Analysis-Clear roadmap needed for Hong Kong's revival as COVID sweeps
through city -experts
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[March 17, 2022] By
Farah Master
HONG KONG (Reuters) - In just under two
months, Hong Kong went from being one of the best places in the world at
controlling COVID-19 to one of the worst.
Deaths have skyrocketed, the health system is swamped, morgues are
overflowing and public confidence in the city government is at an
all-time low.
While the government sticks to a "zero-COVID" policy similar to that of
mainland China, city leader Carrie Lam hinted on Thursday she could ease
restrictions amid concerns over the city's status as a global financial
hub.
But with infections spilling over on to the mainland and local cases
hovering around 30,000 per day among a population of just 7.4 million,
there needs to be a clear exit strategy, in line with learning to live
with the virus, like other major cities, rather than trying to eradicate
it, health experts say.
Densely populated Hong Kong has registered the most deaths per million
people globally in recent weeks – more than 24 times that of rival
Singapore - due to a large proportion of elderly who were unvaccinated
as the highly transmissible Omicron variant ripped through care homes
since February.
The tragedy could have been avoided had, experts say, authorities
offered incentives for vaccinations and used medical resources more
effectively to prepare for COVID-19, which was first identified in late
2019 in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
"The disaster unfolding within our hospital system is predictable,
preventable and political," said Dr David Owens, a founder of OT&P
clinics and an honorary clinical assistant professor in family medicine
at the University of Hong Kong.
Lam's administration has been lambasted repeatedly by politicians,
pro-Beijing media and on Chinese social media, just weeks before the
city is due to hold an election on May 8 to choose who will lead the
territory for the next five years.
Businesses and residents are frustrated at what they see as constant
mixed messaging from the government and measures which have heavily
disrupted business and damaged the economy for much of the past two
years.
Tens of thousands have left, with net outflows showing an exodus of more
than 45,000 people so far in March, compared with nearly 17,000 in
December before the fifth wave of the pandemic hit, prompting fears for
Hong Kong's longer-term competitiveness.
LIVING WITH COVID
Lam has yet to give guidance for how Hong Kong can resume some semblance
of normality, despite daily press briefings where she discusses details
from sewage testing to thanking mainland authorities for their support.
The former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997.
"Hong Kong was certainly not ready when we entered into the fifth wave
as evidently shown, but let’s see whether we can get better prepared for
that eventuality of that transition towards normality,” said Gabriel
Leung, University of Hong Kong’s dean of medicine and a government
adviser on the pandemic.
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Workers move coffins as mortuaries run short of coffins amid
Shenzhen lockdown during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic
in Hong Kong, China, March 16, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo
Leung said Hong Kong needed to
decide whether it was going to stick with its "zero-COVID" policy,
or try to live with it as an endemic.
"We need to be doing all that heavy thinking process now. Because
you have to make plans accordingly."
Even if the government were to stick with zero-COVID by mass testing
and extensive contact tracing, Hong Kong would still need to
transition to living with the virus eventually, the experts said.
About half of the city's residents have likely already been
infected, according to a study from the University of Hong Kong this
week.
Increasing vaccinations to over 90% from about 80% currently is key,
while protecting the most vulnerable, like those in nursing homes,
the experts said. Currently only 56% of those over 80 have been
vaccinated.
With residents developing immunity from vaccinations and infections,
it’s likely that future outbreaks will be less severe, said Dr.
Siddharth Sridhar, clinical assistant professor of Microbiology at
the University of Hong Kong.
“So that gives us a certain degree of freedom in terms of opening up
more and having more reasonable travel restrictions that what we
have seen before.”
Hong Kong has implemented its most draconian measures since the
pandemic began in 2020.
Flights from nine countries, including the United States and
Britain, are banned. Inbound travellers who test negative on arrival
must stay in a hotel for 14 days, a harsher rule than for an
infected resident who needs to isolate for seven days until testing
negative.
Both rules have no scientific basis and should be lifted
immediately, some experts said.
Social distancing measures, such as a ban on public gatherings of
more than two people, the closure of most venues and a curfew on
restaurant dining past 6 p.m., could also be progressively relaxed,
said epidemiologist Ben Cowling.
Hong Kong could aim to do what Singapore has done so that after
"three to six months, where all those measures have been relaxed, it
is simply up to individuals to manage their own risks and there is
no need for community-wide policies".
(Additional reporting by James Pomfret; Editing by Anne Marie
Roantree and Nick Macfie)
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