China Refused to Provide WHO Team with Raw Data on Early COVID Cases

China refused to give raw data on early COVID-19 cases to a World Health Organization-led team probing the origins of the pandemic, one of the team’s investigators said, potentially complicating efforts to understand how the outbreak began.
The team had requested raw patient
data on the 174 cases of COVID-19 that China had identified from the early
phase of the outbreak in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December 2019, as well as
other cases, but were only provided with a summary, said Dominic Dwyer, an
Australian infectious diseases expert who is a member of the team.
Such raw data is known as “line
listings”, he said, and would typically be anonymized but contain details such
as what questions were asked of individual patients, their responses and how
their responses were analyzed.
“That’s standard practice for an outbreak
investigation,” he told Reuters on Saturday via video call from Sydney, where
he is currently undergoing quarantine.
He said that gaining access to the
raw data was especially important since only half of the 174 cases had exposure
to the Huanan market, the now-shuttered wholesale seafood center in Wuhan where
the virus was initially detected.
“That’s why we’ve persisted to ask for that,” he
said. “Why that doesn’t happen, I couldn’t comment. Whether it’s political or
time or it’s difficult ... But whether there are any other reasons why the data
isn’t available, I don’t know. One would only speculate.”
While the Chinese authorities
provided a lot of material, he said the issue of access to the raw patient data
would be mentioned in the team’s final report. “The WHO people certainly felt
that they had received much much more data than they had ever received in the
previous year. So that in itself is an advance.”
A summary of the team’s findings
could be released as early as next week, the WHO said on Friday.
The WHO-led probe had been plagued
by delay, concern over access and bickering between Beijing and Washington,
which accused China of hiding the extent of the initial outbreak and criticized
the terms of the visit, under which Chinese experts conducted the first phase
of research.
The team, which arrived in China
in January and spent four weeks looking into the origins of the COVID-19
outbreak, was limited to visits organized by their Chinese hosts and prevented
from contact with community members, due to health restrictions. The first two
weeks were spent in hotel quarantine.
China’s refusal to hand over raw
data on the early COVID-19 cases was reported earlier by the Wall Street
Journal on Friday.
The WHO did not reply to a request from Reuters for comment. The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment but Beijing has previously defended its transparency in handling the outbreak and its cooperation with the WHO mission.
Dwyer said the work within the WHO
team was harmonious but that there were “arguments” at times with their Chinese
counterparts over the interpretation and significance of the data, which he
described as “natural” in such probes.
“We might be having a talk about cold chain and
they might be more firm about what the data shows than what we might have been,
but that’s natural. Whether there’s political pressure to have different
opinions, I don’t know. There may well be, but it’s hard to know.”
Cold chain refers to the transport
and trade of frozen food.
Beijing has sought to cast doubt
on the notion that the coronavirus originated in China, pointing to imported
frozen food as a conduit.
On Tuesday, Peter Ben Embarek, who
led the WHO delegation, told a news conference that transmission of the virus
via frozen food is a possibility, but pointed to market vendors selling frozen
animal products including farmed wild animals as a potential pathway that
warrants further study.
Embarek also said that the team
was not looking further into the theory that the virus escaped from a lab,
which it considered highly unlikely. The previous US administration of
President Donald Trump had said it suspected the virus may have escaped from a
Wuhan lab, which Beijing strongly denies.
“It was a unanimous feeling,”
Dwyer said. “It wasn’t a political sop whatsoever.”