Zhang Wenhong, who heads the Covid-19 clinical expert team in
While countries around the world may be able to bring the deadly pandemic under adequate control by autumn, the coming winter may bring a "second wave" of infections in China and elsewhere, he said.
Speaking during an online livestream broadcast by popular short-video platform Kuaishou, Zhang said China's experience with disease control means any resurgence in infections later this year will be manageable, and not require a repeat of the dramatic measures taken to curb the virus's initial spread.
Zhang's comments come as
As of Wednesday, the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in China reached 82,341. Altogether 3,342 people have died of the disease, according to the
"China won't implement any shutdowns, and imported cases will certainly still make up the bulk of the outbreak," China's Caixin magazine quoted Zhang as saying.
"For a long time, epidemic prevention and control will go through periods of relaxation and tightening. It will be possible to live and work normally, but it probably won't be possible to completely eradicate the outbreaks," he said.
That means countries must continue to fight the pandemic together even after their initial domestic outbreaks have peaked, Zhang said, adding: "Only when all nations have properly controlled the disease will we all be able to live well again."
Aggressive testing and contact tracing, combined with immediate hospitalisation of confirmed cases, is the secret to effective epidemic control, Zhang said.
Predicting that the US will bring its outbreak under control by May, he also called for the two countries to cooperate more closely on the pandemic.
"Communication between us at the medical level has never stopped," he said.
"When it comes to medicine, people's health, and epidemic control, we can't decouple from each other," he said, amidst the Trump administration's criticism of China's handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
US Secretary of State
Pompeo's phone call to