The Columbus Dispatch

Japan expands COVID-19 state of emergency areas

- Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO – Japan expanded its coronaviru­s state of emergency on Wednesday for a second week in a row, adding eight more prefecture­s as a surge in infections fueled by the delta variant strains the country’s health care system.

The government last week extended the state of emergency until Sept. 12 and expanded the areas covered to 13 prefecture­s from six, including Tokyo. With four new prefecture­s added to a separate “quasi-emergency” status, 33 of Japan’s 47 prefecture­s are now under some type of emergency measures.

Eight prefecture­s were upgraded from quasi-emergency status to a full emergency.

They include Hokkaido and Miyagi in the north, Aichi and Gifu in central Japan, and Hiroshima and Okayama in the west.

“In order to protect the people’s lives, the priority is to maintain the health care system,” Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said as he announced the emergency. “In order to overcome this crisis led by the delta strain, I seek further cooperatio­n from everyone.”

Japan’s state of emergency relies on requiremen­ts for eateries to close at 8 p.m. and not serve alcohol, but the measures are increasing­ly defied. Unenforcea­ble social distancing and teleworkin­g requests for the public and their employers are also largely ignored due to growing complacenc­y.

The Japanese capital has been under the emergency since July 12, but new daily cases have increased more than tenfold since then to about 5,000 in Tokyo and 25,000 nationwide. Hospital beds are quickly filling and many people must now recover at home, including some who require supplement­al oxygen.

More than 35,000 patients in Tokyo are recovering at home, about onethird of them unable to find a hospital or treatment hotel vacancies immediatel­y.

Only a small percentage of hospitals

are taking virus patients, either for financial reasons or because they lack the capability to treat the infections, experts say.

Suga said Wednesday that those recovering at home will receive medical attention via phone calls, online or with visits by community doctors, and that the government will set up temporary hospitals where patients can receive supplement­ary oxygen or other treatments.

Japan has weathered the pandemic better than many other countries, with around 15,600 deaths nationwide since the start, but its vaccinatio­n efforts lag behind other wealthy nations. About 40% of the population has been fully vaccinated, mainly elderly people.

Suga brushed off criticism that he is simply repeating increasing­ly ineffective emergency measures and stressed the progress of vaccinatio­ns despite their late start and slow pace. He said he is convinced that vaccines are key to a return to normal lives and hopes to achieve a 60% vaccinatio­n rate by around September.

Suga said the government will distribute 800,000 antigen test kits to kindergart­ens, elementary and junior high schools for quick detection and isolation of cases when schools reopen after the summer vacation, while promising to accelerate vaccinatio­ns for teachers.

 ?? KAZUHIRO NOGI/POLL VIA AP ?? Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and his staff announce an expansion of the country’s coronaviru­s state of emergency.
KAZUHIRO NOGI/POLL VIA AP Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and his staff announce an expansion of the country’s coronaviru­s state of emergency.

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