Wuhan: How the COVID-19 Outbreak in China Spiraled Out of Control

Wuhan: How the COVID-19 Outbreak in China Spiraled Out of Control

by Dali L. Yang

Narrated by David Shih

Unabridged

Wuhan: How the COVID-19 Outbreak in China Spiraled Out of Control

Wuhan: How the COVID-19 Outbreak in China Spiraled Out of Control

by Dali L. Yang

Narrated by David Shih

Unabridged

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Overview

The Covid-19 pandemic, which began as an outbreak in Wuhan in late 2019, has claimed millions of lives and caused unprecedented disruptions. Despite its generation-defining significance, there has been a surprising lack of independent research examining the decisions and measures implemented in the weeks leading up to the Wuhan lockdown, as well as the missteps that allowed the novel coronavirus to spread with minimal hindrance.



In Wuhan: How the COVID-19 Outbreak in China Spiraled Out of Control, Dali L. Yang scrutinizes China's emergency response to the Covid-19 outbreak in Wuhan, delving into the government's handling of epidemic information and the decisions that influenced the scale and scope of the outbreak. Yang's research reveals that China's health experts had an excellent head start when they implemented a health emergency action program to respond to the outbreak at the end of December 2019. With granular detail and compelling immediacy, Yang investigates the political and bureaucratic processes that hindered information flows, as well as the cognitive framework that limited understanding of the virus's contagiousness and hampered effective decisions. Yang emphasizes the importance of retaining public trust during a pandemic and underscores the need for transparency, openness to new information, and direct communication of risk with the public.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"This is a careful, detailed look at the Chinese response to Covid-19 that sheds much light on what happened. It also uncovers many lessons not only for China but for every country-and we can only hope the world learns them." — John Barry, Author of The Great Influenza

"In Wuhan, Dali Yang provides a riveting and comprehensive account of how SARS-CoV-2 emerged and evolved into a global pandemic. By focusing on the dynamics that led to the initial outbreak spiraling out of control, the book highlights the bureaucratic-pathological tendencies in China's policy process. Wuhan will undoubtedly capture the interest of students of public health, public policy, and Chinese politics, while also holding relevance for anyone deeply concerned about the future of our planet." — Yanzhong Huang, Council on Foreign Relations

"In this remarkable book, Dali Yang offers a gripping account of the outbreak of Covid-19 in China: day by day, and even hour by hour. It will be the definitive account of the outbreak and the Chinese government's mishandling of it." — Bruce Dickson, George Washington University

"Dali Yang has been one of very top scholars of Chinese bureaucratic politics over the past 30 years. Now, he offers a comprehensive, straightforward, and accessible analysis of the recent era's most spectacular breakdown of Chinese bureaucracy during the early days of Covid. Looking at the granular unravelling of information gathering, inconsistency in messaging and ideological framing, and the shifting dynamics of central-local relations, he provides a compelling account of how China's most tragic governance failure in 40 years allowed the worst pandemic in a century to spiral out of control." — William Hurst, University of Cambridge

"Dali Yang has made a career of thinking dispassionately and insightfully about the Chinese Communist Party and the governance of China. This deeply informed and meticulous analysis of the vexed question of what happened in Wuhan in 2019-2020 is a priceless contribution to a heated debate." — Paul Monk, former head of the China desk in Australia's Defence Intelligence Organisation

"Dali Yang has given us the most detailed look yet at the early stages of the COVID outbreak in China. It is a book that only he could write, drawing on extensive primary evidence and decades of expertise on the politics of public health. This is one of the most important books on Chinese politics ever written." — Rory Truex, Princeton University

"Dali Yang has produced an urgent, compelling, readable account of how the COVID-19 crisis unfolded in China, and beyond. He pulls from a wide range of sources, including official communiques, lab reports, revealing social media threads that outran Chinese censors, and from first-hand accounts by many players close to the action. Yang's account of the crisis in China offers universal lessons and warnings on how people and governments process and use information during crises. In all, it makes for a kind of forensic/policy thriller that is also a tour de force of scholarship and reporting." — Ted C. Fishman, Bestselling author of China, Inc.

"Thorough and thoughtful, Wuhan details the conflicts over information and between institutions that ultimately spiraled into the global COVID-19 pandemic. Dali Yang's deeply researched volume sheds new light on the early actions of the doctors, bureaucrats, officials, and politicians facing the novel coronavirus over these crucial weeks, deepening our understanding of its origins and politics in the country where it originated." — Jeremy Wallace, Cornell University

"A book for public health experts, politicians, academics, students and the interested public, Wuhan is a page-turner not to be missed." — John P. Burns, Emeritus Professor Honorary Professor, Dept. of Politics and Public Administration, The University of Hong Kong

"Unless Chinese archives are opened or leaked, this is likely to be the definitive account of the early phase of the Covid outbreak in China. Yang is an even-handed but strict interpreter of events; he won't pull punches but will also stick close to the facts." — Ian Johnson, senior fellow for China studies at the Council on Foreign Relations and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. (via X/Twitter)

"By far the most detailed, convincing social scientific "origin story" of COVID." — Bin Xu, Associate Professor of Sociology, Emory University

"This is a unique combo of public health, governmental strategy, and pandemic response that is needed to help us respond better next time." — Benjamin F. Pierce, Head of Data Analytics and Partnership, Imperial College Health Partners

"[Wuhan] builds a very human picture of pockets of individual heroism mingled with flawed decision-making and deliberate obfuscation as doctors, epidemiologists, lab workers, and local and national politicians grappled with the appearance of a mysterious "pneumonia of unknown etiology" in real time." — Nicola Smith, The Telegraph

"An exceptionally lucid and meticulous analysis of how medical authorities reacted when the virus first appeared in Wuhan." — Paul Monk, The Australian

Kirkus Reviews

2023-10-13
An examination of how a culture that emphasizes stability was ill-prepared for massive disruption.

The global responses to the Covid-19 pandemic will be debated for many years, but this book provides a granular account of how it started. Yang, a senior political scientist and China specialist at the University of Chicago and author of a number of academic books about China, delves deeply into the first months, drawing on the records of the time and his own contacts. He notes that the Chinese government is usually seen as a dictatorial monolith, but in practice, this is not really true. Overlaps and gaps of authority are common at the local level, and framing it all is an obsession with stability. Consequently, when reports of an unusual illness connected to the Huanan Seafood Market began to appear, people were reluctant to sound the alarm. Even when information eventually filtered up to the higher levels of the health authorities, little happened, aside from official censorship. At some point, the infection numbers could no longer be ignored, and when Beijing swung into action, it moved fast, sending medical resources to the affected area and imposing a severe lockdown on Wuhan. The delays and obfuscation led to enormous damage. “No amount of investment, state-of-the-art equipment, or talent can make a difference if the public is kept uninformed and those with knowledge are not allowed to speak up or, if they do, are ignored, or even punished,” concludes Yang. Despite this essential lesson, much of the text will be a difficult read for general readers, with many detours and huge amounts of detail. The author’s careful analysis will be most useful for health professionals and policymakers.

A scholarly study of China’s pandemic response shows how trying to control information is the worst thing to do in a crisis.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940192376799
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 08/27/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
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