• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Serious Many Pappys don't like OngYK..not Team player.

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK gives a simple gift. :thumbsup:

Ong Ye Kung

12 hrs ·
A simple gift for all our Public Health Preparedness Clinics (PHPCs) who have been working hard to support the national COVID-19 response.
Our PHPC clinics are still busy, but we are seeing a decline of cases in this Omicron wave.
Many thanks to all our primary care providers for stepping up and going beyond their call of duty to support this national effort

1647611090101.png
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK gives an update. :thumbsup:

Ong Ye Kung

6 hrs ·
This is an update of the COVID-19 situation.
Based on daily case counts, the Omicron wave has clearly peaked, is subsiding, and picking up pace. The week-on-week case ratio is now almost 0.7. It was over 0.9 just a few days ago.
The number hospitalised due to COVID-19 is falling gradually, with a lag compared to the fall in daily cases.
However, hospitals are still very busy and under stress, due to the large number of non-COVID related Emergency Department admissions. These are mostly patients with chronic diseases, which have worsened over the last two years as the healthcare system was so pre-occupied with fighting COVID-19. Many of these patients are admitted to hospitals with COVID-19, and not because of COVID-19.
To illustrate, out of every 100 ED patients admitted into hospital, 90-95% are for acute medical emergencies or a worsening of chronic medical conditions. Of these, around 20% had an incidental COVID-19 diagnosis. The remaining 5% were admitted for COVID-specific treatments.
At MOH, we call this the Business-As-Usual (BAU) debt, which has to be repaid. And the debt repayment is coming at us ferociously. We hope this situation will ease in the coming couple of weeks.
Week-on-week changes in daily cases, and ED hospital admissions, are two numbers that we are watching closely, as we plan our next set of easing measures.
I attached the two salient graphs.
May be an image of text that says 26000 20000 25731 23891 20152 을 10000 15119 6000 0326 198927 7639629 3017 2000 140585 12 Press Release Date 3300 Total PHI ED Attendances 3100 2900 2700 2500 Mar Mar Mar 8 Mar Mar Mar 12 Mar Mar 15 Mar

 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK was briefed. :biggrin:

Ong Ye Kung

15 hrs ·
LTA briefed me and my fellow #Sembawang GRC Advisers on the North-South Corridor recently.
It is projected to be ready in 2027, and is a collection-distribution system. That is, during morning peak; it will enable motorists in the North to enter the expressway for a smooth ride to the city, and vice versa in the evening. In between, there are much fewer entrances and exits compared to say CTE or PIE.
I took this video, and my volunteers labelled some of the landmarks in Sembawang, so that everyone can better understand the NSC’s configuration.
It is a major piece of infrastructure to serve the North of #Singapore.

 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
from straitstimes.com:

Omicron peak is over, but hospitals remain strapped due to non-Covid-19 admissions: Ong Ye Kung​


1647784253355.png


SINGAPORE - The peak of the Omicron wave is definitely over, but hospitals remain strapped largely due to non-Covid-19-related patients, said Health Minister Ong Ye Kung in a Facebook update on the local Covid-19 situation on Friday (March 18).

He said that based on daily case counts, the Omicron wave has "clearly peaked" and "is subsiding".

The week-on-week case ratio is now almost 0.7. It was over 0.9 just a few days ago, he said.

A case ratio below one shows that the number of cases has declined as compared with the previous week, and a smaller number shows a sharper drop.

Mr Ong also said that the number of people hospitalised due to Covid-19 is falling gradually, with a lag compared with the fall in daily cases.

"However, hospitals are still very busy and under stress due to the large number of non-Covid-19 related emergency department admissions," said Mr Ong.

These are mostly patients with chronic diseases, which have worsened over the last two years as the healthcare system was pre-occupied with fighting Covid-19.


Mr Ong said that 90 per cent to 95 per cent of emergency department patients admitted to hospital have acute medical emergencies or a worsening of chronic medical conditions.

Of this group, around 20 per cent had an incidental Covid-19 diagnosis - meaning that they also happened to have Covid-19.

The remaining 5 per cent were admitted for Covid-19-specific treatments.

"At the Ministry of Health, we call this the 'business-as-usual debt', which has to be repaid. And the debt repayment is coming at us ferociously," said Mr Ong, adding that the ministry hopes that the situation will ease in the coming couple of weeks.

Week-on-week changes in daily cases, and emergency hospital admissions are two numbers that the Government is watching closely as it plans the next set of easing measures, he added.

1647784311814.png
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK allows sports to resume. :thumbsup:

Ong Ye Kung

3 hrs ·
The MTF allowed sports to resume last week. This week, school re-opens, and I am sure schools will resume more sporting activities, and inter-school sports competitions.
Sports bonds people, injects good cheer all around, builds character and imparts valuable life lessons beyond the classroom, tests and exams.
These activities are integral to the holistic development of our young.
Safe playing!
1f60a.png
⚽️
1f3c0.png
1f3c8.png
1f3d0.png
1f94f.png
1f3d1.png
1f3d3.png
1f3f8.png
‍♀️

Photo credit: Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth - MCCY

1647865541999.png
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
from straitstimes.com:

Ong Ye Kung to make working trip to Kuala Lumpur​


1647957926623.png


SINGAPORE - Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung will be making a working visit to Kuala Lumpur from Wednesday to Friday (March 23 to 25).

He is making the visit at the invitation of Malaysia's Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin, said the Ministry of Health (MOH) in a statement on Tuesday.

Mr Ong, who will be accompanied by senior officials from MOH, will meet political leaders in Malaysia during the trip.

On Thursday, he will visit the National Institutes of Health, where he will deliver a keynote address.
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
from msn.com:

Ong Ye Kung: Omicron wave in SG has peaked, but hospitals still under stress​


1647964756053.png


In an update to the Covid-19 situation in Singapore, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said that the Omicron wave has reached its peak.

Daily case counts are showing that “the Omicron wave has clearly peaked,” he wrote in a Facebook post on Saturday (Mar 19). He added that the week-on-week Covid case ratio is now at nearly 0.7, while it had been over 0.9 a few days ago.

Furthermore, Mr Ong wrote that the number of people hospitalised because of COVID-19 “is falling gradually, with a lag compared to the fall in daily cases.”

He cautioned, however, that “hospitals are still very busy and under stress” because of the large number of Emergency Department admissions of cases unrelated to Covid-19.

These patients are individuals with chronic diseases that have gotten worse in the past two years while hospitals and clinics have been busy battling the pandemic.

And the Health Minister underlined the distinction that “Many of these patients are admitted to hospitals with COVID-19, and not because of COVID-19.”

To make his point even clearer, he wrote that out of every one hundred patients admitted to hospitals’ emergency departments, nearly all (90 to 95 per cent) are because of acute medical emergencies or worsening chronic medical conditions.

From among these admissions, Mr Ong added that around 20 per cent had an incidental Covid-19 diagnosis, and five per cent were admitted for Covid-specific treatments.

“At MOH, we call this the Business-As-Usual (BAU) debt, which has to be repaid. And the debt repayment is coming at us ferociously. We hope this situation will ease in the coming couple of weeks.

Week-on-week changes in daily cases, and ED hospital admissions, are two numbers that we are watching closely, as we plan our next set of easing measures,” he added, attaching two salient graphs that would illustrate this further.


Photo: FB screengrab/ongyekung
© The Independent Singapore Photo: FB screengrab/ongyekung
In its latest update on Mar 20, the Ministry of Health said that there are 7,859 new Covid-19 cases, as well as 4 deaths.

Singapore broke the one million mark recently, with a total of 1,007,158 cases reported since the pandemic began, with 1,194 deaths in all.

However, 427,897 cases were reported just in the past four weeks, 99.7 per cent of whom had no or only mild symptoms.

Singapore has one of the highest vaccine rates in the world, with 92 per cent of the country’s total population having completed the full regimen of vaccine doses. Seventy-one per cent of the total population have also received a booster shot.
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK happy to visit KL again. :wink:

Ong Ye Kung

6 hrs ·
Happy to visit KL again, and meet my counterpart, Malaysia’s Minister of Health, Yang Berhormat Tuan Khairy Jamaluddin, or Minister KJ, as he is more commonly known.
We had a fruitful and frank discussion. We agreed that #Singapore and #Malaysia enjoy excellent and longstanding bilateral relations, our peoples have many linkages and ties, but they were all disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
We also agreed that the COVID-19 situation has stabilised and is improving in both countries, and we should now work towards the full resumption of air and land travel for vaccinated persons.
This will rebuild people-to-people connections that were disrupted by COVID-19.

1648044290002.png
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
from straitstimes.com:

Singapore and Malaysia should work towards resuming air, land travel: Ong Ye Kung​


SINGAPORE - While ties between Singapore and Malaysia have been disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic, the situation has improved, and it is time for the Causeway neighbours to work towards full resumption of air and land travel for vaccinated persons, said Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung in a Facebook post on Wednesday (March 23).

He is currently visiting Malaysia, where he met the country's Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin.

"We had a fruitful and frank discussion. We agreed that Singapore and Malaysia enjoy excellent and longstanding bilateral relations, our peoples have many linkages and ties, but they were all disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic," said Mr Ong.

He added: "We also agreed that the Covid-19 situation has stabilised and is improving in both countries, and we should now work towards the full resumption of air and land travel for vaccinated persons."

He said that the resumption of air and land travel for vaccinated people will rebuild the people-to-people connections that were disrupted by the pandemic.

Mr Ong is on a working visit to Kuala Lumpur from Wednesday to Friday (March 25). He is accompanied by senior officials from the Ministry of Health.

On Thursday (March 24), he will visit the National Institutes of Health, where he will deliver a keynote address.
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK provides a summary. :thumbsup:

Ong Ye Kung

3 hrs ·
The MTF announced significant steps forward to live with COVID-19. But these announcements mark a pivoting, but not a dismantling of our COVID-19 related measures. So no Freedom Day, no totally letting our guard down.
From 29 March, we will be adjusting our SMM 1-5:
1f51f.png
Group size will increase from 5 to 10 pax. Number of unique visitors per household will also be 10 pax at any one time.
1f637.png
Mask-wearing will be optional in outdoor settings (eg parks, zoo, beach, sidewalks, bus stops, void decks). It is still required for indoors settings (eg office, malls, hawker centres, coffeeshops).
‍
‍
Up to 75% of employees who are able to work from home can return to the workplace.
1f6ab.png
1m safe distance will still be required for mask-off settings.
1f3df.png
Capacity limit for large events and settings (more than 1,000 pax, mask-on) will increase to 75%.
Separately, borders will be substantially opened. This includes the Causeway, from 1 Apr 2022. Singing will now be allowed, and no more limiting drinking and sale of alcohol to 10.30pm.
With each step, we will monitor and move further based on the science and data. With everyone’s trust and support, we will continue to make good progress.
May be an image of 3 people and nature

 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
OYK had a very fruitful trip to KL. :thumbsup:

Ong Ye Kung

3 hrs ·
On my way to KLIA as I end a short but very fruitful trip to KL.
Many thanks to Minister KJ (Khairy Jamaluddin) for inviting me, and all our Malaysian friends for being such gracious hosts throughout our stay. I am especially thankful to PM Dato’ Sri Ismail Sabri Yaakob for meeting me and my delegation, in the midst of Parliament sitting.
As our countries reconnect, hope to be able to reciprocate the hospitality in #Singapore soon.

1648214610663.png
 
Top