China News Service, March 6. According to the official Weibo news from the Beijing Municipal Health and Health Commission, 4 new cases of new coronary pneumonia were confirmed in Beijing from 05:00 to 24:00 on March 5th, all of which were imported cases from Italy and designated medical institutions. Medical treatment has been given. 3 new suspected cases and 7 close contacts were reported. One patient was discharged from the hospital.

As of 24:00 on March 5, a total of 422 confirmed cases, 298 cured cases and 8 dead cases were cured. There are 29 suspected cases. A total of 2874 close contacts have been identified, of which 368 are still in isolation medical observation. 13 confirmed cases in the Middle East, 53 in Xicheng District, 72 in Chaoyang District, 63 in Haidian District, 43 in Fengtai District, 14 in Shijingshan District, 3 in Mentougou District, 16 in Fangshan District, 19 in Tongzhou District, and 10 in Shunyi District There were 29 cases in Changping District, 39 cases in Daxing District, 7 cases in Huairou District, 7 cases in Miyun District, and 1 case in Yanqing District. There were no cases in Pinggu District, 25 cases came from outside of Beijing, and 8 cases came from overseas.

There are no new confirmed cases in 13 districts in the city for more than 14 consecutive days, specifically no reported cases in Pinggu District since the outbreak, 42 ​​days in Yanqing District, 32 days in Mentougou District, 28 days in Huairou District, 26 days in Shunyi District, and Dongcheng District. 23 days, 23 days in Miyun District, 21 days in Shijingshan District, 21 days in Daxing District, 18 days in Fangshan District, 17 days in Changping District, 15 days in Xicheng District, and 15 days in Tongzhou District.

Of the 422 confirmed cases, 204 were male cases, accounting for 48.3%, and 218 were female cases, accounting for 51.7%; the age range was 6 months to 94 years, of which 14 cases were under 5 years old, accounting for 3.3%, and 6 to 17 years old. 14 cases, accounting for 3.3%, 283 cases aged 18 to 59, accounting for 67.1%, 111 cases aged 60 and above, accounting for 26.3%.