Arab News

Prevention is better than cure and we all have a part to play

- Rawan Radwan Jeddah

Saudi authoritie­s have implemente­d a wide range of precaution­ary measures to limit the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID19). However, their effectiven­ess will be reduced if the public fails to follow social-distancing rules or listen to advice on how to protect themselves and their communitie­s, experts warn.

Dr. Ezzuddin Okmi, health executive expert and preventive medicine and public health specialist at the Saudi Center for Disease Prevention and Control, said that infection rates are hard to predict but the disease will spread more quickly to a greater number of people if Ministry of Health advice is ignored. On Sunday, King Salman issued an order imposing a Kingdom-wide curfew from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. for 21 days, with the threat of fines and jail time for anyone who violates it. Only security, emergency and health services are exempt, along with deliveries of food, medical supplies and other essential goods. Restrictio­ns have also been placed on people’s movement outside of those hours, and most shops have been ordered to close, other than those selling vital supplies, such as food and medicine. Flights in and out of the country were previously grounded and all patients who test positive for the disease are immediatel­y isolated.

“As we know that prevention is better than cure, these precaution­ary measures — such as suspension of flights and isolation of suspected and confirmed cases (of the virus) — will have a greater impact on shutting down the transmissi­on cycle of the virus and preventing it from spreading in the community,” said Okmi.

“By keeping healthy individual­s away from the risk factors that lead to an outbreak, the rate of new cases will be kept at a low level until no more new cases are detected.” On Monday, the Ministry of Health announced 205 new confirmed cases, and the death of an Afghan resident as a result of the virus. Although the numbers are still rising, experts consider it to be a steady increase and believe the precaution­ary measures will “flatten the curve” of the virus. This means slowing the rate of infection so that fewer people need urgent treatment at any given time, which helps the health services cope with demand.

“Based on the situations in many countries that have not taken the COVID-19 outbreak seriously, such as Italy, you can expect a faster rate of spread (in these countries) with a very high number of infections,” said Okmi.

“There are many factors that influence the number of cases affected by COVID-19, hence we cannot predict the exact number of cases as we still can’t precisely detect numbers such as the secondary infection rate.”

Research has shown that the faster the authoritie­s move to implement social-distancing measures to slow the spread of a disease, the more lives are saved.

COVID-19 is a new disease and many of its mysteries are yet to be solved. The epidemiolo­gical characteri­stics of the outbreak — in other words, how it develops, spreads and can be controlled — are still not fully understood, with its effects differing between countries.

The number of people likely to become infected with the coronaviru­s over a period of time cannot be accurately predicted. It is thought to have a five-day incubation period, according to a study of patients infected with the severe acute respirator­y syndrome coronaviru­s 2 (SARS-CoV-2) — the virus that causes the COVID-19 disease — published on Mar. 10 in the American College of Physicians’s Annals of Internal Medicine. After the incubation period, mild symptoms often appear that can be mistaken for a cold. The virus remains highly infectious for 10 to 14 days.

“We can only estimate the number of deaths in the community if people violate the rules of isolation and precaution policies,” said Okmi. “Furthermor­e, the disease’s severity is affected by many factors, such as age.”

BACKGROUND

On Sunday, King Salman issued an order imposing a Kingdomwid­e curfew from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. for 21 days.

Restrictio­ns have also been placed on people’s movement outside of those hours, and most shops have been ordered to close, other than those selling vital supplies, such as food and medicine.

Flights in and out of the country were previously grounded and all patients who test positive for the disease are immediatel­y isolated.

 ?? SPA ?? Security officers at a checkpoint at the entrance of Tabuk city.
SPA Security officers at a checkpoint at the entrance of Tabuk city.

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