What lessons can we learn from the second wave of coronavirus in Asia
A Life / / January 06, 2021
How the situation developed in Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan
These three areas have long been regarded as paradigms for how to deal with the coronavirus outbreak: halting the rise in infection while largely leaving the economy alone. Instead of introducing quarantine, they tested the population, identified contacts of infected people, isolated cases and tightened travel restrictions. Life did not go on quite as usual, but still did not turn into total isolation.
In recent weeks, the situation has changed: a second wave of infection has occurred in these regions. The rules have also changed. All Hong Kong residents who are now flying into the city hand overCoronavirus: Hong Kong’s screening system for airport arrivals holds lessons for travel industry in post-pandemic world saliva samples, the rest are simply prohibited from entering. These measures, together with the issuance of bracelets that track the location of arrivals, have been takenCoronavirus: HK Airport Screening System That Includes Requiring Arriving Passengers to Provide Deep-Throat Saliva Samples Holds Lessons For Travel Industry in order to try to contain a new wave of infections.
It was recorded at the end of March and was caused mainly by the return of local residents from those countries where the coronavirus raged: Great Britain, European countries, the United States. This created additional tension on the territory of Hong Kong: people blamedHong Kong Expats Point Fingers Over Who's Spreading Coronavirus returning fellow citizens in the spread of the disease. But the authorities revealedCoronavirus: 19 new Hong Kong infections linked to growing nightlife cluster, including from Lan Kwai Fong, bringing tally to 43 and small local foci of infection, including in an area famous for its nightlife. The increase in the number of cases led to the fact that meetings of more than three people were prohibited in the city, slot machine halls were closed, sports centers, cinemas, bars and restaurants. And the travel restrictions were extended indefinitely.
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Singapore, too, initially managed to avoid mass closings, but when the number of confirmed cases exceeded 1,000, the country took more stringent measures. Now you can go outside only for vital services, to visit a doctor, or to exercise alone, and you need to maintain a distance. Restaurants work only for pickup and delivery, schools are closed. This second wave of infections is associatedSingapore Battles Virus Hotspots in Migrant Workers' Dorms with poor living conditions for migrant workers.
Taiwan has not yet moved to self-isolation, but has not yet lifted strict restrictionsCOVID-19 Cases Near Zero in Taiwan, But Restrictions Remain for travel. And this may become the new norm, at least until effective and ubiquitous treatment appears, or until most people in the world develop immunity at the expense of vaccines.
What does this mean for all of us
We will have to be in self-isolation more than once.
Social distancing measures can be a tool that must be turned to again. They will be intensified and then mitigated along with new outbreaks of the virus.
As long as the disease is in one place, there is a chance that it will spread everywhere. According toLockdown Can't Last Forever. Here’s How to Lift It Hong Kong epidemiologist Gabriel Leung, everyone should prepare for several rounds of entry and release of restrictions. This is necessary so that the epidemic is under control, and the economic and social consequences are not dire.
Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan are now actually following this course, albeit to varying degrees. They use testing, identifying contacts, restrictions on movement and social distancing as a brake on which you need to press when an outbreak of infection occurs, and release when the situation returns under control.
Continuous adaptation and flexibility will be required
“Responsiveness to the epidemic is a dynamic process that needs adjustment,” said Keiji Fukuda, head of the School of Public Health at the University of Hong Kong. - Although we all hopefully return to business as soon as possible, countries are best served with dynamic monitoring and regulation until the vaccine is widely available. ”
And according to US epidemiologist Jennifer Nuzzo, an effective strategy to contain the coronavirus must include measures to deal with each case. That is, the identification and isolation of the infected, checking their contacts and further monitoring.
Of course, Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan have advantages that other countries do not have. They are relatively small in size, and Taiwan and Singapore are islands, so it is easier for them to control who crosses their borders. Plus, they've learned a lot from previous viral outbreaks. For example, Hong Kong actively invested money to be prepared for new infections after epidemics atypical pneumonia in 2004. The population is well informed and changes their habits of their own free will in addition to the officially adopted measures.
We can't give up social distancing until a vaccine or drug is available
In some form, isolation will be inevitable. “It is enough to look at the experience of the last four months in Wuhan to understand that even the most extensive measures to restrict population movement in modern history have not stopped transmission of the virus in China, ”says epidemiologist Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota.
Of course, the upcoming coronavirus antibody test will help people and authorities know who has been infected and if they have immunity. This in turn will allow many countries to reopen. But social distancing can stay with us even then. So far, no country has managed to completely prevent new outbreaks. As long as the coronavirus exists somewhere in the world, there will always be a risk of new infections.
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