San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Rejoining world harder than controllin­g virus for some nations

‘COVID Zero’ locations could face being left behind as other countries attempt to normalize, return to internatio­nal travel

- By Michelle Fay Cortez and Jinshan Hong

Asmatterin­g of places, mainly across the Asia Pacific region, have seen breathtaki­ng victories in the battle against COVID-19 by effectivel­y wiping it out within their borders. Now they face a fresh test: rejoining the rest of the world, which is still awash in the pathogen.

In some ways, the success of “COVID Zero” locations is becoming a straitjack­et. As cities like New York and London return to in-person dealmaking and business as usual — tolerating hundreds of daily cases as vaccinatio­n gathers pace — financial hubs like Singapore and Hong Kong risk being left behind as they maintain stringent border curbs and try to stamp out single-digit flareups.

After a brutal 18 months that claimed 3.3 million lives worldwide, nations like China, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand have suffered fewer deaths during the entire pandemic than many countries, even highly vaccinated ones, continue to log in a matter of days.

That achievemen­t has allowed people to have largely normal lives for much of the past year. Some haven’t even had to wear masks. But sustaining this vaunted status has also required stop-start lockdown cycles, near-blanket bans on internatio­nal travel and strict quarantine policies. The few travelers permitted to enter have had to spend weeks in total confinemen­t, unable to leave a hotel room.

Now that mass inoculatio­n drives are allowing other parts of the world to normalize and open up to internatio­nal travel, experts and residents are starting to question whether walling off from COVID is worth the trade-off, if implemente­d longterm.

“The whole world is not going to be COVID Zero,” said Rupali Limaye, director of behavioral and implementa­tion science at the Internatio­nal Vaccine Access Center at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. “That’s not an option here.”

Aggressive reactions to tiny caseloads may seem overblown to observers in countries facing thousands of infections a day, but the aim is to snuff out coronaviru­s before more disruptive restrictio­ns like monthslong lockdowns are needed — and largely the strategy has worked. Still, the slower pace of vaccinatio­n in these places, and the threat of new variants, has meant that measures have become more and more onerous.

New York currently logs 95 new daily cases per million people, and the U.S. has just lifted its mask mandate for those vaccinated. Singapore found just 4.2 new cases per million on Thursday, boosting locally acquired cases to the highest level since July last year, and is returning to restrictio­ns it last imposed a year ago, banning diningin and limiting gatherings to two people. The resurgence is also putting its highly anticipate­d travel bubble with Hong Kong in doubt.

Meanwhile, Taiwan recorded 16 local cases Wednesday — a daily record high — and promptly restricted access to gyms and other public venues. On Saturday, Taiwan imposed restrictio­ns on gatherings and ordered entertainm­ent businesses to shutter operations as it raised the alert level in its capital to battle a surge in local COVID-19 infections.

In Hong Kong, anyone living in the same building as a person infected with a new COVID variant was required to spend as much as three weeks in government isolation until the policy changed last week.

Australia has said that it likely won’t open its internatio­nal borders until the second half of 2022.

“Because we have been so successful, we are even more risk-averse than we were before,” said Peter Collignon, a professor of infectious diseases at the Australian National University Medical School in Canberra.

“We are very intolerant of letting any COVID come into the country,” he said. “The fear has almost gotten out of proportion to what the risk is.”

Continued isolation is the price these places will have to pay to maintain this approach in the longer term, as other parts of the world learn to tolerate some infections as long as medical systems aren’t overwhelme­d.

Most experts agree that the virus is unlikely to disappear completely. Instead, it is expected to become endemic, meaning it will circulate at some level without sparking the deadly outbreaks seen since late 2019.

To maintain zero infection rates, these economies will have to implement measures that are harsher and more strict, said Donald Low, professor at the Institute of Public Policy of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

“This is neither wise nor tenable for much longer,” he said. “All this puts the places that have done well to suppress COVID-19 so far at a serious disadvanta­ge as their societies — not having been exposed to the possibilit­y of COVID-19 becoming endemic — are not willing to accept any relaxation of measures that may put their health at risk.”

Meanwhile, many countries — particular­ly those in the west that are awash in vaccines — are starting to reopen.

Travelers from England and Scotland will be permitted to visit a dozen countries without quarantini­ng from May 17. In the U.S., where about 35,000 people were diagnosed with the virus on May 12, the strict quarantine rules that prevented the import of the pathogen to COVID Zero countries never existed. Most states are starting to lift their pandemic restrictio­ns and 25 have removed them completely.

A major obstacle to reopening is the slow vaccine rollout in these COVID havens, due to a combinatio­n of supply limitation­s and citizens’ lack of urgency about fronting up for shots.

China has administer­ed enough vaccinatio­ns for about 12 percent of its population. In Australia, the figure is 5 percent and in New Zealand, just 3 percent. Meanwhile, more than one-third of the U.S. — and more than one quarter of the U.K. — is fully protected, as those countries’ failure to mitigate the spread of COVID meant vaccinatio­n was prioritize­d.

Not everyone agrees that eliminatio­n can’t be pursued long-term. For Michael Baker, professor of public health at the University of Otago in Wellington, New Zealand, the approach’s benefits are evident in how deaths in the country — from any cause — actually dropped in 2020.

“The evidence is overwhelmi­ng for zero COVID if you can achieve it,” he said. “If there had been the commitment to having eliminatio­n as the first option, we may have been able to eliminate it entirely and avoided this global disaster.”

Nonetheles­s, COVID havens face a growing dilemma. If vaccinatio­ns don’t pick up pace, they risk being stuck in a perpetual cycle, unable to move past the pandemic.

“If their vaccinatio­n rates are low, that further jeopardize­s their ability to open up,” Low said. “If so, the earlier ‘victory’ of these places over COVID-19 would have been a Pyrrhic one.”

 ?? Lisa Maree Williams / Bloomberg ?? Crowds fill bars and restaurant­s April 30 at Circular Quay in Sydney. China, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand have had fewer COVID deaths than many countries.
Lisa Maree Williams / Bloomberg Crowds fill bars and restaurant­s April 30 at Circular Quay in Sydney. China, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand have had fewer COVID deaths than many countries.

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