The Citizen (KZN)

Impact of self-isolation

PRECAUTION: TWO WEEKS OF NO WORK MAY SEE ECONOMY GRIND TO A HALT

- Sipho Mabena siphom@citizen.co.za

Medical chair questions SA’s plan to bring Wuhan group back home as fear of virus spreads.

South Africans have no idea what’s coming with coronaviru­s. If you have been in contact with someone who has the virus, even if you don’t have the virus yourself, you will have to “self-isolate” for about two weeks ... but unless SA laws are changed, you cannot be forced into quarantine (see story on P2).

Large-scale “self-isolation”, the term the National Institue of Communicab­le Diseases (NICD) uses for quarantine measures, will mean those who have been in contact with coronaviru­s patients, will not be allowed to return to work (a sick note will be provided) for the 14 days, while they are being monitored.

This self-isolation is the biggest problem facing the country, rather than the number of actual cases or even deaths – because tens of thousands of people might not be able to go to work, causing the economy to grind to a halt.

According to the NICD’s Prof Cheryl Cohen, a person diagnosed with the virus “will be isolated and all measures taken to prevent onward transmissi­on as per recommenda­tions of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO)”.

“They will be given appropriat­e treatment. We will begin active follow-ups of all the close contacts of the case. Each of these people will be identified and will self-isolate at home,” said Cohen.

“All contacts will be monitored daily for the presence of any symptoms and if they become ill, they will immediatel­y be tested for Sars-CoV-2. If any contact is confirmed to be infected they will be managed as a case. After 14 days, if contacts are well, they can return to normal activities.”

Cohen said there were “designated hospitals” for the management of Covid-19 cases in all provinces and additional hospitals are available with appropriat­e infrastruc­ture to manage the cases.

However, the SA Medical Associatio­n (Sama) yesterday questioned government’s reported decision to evacuate South Africans from Wuhan in China, the epicentre of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Department­s directly involved in the matter – the health department and internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n department – has remained mum in the wake of reports detailing advanced preparatio­ns and budgets for evacuation.

Sama chair Dr Angelique Coetzee said she could not understand why South Africa would evacuate its citizens from China when an economic superpower, the United States, considered to have the best expertise and facilities, was not allowing its citizens back from China.

“If the US says no, how are we allowing them back?

“If you want people back, show us how many, where you are planning to quarantine them for 14 days, who is going to be looking after them.

“It is not easy to quarantine and it has to be strict. You cannot have facilities scattered all over the country because you will spread the virus,” she said.

Coetzee said the coronaviru­s – or Covid-19 – was also not easily identified, citing an incident in Australia where a person was cleared, but tested positive two days later and had possibly passed on the virus.

The department of health has confirmed plans to repatriate 200 South Africans from Wuhan, but said President Cyril Ramaphosa still has to sign off on the plan.

If the people return to SA, they will be quarantine­d as per WHO guidelines and be treated by special medical personnel.

Coetzee shared a statement by Dr KK Aggarwal, president of the Heart Care Foundation of India and former president of the Indian Medical Associatio­n, in which he states that “at a certain point, it becomes less about try

It is not easy to quarantine and it has to be strict

ing to stop an outbreak from entering a country and more about doing what we can to mitigate the damage it causes – goals that tend to require different strategies”. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? GOT YOUR BACK. A medic checks the temperatur­e of a passenger as a preventive measure against the coronaviru­s, upon her arrival by bus in Syria’s Kurdish area from Iraqi Kurdistan.
Picture: AFP GOT YOUR BACK. A medic checks the temperatur­e of a passenger as a preventive measure against the coronaviru­s, upon her arrival by bus in Syria’s Kurdish area from Iraqi Kurdistan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa