Monday 9 March 2020

COVID19 affecting thousands of people around the world

https://breakingnewsenglish.com/2003/200304-covid-19-m.html
https://breakingnewsenglish.com/2003/200304-covid-19-a.html
https://www.bbc.com/news/world

Japan and Hong Kong have closed their elementary, junior-high and high schools until April. Governments say they want to protect children from the COVID-19 coronavirus. Schools in Japan will remain closed until April the 8th, which is the start of the new school year. Children in Hong Kong will return to school on April the 20th at the earliest. Parents are now worried about the school closures. Working parents have to think about how to care for younger children. Grandparents will look after many children while their parents go to work. However, many children have no grandparents or extended family who live nearby. Parents may have to pay for expensive childcare fees.
Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shut the country's schools after a meeting of Japan's anti-virus task force. He said the next two weeks are critical to control the spread of COVID-19. He wants to "stem the risk of many children and teachers becoming infected through gathering for long hours every day". The government said it would urge public services and private companies to make it easier for people to take time off work to look after their children. An angry mother said: "I wonder if the government thinks it is OK to leave children at home alone for long hours." She asked: "What's the point of closing schools if parents are still commuting in packed trains in which passengers may have COVID-19?"

Sources:
  • http://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/13172009
  • https://english.kyodonews.net/news/2020/02/b341be1ebf20-breaking-news-children-should-stay-home-while-schools-closed-over-virus-japan-govt.html
  • https://www.bbc.com/news/business-51639488

As the number of coronavirus cases continues to rise in Spain, authorities in Madrid – one of the main infection points in the country – have ordered all education centers to close for two weeks starting on Wednesday. The measure will affect more than 1.5 million students at all levels of the school system, from early education to universities.The decision came on Monday evening, shortly after the Basque Country announced that all schools in the city of Vitoria, another transmission hub, will also remain shut for the next 15 days. If necessary, scheduled surgeries in the Madrid region will also be canceled, along with non-essential medical appointments and tests.These measures were announced by regional premier Isabel Díaz Ayuso, of the conservative Popular Party (PP), in a bid to slow the spread of the coronavirus in the Madrid region.Also on Monday, Health Minister Salvador Illa recommended that people work from home in Madrid if they can, as well as in the Basque cities of Vitoria and Labastida.At least 1,236 people had tested positive for the virus by the latest nationwide count on Monday evening, and the death toll had climbed to 30, a significant rise from the 10 deaths officially registered on Saturday.For the first time since the beginning of the coronavirus outbreak in Spain, health authorities on Monday admitted that the scenario has changed.With more than a thousand confirmed cases by Monday afternoon, nearly twice as many as 24 hours earlier, there is “obvious community transmission” in two regions, Madrid and the Basque Country, said Fernando Simón, head of the Coordination Center for Health Alerts and Emergencies.Authorities admit that this requires additional measures to those that have been in force to date, namely isolating ill people and placing their contacts in quarantine. Until recently, the majority of cases could be traced back to specific locations and authorities were confident that the spread could be contained.But the quick rise in infections and the existence of unknown transmission hubs are triggering new measures such as school closures. In the town of Haro, in Spain’s northern region of La Rioja, a few dozen people who caught the virus at a funeral have been told to remain at home or face arrest and hefty fines.

Picking up speed
Reported fatalities jumped from 10 on Saturday to 17 on Sunday, while the number of confirmed infections grew 20% over the same period. By Monday afternoon the death toll had reached 26, with more than a thousand infections reported nationwide.Daniel López Acuña, a former official at the World Health Organization (WHO), explained that the rise in deaths is part of the normal evolution of the epidemic. “A few days have elapsed since the beginning of the infection, and we are now starting to see that expressed in terms of mortality among vulnerable people,” he said.All the fatalities have been elderly people with underlying health problems. This pattern underscores how senior citizens are the biggest at-risk group from a disease where the mortality rate for other population segments ranges from low to zero, in the case of young children, according to a study conducted in China.Although every single region of Spain has reported the presence of the virus, 60% of cases are concentrated in three of them: La Rioja, Madrid and the Basque Country.

Enforcing the quarantine
In the small northern region of La Rioja, world famous for its red wines, more than 81 cases have been reported, most of them in the town of Haro. The source of the infection has been traced back to a funeral held in the Basque city of Vitoria. On Sunday morning, Civil Guard officers wearing protective gear showed up at these individuals’ homes to inform them that they must refrain from leaving their houses or face hefty fines of up to €600,000, or even be arrested and transferred to a hospital under police surveillance. Health Minister Salvador Illa said on Sunday that they are “not quarantined” but “under active surveillance” and must “remain in their homes because that’s what medical protocols establish to prevent the spread of the virus.”In the Basque Country, where there are over 149 reported cases, the biggest concern is the fact that several health workers have been affected, as the spread of the virus among this group could lead to staff shortages at hospitals in the event of a surge in infections among the general population.But the biggest hot spot is in the Madrid region, with more than 469 known cases and 16 deaths. Many of the new infections reported on Saturday can be traced back to a senior center in the town of Valdemoro. The Madrid regional government on Friday ordered 213 private and public senior centers closed following the deaths of two people.The source of some of the Madrid infections is still being investigated in a bid to contain further spread. The region has also rolled out a home assistance program so that ill people can stay in their houses instead of going to the hospital. So far, a vast majority of the cases are mild enough that no hospitalization is required.

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