No travellers from China?The imperative for developing empathetic public health policies and communication strategies post-COVID Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been a time of great changes and challenges.Among the most transferable lessons of COVID-19 is how public policies that are meant to protect global health and solidarity, especially when ill-considered or poorlydeveloped, could undermine their raison d'être.Arguably, some of the most revealing examples are centring around a key epicentre of the pandemic, China, especially during times when its public health infrastructure is under considerable duress-conditions with which many health systems have struggled and may have to confront during grave crises like pandemics.In December 2022, for instance, the Chinese government abruptly reversed its pandemic management strategy, effectively abandoning most, if not all, key 'zero-COVID' measures that have helped the country maintain a largely low COVID-19 infection or death counts for the past three years. 1The timing of the policy change-which includes the easing or lifting of measures that range from mass testing, centralized quarantine, to travel restrictions-means that many people in China had to hold (belated) celebrations for holidays such as Christmas and the Chinese Lunar New Year, and the Lantern Festival with their faraway loved ones.However, though the policy change had the potential to serve as an unadulterated source of joy for many, due to its abruptness, particularly in light of the government's lack of preparation even in critical areas such as timely pandemic communication and basic medical resources, it had triggered one of the largest outbreaks since COVID-19's emergence instead. 2 Amid the unprecedented outbreaks in China in December 2022, right after the country lifted its zero-COVID policy, for instance, approximately 1 million new infections were added in Zhejiang province alone-one of the 23 provinces in China that has a population of 65 million (in comparison, Henan Province has around 99 million people). 2 Possibly due to the alarming scale, scope, and severity of the country's COVID-19