier Sun Chunlan, the most senior
official in charge of the country's Covid response, vowed Monday to send anyone
who tests positive for Covid and their close contacts to quarantine sites,
"without exception, deduction and delay." Sun said in an interview
Saturday that community transmission in Shanghai could be expected to end soon,
and cases would only be detected in quarantine centers.
Shanghai
officials are under tremendous pressure to contain a raging Omicron
outbreak, which has infected more than 430,000 people despite weeks
of stringent mandatory home lockdown. Public discontent has been mounting, with
residents struggling to secure food and medical access.
The
latest efforts to end community transmission have only sparked more anger. Many
fear that senior citizens will not receive proper care at makeshift isolation
facilities, some of which are plagued by poor conditions, overcrowding as well
as shortages of medical equipment, doctors and nurses.
"For
the elderly in their 80s and 90s, the risk of them getting cross-infected and
dying in these quarantine centers is much higher than having them stay at home
and self isolate," said Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health
at the Council on Foreign Relations.
"Many
of those elderly people suffer from chronic conditions that require special
care, which likely won't be provided at quarantine centers."
Chinese
officials have long boasted that "zero-Covid" is saving lives,
especially vulnerable groups like the elderly. But some argue that by forcing
senior citizens into centralized quarantine, it poses a threat to the health
and well-being of the very people the policy is supposed to protect.
"The
question is at what cost? And does the end justify the means?" Huang said.
"They've
pried open the door"
In
her social media posts, Zhi said her grandmother and uncle tested positive for
Covid-19 by antigen self-test on April 13. They immediately informed the
neighborhood committee, which sent workers to take their nucleic acid tests the
next day. Both developed only mild coughs and had no fever, and by April 16,
their antigen tests had returned negative results.
Then,
on Monday afternoon, they were told by the neighborhood committee they would be
transferred to a makeshift quarantine facility. Zhi was immediately worried --
her grandmother suffers from high blood pressure and heart disease, while her
uncle is on daily medication for a recent prostate surgery.
Like
many other Shanghai residents, Zhi resorted to social media for help.
"Please everyone help me share this! Please don't take my 94-year-old
grandmother to the quarantine center," she pleaded in a lengthy post on
WeChat, which went viral. (Traditionally Chinese age is calculated differently
and can add up to two years to a person's actual age.)
Then,
at 2:47 a.m., Zhi received a brief phone call from her uncle. "They've
pried open the door," she heard him saying, his voice barely audible above
the noise.
When
Zhi's grandmother and uncle arrived at the isolation facility after 4 a.m. on
Tuesday, it was already crowded with elderly people, including some in
wheelchairs, Zhi wrote in a later post. There was no free bed available, and
they spent the rest of the night sitting in the hallway. The next morning, they
were assigned to their beds and each received a sleeping bag and a blanket.
A
video of the healthcare center obtained by CNN shows senior citizens lying or
sitting on beds lining a hallway and a reception area, with wooden boards and
thin sheets as bedding. An elderly man who could hardly walk is seen clinging
onto a wall as he moves in slow, tiny steps toward his bed.
The
local government statement said medical workers at the quarantine center
conducted a basic medical check-up on Zhi's grandmother and uncle, and
"made sure their health conditions are normal." It acknowledged the
shortage of beds, and said healthcare workers would pay extra attention to
elderly patients with underlying ailments.
The
public attention appeared to pay off. Shortly before midnight Thursday, 45
hours after they were taken away, Zhi's grandmother and uncle were sent back
home following three negative Covid tests, Zhi wrote in an update on WeChat.
"I
hope grandma and uncle can finally have a good night's sleep without being
disturbed again," she wrote.
But
many more senior citizens remain in centralized quarantine, or are likely on
their way there as the campaign to end community transmission intensifies.
On
Wednesday, Sun, the vice premier, told local
officials to come up with more targeted measures to deal with
old neighborhoods and nursing homes that have reported high infections.
Officials
were told to strengthen on-site contact tracing, speed up the transfer of
positive cases and close contacts into isolation, and swiftly conduct
disinfection, according to a statement from the Shanghai government.
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