Analysis-Vaccinated Singapore shows zero-COVID countries cost of
reopening
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[October 22, 2021]
By Aradhana Aravindan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Few are left to
inoculate in wealthy Singapore after a vigorous campaign achieved a
level of coverage envied by many nations battling the coronavirus
pandemic, but a record surge in deaths and infections gives warning of
risks that may still lie ahead.
Despite mask mandates, strict social curbs and COVID-19 booster doses
available for over a month, infections in the Asian city-state's latest
outbreak, driven by the Delta variant, took the death toll to 280, up
from 55 early in September.
"Singapore may potentially experience two to three epidemic waves as
measures are increasingly relaxed," said Alex Cook, a disease modelling
expert at the National University of Singapore (NUS).
"Until then, deaths will probably continue to rise, unless many of the
residual unvaccinated elders can be vaccinated or more get their booster
shot."
Cook expects the current wave to subside as the population builds up
immunity, with most infections mild enough for recovery at home.
Singapore is one of several so-called COVID-zero countries that enforced
some of the world's strictest measures to hold infections and deaths far
below the tallies elsewhere.
That was part of a strategy of waiting until a vast majority of its 5.5
million citizens had been vaccinated before gradually easing curbs and
resuming more economic activity.
Now it is slowly re-opening its borders, expanding quarantine-free
travel to nearly a dozen countries. Australia and New Zealand have begun
a similar transition, while China has yet to move ahead.
But the question authorities face is how to avert surges among older
people and those with weak immune systems, particularly after the
fast-spreading Delta, which arrived in Singapore this year, became the
most dominant strain globally.
"If I were a policymaker in Australia, New Zealand or China, I'd be
studying what has happened in Singapore," Cook said.
Although 84% of Singapore residents have been fully vaccinated, most
with doses from Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna, the vaccines may not protect
some of the most vulnerable.
Fully vaccinated people made up about 30% of deaths over the last month,
most older than 60 with underlying medical woes, in line with studies
showing that vaccines offer less protection to the old and very ill.
But Singapore's rolling seven-day average of 1.77 daily deaths per
million people outstrips regional peers such as Japan with 0.14, South
Korea with 0.28, and Australia with 0.58, the website Our World in Data
shows.
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Passengers from Amsterdam arrive at Changi Airport under Singapore’s
expanded Vaccinated Travel Lane (VTL) quarantine-free travel scheme,
as the city-state opens its borders to more countries amidst the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Singapore October 20,
2021. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo
It trails the U.S. figure of 4.96, and Britain's
1.92.
Yet cumulative deaths as a share of population still rate among the
world's lowest, at 47.5 per million. That compares with figures of
2,825.7 in Brazil and 2,202.4 in the United States.
DELTA CHANGED EVERYTHING
Following an easing of curbs in August, Singapore's latest wave has
led to daily infections this week of nearly 4,000, or nearly three
times higher than last year's peak.
During most of the pandemic, the tough curbs held down infections,
but their effectiveness against Delta seems to be waning, experts
have said, though the high vaccination rate means nearly all cases
are asymptomatic or mild.
"Most of our deaths come from the very small percentage of
unvaccinated people," said Dale Fisher, an expert on infectious
diseases at the National University Hospital.
"The reality is that as COVID becomes endemic more and more people
will get COVID."
Singapore will extend some of its social-distancing curbs for about
a month to ease pressure on the healthcare system, authorities said
this week.
Now, with barely anyone older than 12 left to vaccinate, they are
focusing on booster doses. More than 600,000 individuals have
received one, as authorities target those older than 30, beyond the
elderly and healthcare workers.
Measures just short of mandatory vaccinations, such as barring
dining out and entry to shopping malls for the unvaccinated, helped
push the number of those getting their first dose to 17,000 last
week, up 54% from a week before.
"I do not think that easing of restrictions is going to have any
impact on the case numbers," said Paul Tambyah, president of the
Asia Pacific Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infection.
"The key remains to reach the remaining unvaccinated seniors and
protect the vulnerable."
(Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan in Singapore; Editing by Miyoung
Kim and Clarence Fernandez)
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