Oman Daily Observer

Calls grow among Singapore experts for vaccine mandate

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SINGAPORE: Some health experts in Singapore are calling for mandatory vaccinatio­n against the coronaviru­s with a growing toll of severe Covid-19 among unvaccinat­ed people as infections surge and with vaccine take-up plateauing at 82 per cent of the population.

The government has linked reopening to vaccinatio­n targets but it paused the easing of restrictio­ns this month to watch for signs that severe infections could overwhelm the health system. “I would love to see vaccine mandates in over 60s, they are the group most likely to die,” said Dale Fisher, an infectious disease expert at the National University Hospital in Singapore.

“It’s the same reason that age group was selected early for vaccines, the same reason that age group has been selected for booster jabs.”

Singapore has been a model for coronaviru­s mitigation since the pandemic began with mandatory masks, effective contact tracing and a closed border.

In all, 62 of its 5.7 million people have died and new daily infections were for months no more than a handful.

But, as elsewhere in Southeast Asia, the Delta variant has in recent months been spreading and new daily cases have risen to about 1,000. Several countries including the United States, France and Italy have announced mandatory vaccinatio­n programmes, concerned the Delta variant and a slowdown in vaccinatio­ns will thwart plans to get back to normal.

Of vaccinated people in

Singapore who caught the virus from May 1 to September 16, only 0.09 per cent of them had to go into intensive care or died. The rate for the unvaccinat­ed was 1.7 per cent. Data for the elderly is particular­ly striking.

Of infected unvaccinat­ed people aged 80 or older, 15 per cent of them had to be treated in intensive care or died. Only 1.79 per cent of the vaccinated in that age group needed intensive care or died.

Singapore has not made vaccinatio­n compulsory because the Pfizer and Moderna shots only have emergency approval in the country although it has limited activities such as eating out for the unvaccinat­ed.

Neither company responded to a query on whether it had applied for full approval in Singapore.

With about 87,000 seniors still unvaccinat­ed, some experts say full approval could pave the way for a mandate.

“Vaccinatio­n is much more protective than the other measures we have in place, and less economical­ly and socially

damaging,” said Alex Cook, an infectious disease modelling expert at the National University of Singapore.

“If we are not to enforce vaccinatio­n, it seems odd to enforce weaker and more costly measures.”

The number of patients requiring oxygen support or intensive care jumped more than five-fold this month to 146, including 18 in ICU. The government is worried the numbers in ICU could grow quickly on an exponentia­lly rising base of infected people, especially if they are elderly and unvaccinat­ed.

Singapore has about 100 ICU beds for Covid-19 patients, and it can increase that to nearly 300 at short notice.

A vaccine mandate could take the form of curtailing activities for unvaccinat­ed people related to their work, leisure and use of public transport, said infectious diseases doctor Leong Hoe Nam.

“You cannot go to the malls or take public transport or eat out unless vaccinated,” he said, giving examples of possible restrictio­ns. Only vaccinatio­ns against diphtheria and measles are mandated by law in Singapore.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Office workers spend their lunch breaks at the central business district in Singapore.
— Reuters Office workers spend their lunch breaks at the central business district in Singapore.

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