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Re: Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan too

March 14, 2020 02:53PM
Each is a unique situation.

Though all 3 are islands, which makes a difference.

The key in all 3 cases was acting decisively, early.

Quote

, [www.nytimes.com]

Singapore, an island, could readily take aggressive measures to block the arrival of the infection from China — and it did. Three days after the Chinese authorities alerted the world about the outbreak in Wuhan, Singapore started referring inbound travelers from Wuhan with a fever and respiratory symptoms for further assessment and isolation. It was also one of the first countries to cancel all inbound flights from Wuhan after identifying its first imported case.

Travelers coming from affected areas were placed under mandatory quarantine; three university hostels were promptly converted into facilities to host them. The government compensated individuals and employers for any workdays lost.

The Singapore authorities undertook especially intensive efforts to trace the contacts of people known to be infected. Hospital staff went to great lengths to interview patients about their recent whereabouts; when information was unclear or unavailable, the Ministry of Health retrieved additional data from transport companies and hotels, including by consulting CCTV footage.

Large gatherings have been suspended. But to minimize social and economic costs, schools and workplaces have remained open. The Singaporean Ministry of Education — on an extensive FAQs web page — calls the closing of schools “a major, major decision” that would “disrupt many lives.” Instead, students and staff are subjected to daily health checks, including temperature screenings.

Public-health campaigns were also reinforced to further improve Singapore’s already exemplary standards of cleanliness and public hygiene. A special government task force recently recommended five personal hygiene habits:using a tissue when coughing or sneezing; using designated serving spoons during group meals; using trays when eating or drinking to limit contamination in case of spills; keeping public toilets clean and dry; and regular hand washing. From the outset, the government has recommended the use of masks only for people who already are unwell.

Taiwan, also an island, took a slightly different tack. Instead of promptly banning travel from China, it undertook a comprehensive effort to screen newcomers from suspect areas. As soon as early January — just days after the news of the outbreak in Wuhan — Taiwanese medical authorities would board incoming flights from Wuhan and inspect and screen travelers on the planes.

It was only after the first imported case was identified on Jan. 21 that four major airlines suspended flights between Taiwan and Wuhan. A ban on all but flights from Beijing, Shanghai, Xiamen and Chengdu was implemented three weeks later.

Taiwan has also taken a rather mixed approach in its efforts to reduce transmission within the community.

Some state-run facilities have been used for quarantines, but home quarantine has been the predominant method of isolation even when state facilities were available. To ensure compliance, the government has enforced strict penalties against anyone who breaks an isolation order, including fines up to about $33,200.

Organizers of mass events were encouraged to defer or cancel events; some religious institutions suspended services. It was announced that elementary schools and high schools would remain closed after the end of the Lunar New Year holidays, but only for two weeks. In fact, classes resumed on Feb. 25.

The Taiwanese authorities also oversaw the controlled distribution of surgical masks from existing stockpiles through community stores, having also fixed their price. Taiwan’s main health messages — “Wear a surgical mask when coughing or sneezing,” “Wash hands thoroughly with soap” and “Avoid crowded places, including hospitals” — were displayed prominently on the Centers for Disease Control’s website.

As of Friday, about 58 percent of all confirmed cases in Taiwan were believed to have resulted from local transmission. This is an important marker of success for Taiwan’s containment strategy: In many other places, local cases outnumbered imported infections by a far greater margin.

Hong Kong adopted yet another approach, presumably in part because, unlike Taiwan and Singapore, the city shares a border with mainland China and is formally part of China, as a Special Administrative Region. (An average of 300,000 people crossed the border every day last year.) The authorities here focused less on completely blocking the entry of possibly infected people into the territory than on preventing transmission within the community.

On Jan. 3 — again, very soon after the first declared case in Wuhan — existing temperature-screening stations at ports of entry were expanded, and local clinicians were asked to report to the city’s health authorities any patient with a fever or acute respiratory symptoms and a history of recent travel to Wuhan.

But it took five days after the first imported case for travel restrictions to be placed on visitors from Wuhan and other affected areas and for six of the territory’s 14 border crossings with the mainland to be closed. (Another five crossings were closed later.) The number of visitors to Hong Kong from mainland China fell to a daily average of 750 in February.

Starting on Feb. 5, anyone coming across the border — or arriving from elsewhere who had been in mainland China in the preceding 14 days — was required to undergo a mandatory 14-day period of self-quarantine.

Extensive efforts have also been made to track down and quarantine the close contacts of confirmed cases. And in the event transmission might occur before an infected person displayed any symptoms, tracing included all contacts starting two days before the onset of the patient’s illness.

Of Hong Kong’s 40,000 hospital beds, some 1,000 are negative-pressure beds, allowing confirmed cases to be properly isolated. Holiday camps and newly constructed public-housing units that were still vacant were rapidly repurposed into quarantine facilities.

As of March 12, 62 of the city’s 131 confirmed cases were thought to have resulted from close contact with other confirmed cases. More than 24,700 people were still under quarantine this week.

Hong Kong has also deployed very extensive measures to encourage social distancing. As early as Jan. 28, many civil servants were asked to work from home for the following month. Most large-scale events have been canceled or postponed. On Jan. 27, all kindergartens and schools were closed until Feb. 16; the decision was extended several times, most recently to at least April 20. Many classes have been conducted online.

Although it’s still not clear whether or how much children contract and spread Covid-19, they are known major contributors to the transmission of influenza, and Hong Kong has been effective in stemming outbreaks of the flu by suspending classes four times over the past 12 years (in 2008, 2009, 2018 and 2019). Closing schools is a very invasive measure, but Hong Kong has a social structure that helps cushion some of the burden: Many families with two working parents already rely on domestic helpers or grandparents for child care.

The government has mounted a public-education campaign to promote hand hygiene and environmental hygiene. Nearly everyone in Hong Kong wears a face mask in public.

And now, the caveats. Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong, as well as China, all had to contend with the SARS outbreak of 2002-3 and they internalized the lessons of that experience. Institutionally, this has meant, among other things, that they developed testing capacity for new viruses as well as hospitals’ ability to handle patients with novel respiratory pathogens. At the individual level, the experience of SARS has prepared people to voluntarily display a tremendous amount of self-discipline in, say, avoiding crowds and heightening their personal hygiene. These places were better equipped to face an outbreak of the new coronavirus than many others.

At the same time, if the inroads Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong — China, too — have made against Covid-19 are promising, these gains also are fragile. These governments will need to keep at their containment measures for many more months or else risk a surge in infections. Taiwan seems especially vulnerable because it appears not to be testing people enough.

The Chinese government has taken something of a victory lap recently, prematurely. But even it seems to know that, despite its bluster: Judging from bans China is now imposing on travelers from certain European countries, it is well aware that cases of infection could be reintroduced from abroad.

Containment, however valiant an aim, also comes with very high costs, social and economic, and it might be an impossible goal for some countries, especially by now. In some places, Covid-19 could already be too widespread to be stopped. The vast majority of infections still appear to be mild, though; many might not even require medical attention. In such cases, it would be better to forgo trying to contain the disease and instead focus on mitigating its worst effects, for example, by concentrating resources on preventing an overwhelming surge in demand for hospital care, particularly intensive care.

Still, the central point is this: Each in its own way, Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong — three places with markedly different socioeconomic and political features — have been able to interrupt the chain of the disease’s transmission. And they have done so without embracing the highly disruptive, drastic measures adopted by China. Their success suggests that other governments can make headway, too.
























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Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 03/14/2020 03:04PM by zn.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

  Rams cancel pre draft visits............

IowaRam752March 12, 2020 04:36PM

  This seems like a silly decision, frankly.

Rams43320March 12, 2020 06:47PM

  Re: This seems like a silly decision, frankly.

XXXIVwin424March 12, 2020 10:35PM

  Re: This seems like a silly decision, frankly.

AlbaNY_Ram290March 13, 2020 04:16AM

  I've been reading and keeping quiet

RamUK343March 13, 2020 05:23AM

  people are not taking this seriously enough & it AIN'T a media thing

zn303March 13, 2020 10:13AM

  Looks like a media thing to me---- it AIN'T a media thing

Steve237March 14, 2020 08:12AM

  ? I didn't follow that at all

zn232March 14, 2020 10:15AM

  Amazing-isn't it ?

waterfield319March 14, 2020 10:51AM

  Link

MamaRAMa205March 14, 2020 08:16AM

  Re: Link

zn205March 14, 2020 10:21AM

  Re: Link

MamaRAMa199March 14, 2020 10:32AM

  Re: Link

zn211March 14, 2020 10:36AM

  Re: This seems like a silly decision, frankly.

ramBRO285March 13, 2020 06:41AM

  Here’s what I think...

Rams43283March 13, 2020 08:33AM

  An article addressing your questions

waterfield259March 13, 2020 08:43AM

  Re: An article addressing your questions

Rams43258March 13, 2020 08:50AM

  This from the Stanford Hospital Board

waterfield302March 13, 2020 08:57AM

  Re: This from the Stanford Hospital Board

MamaRAMa228March 13, 2020 10:14AM

  the Stanford thing is fake

zn287March 13, 2020 10:19AM

  Actual Qs and As from Stanford Health Dept

waterfield230March 13, 2020 01:25PM

  Re: Actual Qs and As from Stanford Health Dept

zn359March 13, 2020 02:14PM

  Thoughts and prayers for your family Waterfield

Rams Junkie202March 16, 2020 09:43AM

  She's fine

waterfield272March 16, 2020 12:44PM

  Thats great news Waterfield

Deadpool177March 16, 2020 12:48PM

  +1 nm

21Dog277March 16, 2020 12:58PM

  Re: You're right but...

dzrams229March 13, 2020 08:52AM

  Re: You're right but...

Rams43258March 13, 2020 09:19AM

  Are you in denial 43?

RamUK265March 13, 2020 08:58AM

  Re: Here’s what I think...

ramBRO236March 13, 2020 09:09AM

  Re: Here’s what I think...

Rams43308March 13, 2020 09:23AM

  Re: Here’s what I think...

AlbaNY_Ram214March 13, 2020 01:30PM

  Re: Here’s what I think...

ramBRO193March 13, 2020 01:54PM

  Amen(nm)

waterfield178March 13, 2020 02:03PM

  Re: yup

Speed_Kills192March 14, 2020 05:32AM

  You cannot cut red tape on clinical trials

RamUK196March 14, 2020 05:29AM

  and yet despite the vaccine for the flu

ferragamo79205March 13, 2020 06:39PM

  Re: Agreed 43

merlin219March 13, 2020 09:34AM

  "A year from now people will see this for what it is..."

RAMbler254March 13, 2020 12:48PM

  Re: "A year from now people will see this for what it is..."

merlin242March 13, 2020 01:20PM

  Funny you mention WWII

DaJudge369March 13, 2020 10:23AM

  Re: Funny you mention WWII

Rams43249March 13, 2020 11:44AM

  Re: Funny you mention WWII

zn206March 14, 2020 05:24AM

  Re: 43 what in the world man

Speed_Kills197March 14, 2020 05:34AM

  Re: Here’s what I think...

rampage666651March 14, 2020 09:37AM

  This is simple for me...

max236March 14, 2020 04:55AM

  Re: This is simple for me...

LMU93261March 15, 2020 06:59AM

  already 68000 people have recovered

ferragamo79280March 13, 2020 06:41PM

  but to do that China had to take drastic measures

zn385March 14, 2020 04:06AM

  Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan too

ferragamo79260March 14, 2020 02:26PM

  Re: Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan too

zn226March 14, 2020 02:53PM