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The shit created by the PAP government because they refused to close the borders with India

sinkies brace yourself for a tsunami of covids 1671s
brace yourself for a big big bang
yes cuntinue to import
yes cuntinue to open our borders
yes cuntinue to admit ....more and more 1671s
 
9,000 workers at Changi Airport have to be swabbed.

Swabbing under way at Changi Airport after 8 workers test positive for Covid-19
1 of 2
dummy.gif

People seen entering and queuing at the swabbing facility at Terminal 4, Changi Airport on May 10, 2021.

People seen entering and queuing at the swabbing facility at Terminal 4, Changi Airport on May 10, 2021.ST PHOTO: TIMOTHY DAVID
Ang Qing and Timothy David

May 10, 2021

SINGAPORE - Airport workers turned up at Changi Airport on Monday morning (May 10) for a special Covid-19 testing operation for about 9,000 workers, to find hidden cases.
This comes after four workers were reported to have Covid-19 on Sunday (May 9), bringing the cluster at Changi Airport to eight.
All workers at Changi Airport's operating terminals will be tested, said the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) and Changi Airport Group (CAG) on Sunday night.
Food and beverage and retail outlets at Basement 2 of Terminal 3 (T3) have also been closed to the public as of Monday, and all staff also have to test negative for Covid-19 before their outlets are allowed to reopen.
Some airport staff said they had been notified only on Monday morning about the swabbing exercise.
The first case in this cluster was detected last Wednesday (May 5), when an 88-year-old cleaner tested positive for Covid-19.

Certis Cisco staff and construction workers were among those lining up at the swabbing facility at Terminal 4 on Monday morning.
People were seen arriving on shuttle buses from Terminal 3 and public buses.
An airport worker member who had been swabbed told The Straits Times: "I am worried but I'm glad that I can be swabbed immediately.
"Hopefully my results will come out negative," said the 35-year-old, who declined to be named.

Vaccinated front-line airport workers, who were earlier placed on 28-day rostered routine testing, will now be tested every 14 days instead.
"Whilst 92 per cent of front-line aviation workers have been vaccinated, the risk of infection remains", CAAS and CAG said.
Six of the eight people linked to the Changi Airport cluster are fully vaccinated.
Four cases in the cluster were cleaners from Ramky Cleantech Services, the main cleaning contractor for T3. The company has been placed on a 14-day "safety time-out" from Monday.
As several Covid-19 cases had visited outlets in T3's Basement 2, the floor has been closed to the public from Monday, pending MOH's investigations.

eb_airport1_051022.jpg
Cleaners cleaning at B2 level at Changi Airport Terminal 3, on May 10, 2021. ST PHOTO: TIMOTHY DAVID


When food and beverage and retail outlets in T3's Basement 2 reopen, they will be allowed to provide take-away orders only to airport staff. Dining in will not be allowed, except in special allocated areas for airport workers who are unable to consume their meals at their place of work, said CAAS and CAG on Sunday night.
CAG said it will be contacting affected tenants directly. During this period, menus from the affected outlets may not be available on Changi Eats, Changi Airport's food delivery service.
 
Tens of thousands of hospital staff needs to be swabbed

Hospitals in Singapore embark on mass Covid-19 swabbing of staff
Singapore General Hospital has followed suit on the testing.

Singapore General Hospital has followed suit on the testing.PHOTO: SINGAPORE GENERAL HOSPITAL/FACEBOOK
joyceteo.png

Joyce Teo

May 10, 2021


SINGAPORE - Many hospitals in Singapore have begun swabbing all staff to detect Covid-19 cases, if any, as early as possible.
At the same time, patient-facing staff, particularly those who work in emergency departments and wards, will continue to be tested regularly as part of a nationwide initiative for all hospitals.
This follows the emergence of a Covid-19 cluster at Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH), which has since grown to be the country's largest active cluster, with 43 cases currently.
The cluster has been linked to a new variant of the coronavirus first identified in India, which is now in the grip of a devastating second wave of the disease.
TTSH ceased taking in new patients because of the cluster.
The mass swabbing drive, in which front-liners such as doctors, nurses and therapists are expected to be tested first, could be completed by the end of the month.

Last Friday (May 7), Sengkang General Hospital (SKH), which has a staff strength of close to 3,900, was the first hospital to kick off the exercise.
Senior management were among the first to be tested. All staff, including doctors, nurses, allied health professionals and administrators, will eventually be swabbed as well as those working in the hospital as housekeepers.
Singapore General Hospital (SGH), which has followed suit on the testing, said in a Facebook post on Monday that it has started a one-off Covid-19 swab testing of staff, as well as on-site vendors, service partners and others who work in the hospital, as part of its proactive staff surveillance. Those in patient-facing roles will also be swabbed regularly, it said in the post.
SGH said it is embarking on the exercise because no amount of stringent measures can keep the coronavirus out of the hospital if silent infections are not rooted out.
SKH and SGH come under SingHealth, which is extending the swabbing exercise to all its hospitals and speciality centres such as the National Cancer Centre Singapore, National Heart Centre Singapore and the Singapore National Eye Centre.
Hospitals under the National University Health System are expected to start the swabbing exercise from Tuesday, while those under the National Healthcare Group should be starting soon as well.
Private hospitals are also understood to be doing the same. IHH Healthcare Singapore, which has hospitals such as Mount Elizabeth Hospital and Gleneagles Hospital, started the mass swabbing on May 10. Raffles Hospital aims to start swabbing staff some time this week.
 
All these measures are futile. The virus is still going to spread regardless of what humans do.

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 190 tries.


In December, 2020, Israel initiated a national campaign to vaccinate its population with Pfizer–BioNTech's mRNA COVID-19 vaccine BNT162b2 (tozinameran). Israel's Ministry of Health recommended a two-dose schedule with a 21-day interval between doses. Israel delivered more than 10 million doses within 4 months; by April 19, 2021, 54% of the entire population of 9·1 million people, and 88% of people aged 50 years or older, had received two doses.
1
Factors contributing to Israel's rapid roll-out include its small geographical and population sizes; advanced information technology that allowed prioritisation, allocation, and documentation of vaccines for eligible individuals; effective cooperation between government and community-based health funds, which were charged with providing vaccines to those they insured; and experience in rapid large-scale emergency responses.
2
Vaccines were rolled out around the time of Israel's third and largest wave of SARS-CoV-2 infections, with a peak 7-day moving average of 8328 new infections per day, which resulted in a 2-month national lockdown. Thus, Israel's setting provided a robust platform on which to examine vaccine effectiveness and the impact of high vaccine coverage in real-life conditions at a national level. From March, 2021, onwards, Israel reported a rapid decline in COVID-19 cases across all age groups, despite the easing of lockdown restrictions and reopening of education and commerce. By April 19, 2021, the 7-day moving average of new cases dropped to 149 per day, indicating effective control of the pandemic within the country's borders.
1
,
3
The marked reduction in new cases prompted the Israeli Government to ease nationwide restrictions, including the discontinuation of face covering use in open spaces.
View related content for this article
In The Lancet, Eric Haas and colleagues report on a nationwide observational study of the impact and vaccine effectiveness of BNT162b2 in Israel.
3
Israel's Ministry of Health used aggregated data from the national SARS-CoV-2 surveillance and vaccination programme dataset to compare infection and disease incidence between vaccinated and unvaccinated people. Overall, of 232 268 SARS-CoV-2 infections during the study period (Jan 24 to April 3, 2021), 154 648 (66·6%) occurred in people aged 16 years or older and were included in the analyses (of which 20·4% were in the Arab sector, 15·7% in the ultra-Orthodox sector, and 63·9% in the general Jewish [non-ultra-Orthodox] sector). Adjusted estimates of vaccine effectiveness at 7 days or longer after the second dose were 95·3% (95% CI 94·9–95·7) against SARS-CoV-2 infection, 91·5% (90·7–92·2) against asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, 97·0% (96·7–97·2) against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, 97·2% (96·8–97·5) against COVID-19-related hospitalisation, 97·5% (97·1–97·8) against severe or critical COVID-19-related hospitalisation, and 96·7% (96·0–97·3) against COVID-19-related death. Vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, COVID-19-related hospitalisation, and COVID-19-related death exceeded 96% across all age groups, including older adults (aged ≥75 years and ≥85 years). These results closely mirror the efficacy estimates of the BNT162b2 vaccine reported in the phase 3 trial.
4
The strengths of the study include its nationwide design, mandatory routine reporting of new infections and of vaccination status to the national dataset, large sample size, exclusive use of BNT162b2, and occurrence of a highly efficient vaccine roll-out during peak transmission of SARS-CoV-2, which resulted in high vaccination coverage of most of the adult population. However, several limitations should be considered when interpreting the results. First, social desirability bias affecting symptom questionnaire respondents and presymptomatic infections at the time of questioning could have contributed to an overestimation of vaccine effectiveness against asymptomatic infection. Additionally, patients with COVID-19 who reported symptoms were defined as asymptomatic if they did not report fever or respiratory symptoms. This unorthodox case definition might have resulted in a substantial overestimation of vaccine effectiveness against asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection.
5
Second, during early 2021, the B.1.1.7 variant of SARS-CoV-2 was estimated to account for 95% of cases in Israel, and the results thus indicate that the vaccine was effective against this variant of concern. However, the study did not report on effectiveness against other variants of concern, such as B.1.351 and P.1. Concerns regarding breakthrough infections were recently raised as a case-cohort study from Israel reported a disproportionally high infection rate with the B.1.351 variant in fully vaccinated compared with unvaccinated individuals.
6
Nevertheless, the incidence of B.1.351 infection in Israel to date remains low. Rapid mass vaccination coupled with non-pharmaceutical interventions
7
might have successfully controlled its spread.
Haas and colleagues' findings from Israel suggest that high vaccine coverage rates could offer a way out of the pandemic.
5
,
8
Regrettably, rapid population level coverage cannot be easily replicated in many other countries. The global use of the BNT162b2 vaccine is limited by supply issues, high costs, and ultra-cold chain storage requirements. Global COVID-19 vaccine roll-out has been sluggish, and vaccine distribution is inequitable despite the achievements of COVAX, mainly due to the lack of adequate manufacturing scalability.
9
,
10
Rapid expansion of deployment of other effective vaccines with more achievable cold chain storage requirements remains an urgent global priority.
9
Facing such challenges, alternative approaches must be considered to allow rapid protection of at-risk populations against severe COVID-19. One such approach is deferring the second dose to accelerate and maximise coverage of the first dose in the population. Indeed, the situation in Scotland looks promising: the first dose of BNT162b2 was associated with a vaccine effectiveness of 91% (85–94) for COVID-19-related hospitalisation at 28–34 days post-vaccination.
11
Israel's robust dataset could allow further assessment and corroboration of first-dose short-term effectiveness and lead other countries to considering deferring the second vaccine dose.
3
Post-introduction vaccine effectiveness studies such as those from Israel
3
and the UK
5
,
11
will gain increasing importance in augmenting the current evidence, which has so far been based only on data from phase 3 efficacy trials. WHO has published a best practice guidance document on how to conduct vaccine effectiveness assessments using observational study designs.
12
Israel's experience provides impetus for countries to proactively pursue high vaccine coverage to protect the population;
8
however, rollout would need to follow the WHO prioritisation roadmap to maximise the public health impact, in light of vaccine supply constraints. More post-introduction vaccine effectiveness studies will be required. Timely reporting of vaccine effectiveness against variants of concern, the duration of protection across age groups and geographical settings, and the effectiveness of alternative dosing regimens is crucial to provide data-driven immunisation policies.
12
Figure thumbnail fx1


 
These measures are pure comedy but with absolutely no effect on reality.

They remind me of this...




What is pure comedy is you trying to beat your worthless drum on a has been failure of a forum that lost its purpose long ago

And now a very stupid person with a keyboard is all that's left.

Your Indians here appreciate your efforts
 
Now we need a hero to fuck Loong to step down, incompetent...

If the hero get sued for defamation We can crowdfund him.... 患乱出英雄

Enjoy while it last....
 
Singaporeans turned away from hospitals and treatment delayed because hospitals need to reserve beds for covid-19 cases.

Hospitals reduce non-urgent surgery to prepare for surge in Covid-19 cases in S'pore
Most hospitals are reducing non-urgent surgery.

Most hospitals are reducing non-urgent surgery.ST PHOTO: MOHD KHALID BABA
joyceteo.png

Joyce Teo


MAY 5, 2021

SINGAPORE - Most hospitals are reducing non-urgent surgery as they ramp up capacity to prepare for a rise in Covid-19 cases but life-saving treatment for afflictions like cancer or stroke will not be affected.
All hospitals were asked on Monday (May 3) to defer non-urgent surgery and appointments at specialist outpatient clinics until further notice.
The authorities are on the alert as worrisome new variants of Covid-19 are spreading fast in the community.
The number of new community cases had risen to 64 in the past week, from 11 the week before, noted the Ministry of Health (MOH) on Tuesday.
It added that 10 cases of the variants spreading in India have been identified here; half are part of Singapore's largest active cluster at Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH). TTSH has ceased taking in new patients as it focuses on containing the spread and caring for existing patients.
Professor Terrance Chua, the group chairman of SingHealth's medical board, said its institutions will be temporarily deferring non-urgent surgery, admissions and specialist outpatient clinic appointments until further notice.

Singapore General Hospital (SGH) and Changi General Hospital are among the hospitals under SingHealth.
"The rescheduling of procedures and appointments will only be done for non-urgent cases which our clinical teams have reviewed to be safe for a temporary deferment," said Prof Chua.
He said patients will be contacted, adding: "We are also working closely with them to arrange teleconsultations and alternative care arrangements where suitable."
Professor Fong Kok Yong, co-chair of the SingHealth Disease Outbreak Taskforce, said hospitals are prepared to increase capacity as necessary: "Besides our existing isolation facilities and the possibility of converting existing wards, we also have dedicated facilities that can support the care of Covid-19 patients."

SGH has 50 isolation units at Ward @ Bowyer that opened last July, while its Bright Vision community hospital continues to receive clinically stable Covid-19 patients who require inpatient care, he said.
There's a sense of deja vu at the hospitals, which started to defer non-urgent or elective procedures some time in February last year before gradually resuming around the end of the April-June circuit breaker period.
The hospitals will assess which non-urgent appointments to defer. While it's not clear which ones will be deferred, they could include complex, open surgery such as those for the prostate or spine, or total knee replacement done for elderly patients, who may require a few days in hospital.
Some private hospitals are also helping with Singapore's Covid-19 fight.
Dr Noel Yeo, chief operating officer of IHH Healthcare Singapore, said it is managing its surgical and admission loads in consultation with doctors "so as to avail capacity, resources and manpower to support our colleagues in the public sector". It has committed up to 70 beds in three hospitals for Covid-19 patients.
Raffles Hospital, too, is involved.

Health Minister Gan Kim Yong told a briefing on Tuesday that MOH is preparing the healthcare system for any potential rise in community cases and new clusters as it continues to test and contain the TTSH cluster. He said: "We hope it will not happen, but we must be prepared for it."
There are 131 Covid-19 patients in hospitals around the city, including two in intensive care.
This is how they prepare since SARS? By turning sick people a way? :thumbsdown:
 
More than 25,000 tested! What a monumental waste of money, time and resources.

Just because the PAP government continues to allow travellers in from India.

How many foreign workers came in during this period? A few hundred.

How much can a few hundred foreign workers add to economic activity (construction)? Is the value-added from these few hundred workers greater than the cost to the entire population (swabbing, quarantine costs, lockdown)?

Over 25,000 tested as part of efforts to detect cases linked to TTSH Covid-19 cluster: Gan Kim Yong
People queueing to take Covid-19 tests at the former Da Qiao Primary School in Ang Mo Kio on May 4, 2021.
People queueing to take Covid-19 tests at the former Da Qiao Primary School in Ang Mo Kio on May 4, 2021. PHOTO: ST FILE
yuesin.png

Yuen Sin

May 11, 2021

SINGAPORE - As at Monday (May 10), close to 12,500 people have been tested as part of special testing operations carried out to detect any cases linked to the Tan Tock Seng Hopsital (TTSH) cluster.
Additionally, 12,000 TTSH staff, 1,000 patients as well as close to 2,500 individuals who have been quarantined have also been tested, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said in Parliament on Tuesday.
Giving an update on the cluster, Mr Gan stressed that though the first detected case of the cluster was a staff nurse who developed symptoms on April 28 and dutifully reported them, this does not mean that she was the first confirmed case and had brought Covid-19 into the wards.
"Her responsible act enabled us to pick up the cluster at TTSH," said Mr Gan, adding that investigations are still ongoing.
Of the 43 cases in the TTSH cluster, seven staff and two patients had received full doses of the Covid-19 vaccine, said Mr Gan, who is co-chair of the multi-ministry task force tackling Covid-19.
"They were all either asymptomatic, or only exhibited mild symptoms, and none of them required oxygen support," he noted. Of the remaining 34 who were not fully vaccinated, six required oxygen, two are in intensive care and one has died from Covid-19 complications.

"While the numbers are too small to draw firm conclusions, the findings do indicate that vaccination provides critical protection even against Covid-19 variants," said Mr Gan, urging everyone to get vaccinated when the jab is offered to them, as well as to continue to comply with safe management measures even when they have been vaccinated.
"We know while vaccination does not eliminate the risks of infection totally, it does provide significant protection against infections, and helps to reduce the severity of the disease. It is also likely to reduce onward transmission," he added.
Mr Gan also outlined how efforts had been made to contain and isolate the infections at TTSH, so that they do not spread to the larger community.
First, close contacts around the first detected case were quarantined, while others who could have been in contact with her were tested, including all staff and patients of the affected Ward 9D.

Testing and quarantine were also extended to all staff who worked in Ward 9D from April 20, as well as discharged and current inpatients and visitors to Ward 9D from April 20. This was after the detection of a patient who had entered the ward on April 20 and started to display Covid-19 pneumonia symptoms around April 20.
Testing was also expanded to include all inpatients and all staff working in the main ward block.
Subsequently, all other TTSH staff were also screened, and as an additional precaution, patients and staff from the main ward block were retested.
Another additional layer of defence was also added, with discharged patients and visitors who were in the hospital during the affected period also invited to be tested.

"They are not close contacts and hence have a lower risk of infection, but we offered to test them for abundance of caution and to give them peace of mind," said Mr Gan.
For every case detected, those around them were also tested and isolated, and all wards that had exposure to infectious cases were locked down, including wards in levels eight and nine, and wards 7D and 10B.
"We will continue to monitor these individuals who have been exposed, and retest them where necessary as some of them may be incubating the infection," said the minister.
He added that TTSH has implemented a series of measures to prevent further spread within the hospital.
It has stopped all new admissions to the hospital, restricted visitors, and reinforced the need for all staff to comply with infection control, hand hygiene, and personal protective equipment regimes.
 
All these measures are futile. The virus is still going to spread regardless of what humans do.
KNN just freeze all fucking activities for a short period of time things will be leesolved without much effort KNN
 
This is sheer stupidity ! By sloppy border controls,they allow free movement of covid-19 from India to Red Dot .Then,they realize a sudden increase of covid-19 cases all over Red Dot. Big problem already ! Then, they implement more measures to lockdown Red Dot to prevent the spread of covid-19 . U can't blame stupidity !
 
Possibly another two more hospitals get locked down, leaving Singaporeans with little recourse to medical and emergency medical services.

Two more hospitals here taking precautions after staff test positive for Covid-19
One staff member each at Changi General Hospital and Ng Teng Fong General Hospital tested positive for Covid-19 on May 10, 2021.

One staff member each at Changi General Hospital and Ng Teng Fong General Hospital tested positive for Covid-19 on May 10, 2021.ST PHOTOS: MATTHIAS CHONG, KUA CHEE SIONG
timgoh.png

Timothy Goh

May 12, 2021

SINGAPORE - Changi General Hospital (CGH) and Ng Teng Fong General Hospital (NTFGH) have stepped up their defences and put out messages to assure the public after one staff member at each hospital tested positive for the coronavirus on Monday (May 10).
Both cases were announced by the Health Ministry (MOH) on Tuesday night.
The first staff member, Case 63073, is a 42-year-old Malaysian man who works as an operating theatre technician at NTFGH.
He returned to Singapore on Jan 10 after a trip to Malaysia, and served his stay-home notice until Jan 24.
He tested negative on Jan 23 but later developed a cough on April 21. However, he did not seek medical treatment until almost three weeks later on May 10, after his cough worsened.
He was tested at NTFGH's staff clinic and his result came back positive the same day.


In a statement on its Facebook page on Wednesday, JurongHealth Campus, which NTFGH is a part of, said that the man is now warded in an isolation room in NTFGH.
The campus added that he was last at work on May 10 and is likely shedding minute fragments of the virus from a past infection, which is no longer transmissible nor infective to others.
In addition, he had no contact with any known clusters or staff from Tan Tock Seng Hospital, which is currently Singapore's biggest active Covid-19 cluster.
However, JurongHealth Campus added that as a precaution, his household contacts have been swabbed for the virus.

All areas where the man had been in have also been disinfected.
"We will continue to provide full support to our colleague and continue to enforce strict precautionary measures and infection control protocols to keep our patients, visitors and staff safe," said the statement.
The second staff member, Case 63061, is a 43-year-old Chinese woman who is employed by EM Services and worked as a housekeeper at CGH.
She lives in the same household as Case 62971, who is part of the Changi Airport cluster.
As she had been identified as a close contact of Case 62971, she was quarantined on May 8. She developed a cough the next day, and reported her symptoms to MOH.
She was tested for Covid-19 and her result came back positive on May 10. Preliminary findings show that she was infected with the B1617 variant of the virus.
CGH said on its Facebook page on Wednesday that the woman did not have direct interaction with patients, and had adhered to appropriate precautionary measures such as wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) while performing housekeeping duties. She had also received both doses of the vaccine.
Contact tracing and ongoing surveillance swab tests are in progress and any affected areas have been thoroughly cleaned, said the hospital.
CGH added: "We remain on heightened vigilance to keep our patients, their family members and our staff safe. We will continue to provide our care and support to our patients and colleagues."
 
KNN just freeze all fucking activities for a short period of time things will be leesolved without much effort KNN

You can freeze all activities but sooner or later you have to unfreeze and the spread will continue. The virus is always with us.

The solution is to carry on with normal activities and with no restrictions and dumb mask mandates, treat the sick an bury those that die. That's what we do for all other diseases so why can't we do the same with Covid.
 
I am totally confused. I thought front liners already vaccinated. So why need to test for covid!
 
How stoopig can these crown be and tot peasant are just as....what is the use of lockdown and restrictions when everyday the door is OPEN for infected people coming in from Changi airport.
 
How stoopig can these crown be and tot peasant are just as....what is the use of lockdown and restrictions when everyday the door is OPEN for infected people coming in from Changi airport.
Lock down is so govt can continue letting them in with out u getting in fected. For your own good. :unsure:
 
More than 25,000 tested! What a monumental waste of money, time and resources.

Just because the PAP government continues to allow travellers in from India.

How many foreign workers came in during this period? A few hundred.

How much can a few hundred foreign workers add to economic activity (construction)? Is the value-added from these few hundred workers greater than the cost to the entire population (swabbing, quarantine costs, lockdown)?

Over 25,000 tested as part of efforts to detect cases linked to TTSH Covid-19 cluster: Gan Kim Yong
People queueing to take Covid-19 tests at the former Da Qiao Primary School in Ang Mo Kio on May 4, 2021.
People queueing to take Covid-19 tests at the former Da Qiao Primary School in Ang Mo Kio on May 4, 2021. PHOTO: ST FILE
yuesin.png

Yuen Sin

May 11, 2021

SINGAPORE - As at Monday (May 10), close to 12,500 people have been tested as part of special testing operations carried out to detect any cases linked to the Tan Tock Seng Hopsital (TTSH) cluster.
Additionally, 12,000 TTSH staff, 1,000 patients as well as close to 2,500 individuals who have been quarantined have also been tested, Health Minister Gan Kim Yong said in Parliament on Tuesday.
Giving an update on the cluster, Mr Gan stressed that though the first detected case of the cluster was a staff nurse who developed symptoms on April 28 and dutifully reported them, this does not mean that she was the first confirmed case and had brought Covid-19 into the wards.
"Her responsible act enabled us to pick up the cluster at TTSH," said Mr Gan, adding that investigations are still ongoing.
Of the 43 cases in the TTSH cluster, seven staff and two patients had received full doses of the Covid-19 vaccine, said Mr Gan, who is co-chair of the multi-ministry task force tackling Covid-19.
"They were all either asymptomatic, or only exhibited mild symptoms, and none of them required oxygen support," he noted. Of the remaining 34 who were not fully vaccinated, six required oxygen, two are in intensive care and one has died from Covid-19 complications.

"While the numbers are too small to draw firm conclusions, the findings do indicate that vaccination provides critical protection even against Covid-19 variants," said Mr Gan, urging everyone to get vaccinated when the jab is offered to them, as well as to continue to comply with safe management measures even when they have been vaccinated.
"We know while vaccination does not eliminate the risks of infection totally, it does provide significant protection against infections, and helps to reduce the severity of the disease. It is also likely to reduce onward transmission," he added.
Mr Gan also outlined how efforts had been made to contain and isolate the infections at TTSH, so that they do not spread to the larger community.
First, close contacts around the first detected case were quarantined, while others who could have been in contact with her were tested, including all staff and patients of the affected Ward 9D.

Testing and quarantine were also extended to all staff who worked in Ward 9D from April 20, as well as discharged and current inpatients and visitors to Ward 9D from April 20. This was after the detection of a patient who had entered the ward on April 20 and started to display Covid-19 pneumonia symptoms around April 20.
Testing was also expanded to include all inpatients and all staff working in the main ward block.
Subsequently, all other TTSH staff were also screened, and as an additional precaution, patients and staff from the main ward block were retested.
Another additional layer of defence was also added, with discharged patients and visitors who were in the hospital during the affected period also invited to be tested.

"They are not close contacts and hence have a lower risk of infection, but we offered to test them for abundance of caution and to give them peace of mind," said Mr Gan.
For every case detected, those around them were also tested and isolated, and all wards that had exposure to infectious cases were locked down, including wards in levels eight and nine, and wards 7D and 10B.
"We will continue to monitor these individuals who have been exposed, and retest them where necessary as some of them may be incubating the infection," said the minister.
He added that TTSH has implemented a series of measures to prevent further spread within the hospital.
It has stopped all new admissions to the hospital, restricted visitors, and reinforced the need for all staff to comply with infection control, hand hygiene, and personal protective equipment regimes.

It's just to show everyone that Gan/MOH is doing their job. Don't worry too much about it. It's politics not healthcare. :cool:
 
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