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Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Travel ban on 8 nations up; WHO warns of strain spread

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Travellers from eight countries will not be allowed to enter the Philippines from Dec. 16 to 31 to prevent the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19, the Palace said Wednesday, before health officials announced the detection of two imported cases.

The World Health Organization (WHO), meanwhile, warned Omicron was spreading at an unprecedented rate and urged countries to act, as drug maker Pfizer said its coronavirus pill was effective against the variant.

Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles identified the “high-risk” countries as Andorra, France, Monaco, Northern Mariana Islands, Reunion, San Marino, South Africa, and Switzerland.

The restriction covers everyone who has been to these eight areas in the last 14 days regardless of their vaccination status, Nograles said.

Only Filipinos returning through repatriation efforts and “Bayanihan” flights are exempted from the travel ban, Nograles said.

“To all those who plan to come home during the holidays, we humbly request your patience as we in the IATF continue to make modifications to our protocols. These are all being done in response to evolving situations in the world,” Nograles said, referring to the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF).

“We want to keep our people safe, and we will do what is necessary to achieve that,” he added.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the IATF is considering adding more countries to its “red list.”

Fully vaccinated Filipinos from eight areas must show a negative RT-PCR test taken 72 hours prior to their departure. They must also undergo a facility quarantine, from which they could be discharged after getting the negative result of an RT-PCR test taken on the seventh day. They must then stay on home quarantine until the 14th day.

Unvaccinated or partially vaccinated Filipinos must show a pre-departure negative RT-PCR test and complete a 10-day facility quarantine, regardless of when they get the result of a second RT-PCR test taken on the seventh day. They will then undergo home quarantine until the 14th day.

Amid the WHO warning, Dutch primary schools will close early as Europe battles a fresh wave

of infections and hospital admissions, while British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced a major parliamentary test seeking to impose fresh COVID curbs.

Omicron, first detected by South Africa and reported to the WHO on Nov. 24, has a large number of mutations, setting alarm bells ringing since its discovery.

Early data suggests it can be resistant to vaccines and is more transmissible than the Delta variant, which was first identified in India and accounts for the bulk of the world’s coronavirus cases.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters the strain had been reported in 77 countries and “probably” spread to most nations undetected “at a rate we have not seen with any previous variant.”

Omicron now accounts for around 3 percent of cases in the United States, a figure that is expected to rise rapidly as has been seen in other countries.

The United States is the nation hit hardest by the pandemic, and it crossed 800,000 known Covid-19 deaths on Tuesday, according to a Johns Hopkins University tracker.

Although Britain on Monday confirmed what is thought to be the world’s first Omicron death, there is no proof yet that the variant causes more severe illness.

The WHO on Tuesday provided room for cautious optimism saying Africa had recorded a massive rise in cases over the past week but a lower number of deaths compared with previous waves.

But it urged countries to act swiftly to rein in transmission, protect their health systems and guard against complacency.

WHO expert Bruce Aylward strenuously warned against “jumping to a conclusion that this is a mild disease.”

“We could be setting ourselves up for a very dangerous situation.”

The warning came as Pfizer on Tuesday said clinical trials of its Covid pill reduced hospital admissions and deaths among at-risk people by almost 90 percent.

The American drug maker said its new treatment, Paxlovid, held up against Omicron in lab testing.

Chief executive Albert Bourla called the news a “game changer” and said he expected approval from the US medicines regulator as early as this month.

“This news provides another potentially powerful tool in our fight against the virus, including the Omicron variant,” added US President Joe Biden.

A real-world study from South Africa has showed two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was 70 percent effective in stopping severe illness from Omicron.

Researchers called the results encouraging, though it represented a drop compared with earlier strains, underlining the threat of the coronavirus.

The WHO added that low vaccination rates in regions including Africa — where Omicron was first detected — would provide breeding grounds for new variants of the virus, which is known to have claimed more than 5.3 million lives around the world.

Europe is the global coronavirus hotspot, recording 62 percent of the world’s total cases in the past seven days, while the five countries with the world’s highest infection rates are all European.

The Netherlands followed other European nations in reintroducing restrictions on Tuesday as Prime Minister Mark Rutte announced primary schools will shut next week and a night-time lockdown will be extended over Omicron fears.

Schools will close from Dec. 20 instead of on December 25 due to concerns that children, among whom infection rates are the highest, could pass it on to older relatives.

France on Tuesday registered 63,405 new coronavirus cases – its highest daily total since April — even with more than 77 percent of its population having had at least one shot.

In neighboring Britain, the ruling Conservative government on Tuesday suffered a major parliamentary rebellion as almost 100 of its MPs rejected new restrictions as the country responds to Omicron.

Boris Johnson’s administration will introduce new rules on mask-wearing, daily testing to avoid isolation and vaccine passes for certain settings in England.

But many MPs from his own party believe the measures — which only passed with opposition support — are excessive and undermine basic freedoms.

Scientists have predicted the true number already infected with Omicron in Britain could be as high as 200,000 a day. With AFP

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