No. At least not in Taiwan.
Guy
No. At least not in Taiwan.
Guy
I don’t have an issue with this nomenclature, personally. In my opinion, the difference lies in the intention - “UK” and “South Africa” here simply serve as neutral descriptors conveniently indicating the places that these variants of what’s now a pandemic virus were first identified (they also have official names, B.1.1.7 and 501.V2), whereas “Chinese virus” is typically a biased attempt to attribute blame/responsibility rather than actually dealing with the problem. If a new variant was identified in Beijing, say, I also think it’d be fine to call it “the Beijing variant”.
I don’t think “COVID-20” would make much sense, given that now we’re talking about the disease rather than the virus and I haven’t read of any indication that the disease caused by the new strains is fundamentally different. (An analogy would be AIDS, which I believe is also caused by multiple variants of HIV - incidentally, we don’t call that “the Congo virus” or “the Africa virus”, because it’s kind of irrelevant at this point to the problem under discussion).
COVID-20 A and B
The government has reversed its policy banning the entry of international students and is allowing some students to enter now
Remember the possible exported case to Vietnam?
All contacts to that case in Taiwan tested negative; and the migrant worker herself also tested negative when she was retested in Vietnam.
Guy
Gee what a surprise.
Three more imported cases reported today—a girl from Egypt under the age of 10, a Taiwanese businessman medically evacuated from Nigeria, and another Taiwanese student returning from the US:
Guy
More details from the CDC about lunar new year guidelines—and what recent arrivals practicing “self-health management” (that is, the seven days after the completion of the fourteen day quarantine) can and cannot do.
Here’s the key take-away:
Under [self-health management], people are required to wear surgical masks at all times, take their temperatures twice a day, and avoid visits to public places and large-scale events.
According to updated guidelines released by the CECC, people under “self-health management” are also prohibited from partaking in group dining, as such events require the removal of masks while consuming food and beverages.
Individuals with no symptoms can visit supermarkets or convenience stories as long as they wear masks throughout the visit, but they should avoid doing so when these places are crowded or when it is difficult to practice one-meter social distancing, the center said.
Violators could face a fine of up to NT$300,000 (US$10,715), the CECC warned, citing the Communicable Disease Control Act.
Source: https://focustaiwan.tw/society/202101080018
Guy
Going to be super hard to manage the group dining thing.
Yup. How to enforce it?
Does anyone recall how the Filipina hotpot debacle was discovered?
Guy
If people eating at home though
A note to ourselves; if you have friends returning to Taiwan, do not invite them out for a big celebratory dinner the day their 14 day quarantine ends. Meet them for a walk in the park, make them sit on their own park bench.
That British guy got sick on a trip back to his homeland it seems. Best to stay put.
If we have a breach will be over CNY, everyone has known that for a while now. A few weeks after CNY and no community infection, we are all good and kickback and wait for those sweet sweet vaccines
Three more imported cases reported today—two migrant workers from the Philippines and one fisher from Indonesia, all asymptomatic:
Guy
Six more imported cases reported today:
Guy
Egypt keeps popping up. Are there a lot of Egyptians in Taiwan?
All the recent cases from Egypt are members of one family.
The girl under 10 was the first to be diagnosed; today three of her family members were confirmed as positive cases.
Guy