Houston Chronicle

World learning to live in pandemic

- By Sui-Lee Wee, Benjamin Mueller and Emma Bubola

China is testing restaurant workers and delivery drivers block by block. South Korea tells people to carry two types of masks for differing risky social situations.

Germany requires communitie­s to crack down when the number of infections hits certain thresholds. Britain will target local outbreaks in a strategy Prime Minister Boris Johnson calls “Whac-A-Mole.”

Around the world, government­s that had appeared to tame the coronaviru­s are adjusting to the reality that the disease is here to stay. But in a shift away from damaging nationwide lockdowns, they’re looking for targeted ways to find and stop outbreaks before they become third or fourth waves.

While the details differ, the strategies call for giving government­s flexibilit­y to tighten or ease as needed. They require some mix of intensive testing and monitoring, lightning-fast response times by authoritie­s, tight border management and constant reminders to their citizens of the dangers of frequent human contact.

The strategies often force central government­s and local officials to share data and work closely together, overcoming incompatib­le computer systems, turf battles and other longstandi­ng bureaucrat­ic rivalries. In Britain, some local officials say their efforts aren’t coordinate­d enough.

The shifting strategies are an acknowledg­ment that even the most successful countries can’t declare victory until a vaccine is found. They also show the challenge presented by countries such as the United States, Brazil and India, where the authoritie­s never fully contained initial outbreaks.

“It’s always going to be with us,” said Simon James Thornley, an epidemiolo­gist from the University of Auckland in New Zealand. “I don’t think we can eliminate the virus long term. We are going to need to learn to live with the virus.”

Even in places where the coronaviru­s appeared to be under control, big outbreaks remain a major risk.

In Tokyo, there have been 253 new infections in the past week, 83 from a nightlife district. In Gütersloh in western Germany, more than 1,500 workers from a meat-processing plant tested positive, prompting authoritie­s to shut down two districts. South Korea, a poster child for fast responses, has announced dozens of new infections in recent days.

In Rome, which recently emerged from one of the strictest lockdowns in Europe, 122 people have been linked to a cluster case at a hospital. Several days later, 18 people who lived in a building with shared bathrooms came down with the virus.

“As soon as we lowered our guard,” said Paolo La Pietra, who owns a tobacco shop in the neighborho­od, “it hit us back.”

Some countries, like South Korea and Japan, aimed to make their responses nimble.

South Korea calls its strategy “everyday life quarantine.” The country never implemente­d the strict lockdowns seen in other places, and social-distancing measures, while strongly encouraged, remain guidelines.

Still, it has set a strict target of a maximum of about 50 new infections a day — a target that it says its public health system, including its testing and tracing capacity, can withstand.

Officials shift the rules as needed. After a second wave of infections broke out in Seoul, city officials made people wear masks in public transporta­tion and closed public facilities for two weeks.

The South Korean government has added new guidelines as it has learned more about outbreaks. It advises companies to have employees sit in a zigzag fashion. Air-conditione­rs should be turned off every two hours to increase ventilatio­n, it said. It has discourage­d singing in markets and other public places.

It also has advised people to carry two types of masks in summer — a surgical mask and a heavy-duty mask, similar to the N95 respirator masks worn by health care workers, to be used in crowded settings.

Japan, which endured only limited lockdowns, also wants to keep its limits light to help restart its economy.

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