Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Is Taiwan learning to live with COVID?

Taipei has introduced a "new Taiwan model" to shift away from its "zero-COVID" strategy. But public health experts warn of an increase in COVID-19 fatalities if the island can't streamline policies.

- Edited by: Sou-Jie van Brunnersum

Taiwan has witnessed a surge in domestic COVID-19 cases since it began to abandon its "zero-COVID" strategy last month. On Thursday the island reported over 90,000 local cases in a day for the first time since the pandemic began.

While the number of infections has increased exponentia­lly over the last month, more than 99% of cases are considered to be mild or asymptomat­ic.

Taiwan's Ministry of Health and Welfare said on May 19 that the virus was spreading widely at the community level and that authoritie­s expect the outbreak to peak around the end of the month. The current outbreak is caused by the more transmissi­ble omicron variant.

In a statement, the ministry announced that Taiwan is pivoting toward co-existing with the virus and that the government continues to strike a balance between risk management and ensuring health services are maintained. As authoritie­s relax some pandemic regulation­s, they are still urging highrisk individual­s to get vaccinated. Taiwanese officials described the new policies as the "new Taiwan model."

' Constant changes' in COVID-19 policy spark chaos

Over the past weeks, Taiwan has reduced the number of quarantine days for incoming visitors to seven. The island has also made several adjustment­s to the isolation policies for individual­s who have tested positive and their close contacts.

The changes in COVID-19 policy have created a flurry of confusion and chaos, particular­ly for those testing positive.

On May 5, authoritie­s revised their definition of confirmed COVID-19 infection, extending it to people undergoing home isolation after having tested positive with rapid tests. Those testing positive with rapid tests would then have to arrange an online medical consultati­on with a doctor to officially declare their positive test result.

However, several people told DW that the official software used to arrange the medical sessions had either crashed or failed to indicate clinics or hospitals offering such services, leaving many frustrated. The patients said they had had to leave home isolation and line up for PCR tests outside hospitals for more than an hour to officially report their cases to the government.

Yang, a marketing profession­al in her early 30s, was one of those patients.

"I ended up having to line up for a PCR test at a hospital in order to meet the criteria of a confirmed case," she said, adding that some older citizens had given up complying with government COVID-19 reporting regulation­s altogether due to their complexity.

"The constant change in policies and criteria have confused a lot of COVID patients," she said. "It feels like the government doesn't really have a comprehens­ive plan, and they are always trying to catch up with changes in the outbreak."

For Chen, the government's ever-changing COVID-19 policies are increasing the stress on patients.

"After being tested positive, we have to do research about the quarantine criteria while trying to make appointmen­ts for a PCR test online … It's a lot of stress for someone who's already sick," she admitted.

Mei-Shang Ho, a research fellow at Taiwan's Institute of Biomedical Sciences at Academia Sinica, thinks the confusion is caused by the government not communicat­ing its policy direction clearly. "When the government doesn't clearly tell the public whether they want to stick to the zero-COVID policy or pivot towards co-existing with the virus, people won't know what rules to follow," she explained.

Shortage of medical staff

Reports about hospitals experienci­ng a shortage of medical staff have also emerged in recent weeks. After the president of the Taiwan Union of Nurses Associatio­n revealed that some frontline nurses would have to stay in hospitals to take care of COVID-19 patients despite having tested positive themselves, Health Minister Shih-Chung Chen announced Wednesday that the island was suffering a shortage of medical staff. But the health minister did reassure the public that hospitals would be periodical­ly monitoring staff health.

Chang, a nurse, said some nurses on leave had been called back to work to support the influx of COVID-19 patients following medical staff infections.

"As the workload continues to increase for most medical staff, I'm worried that the quality of medical care will suffer," Chang said.

A victim of its own success

Chunhuei Chi, director of the Center for Global Health at Oregon State University and a former adviser to the National Health Insurance Administra­tion in Taiwan, said Taiwan "is not ready to face an outbreak at this level."

"A blind spot facing countries that have pursued zero-COVID for a long time is when do they begin to move away from the policy," he told DW.

Chi said Taiwan health authoritie­s should have foreseen the exponentia­l surge of case numbers, based on other countries' experience­s.

"Initially, Taiwan was still sending all mild and asymptomat­ic COVID-19 patients to government- run quarantine facilities in March, but if they had rolled out recent policies around that time, they could have lowered the pressure on hospitals and quarantine facilities," he said.

"Taiwan's quarantine policies… basically change every one to two weeks," he added.

According to Chi, Taiwan still relies on using tactics from the early stages of the pandemic to contain the outbreak.

"Because of its early success, Taiwan thought all the experience­s it had learned from SARS could be applied to the current outbreak. However, experience­s from Western countries have shown that outbreaks caused by the omicron variant will rise exponentia­lly in a very short period," he explained. "That's why their policies seem to have lagged behind the developmen­t of the outbreak."

Chi said Taiwanese authoritie­s want to avoid hospitals becoming overburden­ed, but they also don't want to let the outbreak "drag on for too long."

"Based on the experience in Europe and the United States, the curve of the outbreaks only begins to flatten when at least 40% to 50% of the population have contracted the virus. So far, the number of confirmed cases in Taiwan is still too far from that goal, so this is the dilemma that Taiwanese authoritie­s are facing," he said.

 ?? ?? Taiwan 'is not ready to face an outbreak at this level,' warns a public health expert
Taiwan 'is not ready to face an outbreak at this level,' warns a public health expert

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