Los Angeles Times

Japan to downgrade COVID-19 to flu status, easing rules

- associated press

TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Friday announced plans to downgrade the legal status of COVID-19 to the equivalent of seasonal influenza in the spring, a move that would further relax mask wearing and other preventive measures as the country seeks to return to normality.

Kishida said he has instructed experts and government officials to discuss the details on lowering COVID-19’s status.

A change would also remove self-isolation rules and other antivirus requiremen­ts and allow COVID-19 patients to seek treatment at a hospital instead of only specialize­d facilities.

“In order to return to our ordinary daily life in Japan while pursuing measures to adapt to living with the coronaviru­s, we will study concrete measures to gradually move on to a next step,” Kishida said.

In Japan, COVID-19 is categorize­d as a Class 2 disease, along with SARS and tuberculos­is, and is subject to restrictin­g movements of patients and their close contacts, while allowing central and local government­s to issue emergency measures.

Downgradin­g it to Class 5 would mean scrapping those rules.

The planned change would mark a major turning point in Japan’s COVID-19 policy toward normalizin­g social and economic activities.

The move, however, comes as Japan faces widespread infections and record levels of deaths in what is considered its eighth wave of outbreak since the pandemic began three years ago.

According to the Health Ministry, daily deaths totaled a record high of 503 last Saturday. Experts say the latest increase could be linked to worsening chronic illnesses among older patients.

Downgradin­g the legal status of COVID-19 under the infectious disease law could remove ongoing hospitaliz­ation and self-isolation rules and help to free up hospital beds reserved for COVID-19 patients, Health Minister Katsunobu Kato said.

The idea is to create a system where COVID-19 can be treated as part of ordinary medical services, he said. But he cautioned: “Changing its classifica­tion doesn’t mean coronaviru­s is gone. We still need everyone to take voluntary measures by using masks and precaution­s.”

Kato said that mask wearing is unnecessar­y outdoors now and that indoor use would also be eased once the downgrade is in place.

Kato said it will require some adjustment­s for people, workplaces, municipali­ties and hospitals.

He declined to set an exact timeline, other than to say it would occur in “the spring.”

Details are being worked out, but the cost of COVID-19 treatments and vaccinatio­ns are expected to still be covered by the government for now.

In fall, Japan stopped requiring COVID-19 tests for entrants who had had at least three shots — part of the country’s careful easing of measures after virtually closing its borders to foreign tourists for about two years.

Japan is now reporting known daily cases of between 100,000 and 200,000.

 ?? Kyodo News ?? JAPAN’S health minister says outdoor mask wearing isn’t needed, but cautioned that COVID-19 isn’t gone.
Kyodo News JAPAN’S health minister says outdoor mask wearing isn’t needed, but cautioned that COVID-19 isn’t gone.

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