U.S. economy adds 943,000 jobs in July amid recovery in labor market #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004329

U.S. economy adds 943,000 jobs in July amid recovery in labor market


The U.S. economy added 943,000 jobs in July as hiring surged and employers raised wages to lure workers. It marked the second straight month of impressive growth as the countrys recovery sped up amid widespread availability of vaccines.

But the renewed strength of the coronavirus in late July and early August is raising concerns about whether this momentum can continue. The delta variant has sped through the country’s vaccine-resistant population in recent weeks, leading to new government restrictions.

President Joe Biden comments on the jobs report in the East Room at the White House on Aug. 6, 2021. Washington Post photo by Demetrius Freeman

This has clouded many economist’s outlook for the second half of the year and raised questions about whether July could serve as a high-water mark of the recovery’s second wave.

The unemployment rate in July fell to 5.4% from 5.9%, a sizable monthly reduction. It is down from 6.3% when President Joe Biden took office but still well above the 3.5% rate in February 2020, the final report before the pandemic slammed into the United States and sent the numbers of joblessness spiking to historic levels.

July’s tally was the highest number of jobs added since last August, and it surpassed June’s impressive numbers, which were revised up in the report to 938,000.

Economists, political leaders, executives and many workers are now watching to see where the economy goes from here.

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In the weeks since the hiring data was collected, numerous firms began requiring vaccinations or imposing new mask restrictions on employees, as rising cases begin to complicate reopening efforts. The stock market, though, remains at record levels, and the recent reports about brisk hiring in June and July show that this momentum could be hard to knock off course.

June and July make for two straight months when nearly 1 million jobs were added – totals that are close to the optimistic predictions many economists had last year about how vaccinations would smooth the way for the labor market recovery.

And there were other promising signs in the report. Wages also continued to rise, raising by 11 cents an hour to $30.54 on average – the fourth straight month of growth. The number of people reporting both long-term unemployment and temporary layoffs fell precipitously.

“This is an unambiguously positive report,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. “It’s consistent with a booming economy, an economy that’s roaring back from the pandemic recession.”

Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at the firm RSM, agreed that the report showed exceedingly strong momentum.

“I’ve been doing this a long time – this is one of the best monthly jobs reports that I’ve seen in my career arc,” he said.

Biden touted the numbers at a morning appearance where he talked about the importance of his infrastructure plan, saying that more than 4 million jobs have been added since he took office.

“What is indisputable now is this: The Biden plan is working, the Biden plan produces results, and the Biden plan is moving the county forward,” he said.

If there was a caveat about the report, it was its timing. The report is a portrait of the economy from the middle of July – around the beginning of the time when coronavirus cases from the delta variant began to surge.

The country is in a unique place, having confronted a number of conflicting forces in 2021 as the economy works to dig out of a public health crisis unlike any other in the modern era. While vaccinations have given the country its strongest tool yet in the battle against the virus, the crisis is far from over, as resistance to the vaccine and the potential for the virus to continue to mutate, make it hard to forecast how the intertwined crises – an economic on one hand, and the public health one on the other – will unfold next.

There has been a notable uptick in inflation, though experts are split over whether it will be short-term or more lasting. Employers continue to complain about labor scarcities, particularly for low-wage jobs, though there is some evidence that it can be partially addressed for through things like better pay and benefits, as well as the wider availability of in-person schooling that is expected in the fall.

Hiring slowed in the winter as the virus raged, but it has picked up with sustained velocity in recent months.

The biggest jump has come in the leisure and hospitality sector, as hotels and restaurants worked to bring employees back, optimistic about a consumer spending boom. These types of businesses, though, are susceptible to a setback if the virus doesn’t ebb this fall, making some of these gains fleeting.

Economists like Constance Hunter, chief economist for accounting firm KPMG, said it was too soon to tell how severely the latest surge of coronavirus cases, which is threatening the country’s reopening, will affect the labor market, but said there were reasons to be concerned. The economy remains about 5.7 million jobs down from where it was before the pandemic hit, in March 2020, and economists have expected the jobs market to roar as school reopenings and wide vaccination usage allows many working parents to get back into the labor force.

“We could see some reversal in August and September’s data because of the delta variant,” Hunter said. “As the delta variant progresses here, if it hampers back to school, it’s could put a dent in.”

Zandi said that some economic indicators – mobility data, restaurant reservations, hours worked, when tracked by private time management systems, consumer and business sentiment – were already sending off warning signals in the South and Midwest the past month, particularly in states like Florida and Georgia.

But a vaccination effort that stalled this summer – more than 40% of the U.S. vaccine eligible population remains unvaccinated despite their wide availability – and only recently began ticking up again, has provided fertile ground for the delta variant to wreak havoc, raising questions about whether some consumers and businesses will begin the process of buttoning up, yet again.

For now, the economic indicators continue to be strong, when looked at nationally. New weekly unemployment claims have trended downward gradually this year, though they have largely flatlined in recent weeks on average. They remain about twice the level of pre-pandemic average.

Reservations at restaurants are hovering just below 2019 levels, according to OpenTable data – a remarkable achievement after so many businesses shuttered earlier in the pandemic. And air travel, as measured by TSA checkpoint data, continues to hit record numbers for the pandemic, every couple of weeks.

The growth in July was driven by employment in the leisure and hospitality sector, with restaurants and bars adding 253,000 people, hotels adding 74,000 and arts entertainment and recreation adding 53,000. The sector is still down 1.7 million jobs from February 2020.

Employment rose by 221,000 in local government education and 40,000 in private education, although the report noted that the distinct patterns in hiring in schools – namely that there were fewer layoffs at the end of the school year this year, because there had not been seasonal increases earlier – may have distorted the report, and contributed to the signals about job gains in July.

Professional and business services added 60,000 jobs; transportation and warehousing added 50,000 jobs.

Published : August 07, 2021

By : The Washington Post · Eli Rosenberg

Hanoi extends stringent COVID-19 restrictions until August 23 #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004327

Hanoi extends stringent COVID-19 restrictions until August 23


HÀ NỘI — Hà Nộis People’s Committee on Friday afternoon officially announced its decision to extend stringent citywide social distancing orders for 15 days until 6am on August 23.

According to dispatch No.18, signed by Chairman Chu Ngọc Anh, after 14 days of heavy restrictions in line with the Government’s Directive 16 that began at 6am Saturday, July 24 and set to expire at 6am Saturday, August 7, the city had attained “certain results”, Anh said. 

However, the outbreak in the city as well as across the country remains “unpredictable and complicated,” with many infections found in the community without clear sources and numerous cases displaying no symptoms, he added.

The capital city has logged 1,800 cases in the fourth wave of infections starting in late April, half of which were found during the lockdown period with about 60-70 cases new cases registered each day.

During a press briefing held the same day, a health official said the health sector will take advantage of the lockdown period to ‘filter’ out all hidden COVID-19 cases in the community.

Under the social distancing order, non-essential businesses continue to remain closed, people are not allowed to go outside except for essential purposes like buying food or medical emergencies. Public transport also remains halted.

The dispatch noted that many members of the public and organisations/companies have not strictly abided by the social distancing rules and that crowding still occurred from time to time in markets and on the streets. The presence of the highly-transmissible Delta variant threatens to shatter the city’s COVID-19 prevention and control efforts, he said.

The city leader asked for absolute compliance with social distancing orders, separating household from household and individual from individual.

Companies, businesses and agencies in the city should continue to arrange for their employees to work from home and only go to work in truly necessary cases such as members of the armed forces or people handling confidential documents and all under the monitoring of the company and/or local authorities.

The chairman noted that the success of the COVID-19 fight, other than the “robust involvement” of the administration, is predicated on the self-discipline and compliance and support of the people and society in obeying social distancing rules.

For green zones (COVID-19 free areas), residents should remain proactive and not complacent in preventing the disease, but stand ready to respond to any emerging incidents.

For orange zones – high-risk areas like factories, workplaces, markets, hospitals or other medical facilities – each unit must have a prevention and control plan ready and local authorities will inspect and only permit them to operate once the units satisfy the COVID-19 safety criteria.

For red zones or blockaded/quarantined areas, local authorities can decide to impose stronger measures to make sure no spread of the virus will occur inside these zones and to contain the outbreak as soon as possible.

Testing and treatment

The city leader also asked for stock to be taken of the city’s testing capacity, as well as for the mobilisation of all capable units to help expand testing capacity.

Health agencies and local authorities have been tasked with taking the initiative in conducting rapid antigen testing based on their assessment of outbreaks and clusters, to act fast and flexibly to avoid missing virus carriers, and start to offer guidance for the public to take samples by themselves under the supervision of healthcare workers.

The health authorities have also been asked to prepare for maximum capacity scenarios – with regards to the treatment of COVID-19 patients, especially ensuring enough oxygen, ventilators and beds.

Healthcare centres have been told to classify asymptomatic and symptomatic patients and sort them into the appropriate treatment units.

Suitable apartment buildings, educational institutions, and construction projects could be requisitioned and repurposed to act as treatment facilities for asymptomatic patients (30,000 beds and up to 50,000 beds if necessary).

Anh also asked for quicker vaccinations but in a safe manner, providing sufficient instructions for people before their vaccine appointments.

Local authorities and relevant sectors must have plans and arrangements in place to avoid disruptions to the supply of goods to the city, market instability, shortages or hoarding and ensure the safe circulation and supply of food and essentials for all people, especially in blockaded areas, guaranteeing that no one is left wanting.

Trần Thị Phương Lan, Acting Director of Hà Nội’s Department of Industry and Trade, said the department had told distribution chains to stock up three times the normal amount of goods (up to VNĐ194,000 billion in value).

Lan said given that there are some markets and supermarkets that have been closed due to COVID-19 infections, mobile units have been set up to provide essential products for local residents. — VNS

Published : August 07, 2021

By : Viet Nam News/ANN

Japan tops 1 million cumulative virus cases #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004326

Japan tops 1 million cumulative virus cases


Japan passed the 1 million mark in its cumulative total of novel coronavirus cases on Friday.

The nation reached the milestone about 1½ years after the first domestic case was confirmed in January last year.

On Friday, Tokyo reported 4,515 new infection cases, marking the second largest daily number for the capital, after a record 5,042 new cases were confirmed there on Thursday. The daily tally in the capital exceeded 4,000 for the third consecutive day.

According to the Tokyo metropolitan government, there were 141 people with serious COVID-19 symptoms on Friday, up by six from Thursday. The seven-day moving average of new infection cases was 3,820, up 52.7% from the previous seven-day period’s average of 2,501.

In Kanagawa Prefecture, the number of new cases hit a record high of 2,082 on Friday, renewing its record for the second day in a row. The prefecture saw its daily figure exceed 2,000 for the first time. Four deaths of COVID-19 patients were reported in the prefecture, bringing its cumulative death toll to 1,003.

Chiba Prefecture also confirmed a record high of 1,057 new cases, topping 1,000 for the first time.

In Osaka Prefecture, there were a record 1,310 new cases. The figure topped the previous record of 1,260 logged on April 28 and May 1 during the fourth wave of infection.

Published : August 07, 2021

By : The Japan News/ANN

Washington urged to cease HK card use #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004324

Washington urged to cease HK card use


The United States was again urged to stop playing political tricks by meddling in the legal affairs of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

The Foreign Ministry’s commissioner’s office in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and the Hong Kong SAR government on Friday voiced opposition to Washington’s self-proclaimed “safe haven” offer to Hong Kong residents.

US President Joe Biden on Thursday signed a memorandum that allowed Hong Kong residents already in the US to stay for up to 18 months. The White House said the decision was made in response to the National Security Law for Hong Kong and to the “crackdown” on the city’s opposition camp.

A spokesperson for the Commissioner’s Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the HKSAR in a statement expressed “strong condemnation” and “firm opposition” to the US move.

The US decision reflects its hypocrisy as it turns a blind eye to the facts and mainstream opinion in Hong Kong, the spokesperson said.

The facts include that the National Security Law for Hong Kong only targets a small number of anti-China, destabilizing forces in the SAR who seriously endangered national security and the city’s stability.

By late July, 138 people had been arrested on suspicion of endangering national security, 76 of whom were later prosecuted. The city has more than 7.56 million people.

Other facts overlooked by the US include a more stable society and lower crime rates brought about by the National Security Law for Hong Kong along with electoral system improvements. The spokesperson said that the legislation further optimizes the rule of law and protects the legitimate rights of people living in the city.

The spokesperson said the US “tricks”, including talking down to the Hong Kong SAR and stigmatizing Beijing, revealed its ulterior motives to curb China’s development by playing the “Hong Kong card”.

The office urged the US to drop the illusion about containing China and put an end to such shameful political manipulations.

In a separate statement, a spokesperson for the Hong Kong SAR government also rebutted the US claim that the National Security Law for Hong Kong was used to crack down on dissidents, adding that the smear was “baseless and purely politically motivated”.

“Any law enforcement actions taken by Hong Kong law enforcement agencies are based on evidence, strictly according to the law, based on the acts of the persons or entities concerned, and have nothing to do with their political stance, background or occupation,” the government statement read.

The US is one of the destinations where some Hong Kong people suspected of endangering national security have fled to over the past two years.

“The Hong Kong government will pursue … legal liabilities in accordance with the law to ensure fugitive offenders face justice,” the spokesperson added.

Before granting the 18-month arrangement, the US last month imposed a round of sanctions on central government officials in the SAR and warned US enterprises in Hong Kong of the city’s “deteriorating business environment”.

Published : August 07, 2021

By : GANG WEN/China Daily/ANN

India, China pull out troops from friction point Gogra in Ladakh #SootinClaimon.Com

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India, China pull out troops from friction point Gogra in Ladakh


In a major breakthrough, India and China have withdrawn troops from the friction Patrolling Point (PP) 17A in Gogra along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Eastern Ladakh, the Indian Army said on Friday.

The Indian Army said that both the countries have ceased forward deployments in this area in a phased, coordinated and verified manner.

“The disengagement process was carried out over two days, i.e., August 4 and 5. The troops of both sides are now in their respective permanent bases,” the Indian Army said in a statement.

The force said that the 12th round of talks between the Corps Commanders of India and China were held on July 31 at the Chushul Moldo Meeting Point in Eastern Ladakh.

The two sides had a candid and in-depth exchange of views on the resolution of the remaining areas related to disengagement along the LAC in the Western Sector of India-China border areas.

“As an outcome of the meeting, both sides agreed on disengagement in the area of Gogra,” the Indian Army said.

The troops in this area were in a face-off situation since May last year.

The force said that all the temporary structures and other allied infrastructure created in the area by both sides have been dismantled and mutually verified.

“The landform in the area has been restored by both sides to the pre-stand off period,” the Indian Army stated.

This agreement ensures that the LAC in this area will be strictly observed and respected by both sides, and that there is no unilateral change in status quo.

With this, one more sensitive area of face-off has been resolved.

“Both sides have expressed their commitment to take the talks forward and resolve the remaining issues along the LAC in the Western Sector,” the force added.

The Indian Army also pointed out that along with the ITBP, it is totally committed to ensure the sovereignty of the nation and maintain peace and tranquility along the LAC in the Western Sector.

In a joint statement after the 12th Round of India-China Corps Commander-level talks geld earlier this week, it was stated that the two sides have also agreed that in the interim, they will continue their effective efforts in ensuring stability along the LAC in the Western Sector and jointly maintain peace and tranquility.

The talks between the two countries took place after a gap of three months.

With the latest disengagement reached between both the countries in Gogra, India will now take up the other remaining friction areas like the Hot Springs and the 900 sq km Depsang plains.

The build-up in Depsang was not being considered part of the current standoff that started in May last year as escalation here took place in 2013. India has insisted during recent military commander-level meetings to resolve all the issues across the LAC.

Till now, apart from 12 round of Corps Commander-level talks, the two forces have also held 10 Major General-level and 55 Brigadier-level talks, apart from 1,450 calls over hotlines.

Earlier, the troops of the two Himalayan giants had disengaged from both the banks of Pangong Tso in February this year.

Published : August 07, 2021

By : The Statesman/ANN

Mae Sot market in Myanmar-Thai border temporarily closed as the numbers of cases higher in COVID-19 Third wave #SootinClaimon.Com

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Mae Sot market in Myanmar-Thai border temporarily closed as the numbers of cases higher in COVID-19 Third wave


Mae Sot market in Myanmar-Thai border situated in downtown Mae Sot was temporarily closed from August 4 to August 10 by Thai authorities in the COVID-19 Third wave.

The market sells products from Myanmar such as fish paste, dry fish, dry prawn, various kinds of food, and clothing. Many Myanmar migrant workers are working at the market. In Mae Sot, there are upper market and lower market. Now, the upper market will be temporarily closed.

“Myanmar workers are anxious as the market will be closed temporarily. But they can buy at lower market and Macro shopping mall. The market was packed with shoppers a day before the market was closed,” said a Myanmar living in Thailand.

More than 100,000 Myanmar migrant workers are working in Mae Sot. 

In Tak province including Mae Sot, there are about 400 factories and industries opened legally or illegally. There are over 200,000 Myanmar migrant workers working at these factories and they faced hardships during COVID-19 crisis according to a Myanmar worker who doesn’t want to be identified.

Published : August 07, 2021

By : Ko Shwe Thein/Eleven Media/ANN

Myanmar calls on US to provide more support, including providing of COVID-19 vaccines #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004282

Myanmar calls on US to provide more support, including providing of COVID-19 vaccines


Union Minister for Foreign Affairs Wunna Maung Lwin has called on the United States to provide more assistance, including the COVID-19 vaccines, to protect the lives of the Myanmar people, according to a statement from Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

He made the remark at the Second Mekong-U.S. Partnership Ministerial Meeting held on August 3, via video conferencing.

At the meeting, Wunna Maung Lwin thanked the United States for its assistance to the Mekong countries and urged the United States to give more support, including the COVID-19 vaccines, to protect the lives of the people in Myanmar. More assistance should be provided to the people of the Mekong region for the sake of inclusive sustainable development based on the principles of the Mekong-US Partnership Program: consensus, equality and non-interference in internal affairs. He welcomed the release of the “Action Plan (2021-2023)” of the Mekong-US Partnership, which includes cooperation in the fields of education, young people, capacity building, energy and environmental protection.

In addition, the importance of information sharing in the effective implementation of the new Mekong-US Partnership Action Plan and the priority should be given to cooperation in services, trade and investment for the need for small, medium and large-scale economic recovery in the post-COVID-19 period, he said.

The Union Minister also endorsed US proposals to hold policy dialogues on inequality and women’s empowerment and to hold policy dialogues aimed at enhancing direct communication between United States and Mekong government officials.

Then, the meeting approved the action plan (2021-2023) of the Mekong-US Partnership Plan designed to bring significant results to the member countries. The Mekong-US Partnership Program was upgraded in 2020 to meet current and future needs for sustainable and inclusive development in the region, based on the achievements of the “Lower Mekong Countries Cooperation Program” implemented between the United States and Mekong countries.

Published : August 06, 2021

By : Eleven Media/ANN

Japan to apply COVID-19 priority measures to 8 more prefectures #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004281

Japan to apply COVID-19 priority measures to 8 more prefectures


The government decided Thursday to apply emergency-level measures for eight more prefectures amid a surge in coronavirus cases.

Aproposal to apply priority measures for the prefectures of Fukushima, Ibaraki, Tochigi, Gunma, Shizuoka, Aichi, Shiga and Kumamoto was presented to the government’s COVID-19 subcommittee on Thursday morning. The measures will be in effect in the eight prefectures from Sunday through Aug. 31.

In areas under priority measures, eating and drinking establishments are asked to shorten their business hours and close by 8 p.m. and stop serving alcohol, in principle. However, if businesses meet certain conditions, such as implementing infection control measures, and if cases are on the decline, prefectural governors can approve the sale of alcohol until 7 p.m.

At the subcommittee meeting, Yasutoshi Nishimura, the minister in charge of COVID-19 countermeasures, said, “The number of newly confirmed cases is increasing at an extremely rapid pace, and at a magnitude not seen before.”

Excluding Shizuoka and Aichi, six of the eight prefectures have infection levels at Stage 4 on the government’s COVID-19 alert scale, the most severe level.

Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Norihisa Tamura said Thursday that patients with moderate symptoms would be hospitalized in principle even in areas where cases have surged.

“Patients who doctors judge to be at low risk of developing severe symptoms will recuperate at home,” he said.

Some members of the ruling coalition have claimed that the lack of an explanation on a measure to reduce the number of hospitalizations led to people thinking that those with moderate symptoms would not be admitted to hospitals, prompting calls for a review of the policy.

Tamura’s clarification of the criteria for hospitalization could be interpreted as the government’s way of attempting to resolve the situation.

Published : August 06, 2021

By : The Japan News/ANN

Korea says November herd immunity will happen even as prospects darken #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004280

Korea says November herd immunity will happen even as prospects darken


South Korean political and health leaders are standing firm on their goal of getting to COVID-19 herd immunity in November, which has been marked as a point of return to normalcy, after reaching a vaccination threshold of 70 percent of the population.

So far the term herd immunity has been loosely thrown around by those in political circles and public health offices alike. But the concept has been largely understood as some degree of a return to normal life and retirement from the excruciating practice of social distancing.

President Moon Jae-in said back in June that a “maskless Chuseok” will be possible as vaccinations progress, and top officials at the Ministry of Health and Welfare and the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency have repeatedly associated having herd immunity with restoration of normal life.

What herd immunity would look like when Korea gets there in November has been more concretely laid out for the first time during Health Ministry’s closed-door briefing Thursday.

Health Ministry spokesperson Son Young-rae told reporters that even after herd immunity is reached in November, face masks and other safety steps will remain necessary.

Asked how the administration was defining herd immunity, Son said it was “when transmissions slow and fatality rates fall as large proportions of Koreans are immunized against COVID-19.” “The day-to-day operations of the society will be significantly close to normal,” he said. “But that doesn’t mean we can do away with face masks or other basic health protocols.”

Herd immunity is “thought to be a situation where risks are controlled through continued compliance with basic health protocols,” he said.

Son said in the same briefing 70 percent of Korea’s roughly 51 million people will complete their vaccinations between late October and early November, adding on to Moon’s reaffirmation of the administration’s vaccine goal on Monday.

Moon told a meeting of senior presidential secretaries and aides earlier this week that 36 million Koreans will be vaccinated with at least one dose of a vaccine before Chuseok, a national holiday falling Sept 18-22.

Since Pfizer and Moderna vaccines — which are administered over a minimum interval of four weeks per the guidance updated July 23 — are to be mainly available from August onwards, the finishing point of second-round vaccinations for 70 percent of the population is anticipated to be around a month after Chuseok.

But Son gave a more conservative estimate, saying, “The majority of Koreans will become fully vaccinated by the end of October or the start of November. By September’s end is when at least 70 percent will have gotten one dose.”

What the Health Ministry has described as herd immunity Thursday far is from how the term has been previously communicated to the public, or how it is commonly understood as a public health term, according to experts. 

“The notion of herd immunity has grown rather elusive with COVID-19, but I wouldn’t call that herd immunity,” said Dr. Paik Soon-young, emeritus professor at Catholic University of Korea’s department of microbiology.

“But what is more important is that even without herd immunity, the pandemic is expected to become substantially more manageable as more people get vaccinated, with reductions in deaths and hospitalizations,” he added.

“Generally speaking, herd immunity is when the spread of a virus can be contained without non-pharmaceutical interventions such as social distancing, masking and hand washing, after a large chunk of population in a given community becomes immune either through infection or vaccination,” said infectious disease professor Dr. Kim Woo-joo of Korea University.

Kim went on, “We also need to keep in mind that 70 percent vaccination rate does not necessarily translate to corresponding rates of neutralizing antibody responses across the vaccinated population.” “Plus, there is a question of immunity waning over time,” he said.

While the key task facing Korea remains delivering first doses to people who have never been vaccinated, older, immunocompromised people who were given vaccinations months ago are now getting what is known as “breakthrough infections,” he said. In recent weeks, outbreaks among the vaccinated have been reported at nursing homes, whose residents were first in line for a vaccine when the national campaign kicked off in February. 

Korea has no plan to give a third booster shot to vulnerable people first vaccinated in February and March.

Dr. Eom Joong-sik, infectious disease specialist at Gachon University Medical Center, also said, “Herd immunity as I understand it is when infections remain at a stable level in the absence of social distancing.”

He pointed out that in light of highly contagious new variants, Korea needed a vaccination rate greater than the initially aimed 70 percent. “Delta raises the bar higher — now the vaccination target should be 80 percent, or even 90 percent,” he said. “That is, if delta continues to be the dominant strain. We could be fighting against a new, different variant then.”

Children under 18 years of age, who make up 15 percent of the population, are currently left out of vaccine plan, which also complicated the equation, Eom said.

Out of the 51 million people in Korea, 39 percent had received at least one dose of a vaccine by Wednesday’s end, while 14 percent were fully vaccinated. Over the month of July, an average of around 90,000 doses were administered per day.

Published : August 06, 2021

By : Kim Arin/The Korea Herald/ANN

[Philippines] 12 big Metro hospitals hit critical risk level #SootinClaimon.Com

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https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40004279

[Philippines] 12 big Metro hospitals hit critical risk level


As the National Capital Region (NCR) and nearby provinces begin a two-week lockdown today, 12 of the 22 major hospitals in Metro Manila are already at critical risk in terms of their ICU capacity.

Seven of the hospitals have actually reached their full ICU capacity as of Aug. 2, namely East Avenue Medical Center, Chinese General Hospital and Medical Center, Metropolitan Medical Center, Quirino Memorial Medical Center, San Juan de Dios Foundation Inc., University of Perpetual Help Dalta Medical Center and VRP Medical Center.

The ICU occupancy rates of the rest were critically high: Capitol Medical Center (85.71 percent), Ospital ng Makati (91.57 percent), UP-Philippine General Hospital (83.3 percent), V. Luna Medical Center (90 percent) and St. Luke’s Medical Center (90.9 percent).

The list was based on the monitoring of the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) and was presented by its chair, Benhur Abalos, in a recent meeting with NCR mayors and business leaders.

In terms of bed occupancy, which included COVID wards, the MMDA said East Avenue Medical Center, Metropolitan Medical Center, National Children’s Hospital, University of Perpetual Help Dalta Medical Center, Philippine General Hospital (PGH), VRP Medical Center and V. Luna Medical Center were also classified as being at critical risk.

In an Aug. 2 memorandum to all NCR hospitals, the Department of Health (DOH) ordered the conversion of some of their facilities to accommodate new cases and to increase their COVID-dedicated beds by 50 percent.

In anticipating an increase in COVID-19 infections, the DOH also ordered the suspension of scheduled hospital procedures, “but (still) ensuring continuity of essential services..for patients needing specialized care.”

It also ordered the safeguarding of health-care workers through alternate staffing and hiring additional manpower for a backup pool of hospital workers.

Four-fold increase

The One Hospital Command Center (OHCC) hotline also recorded a 400-percent jump in calls so far this month, indicating the rising number of COVID-19 infections.

The OHCC is an inter-agency project led by the DOH and the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) to ensure an efficient health facility referral system in Metro Manila.

In an online press briefing on Thursday, OHCC operations manager Dr. Bernadett Velasco said they received an average of 600 calls a day in the past three days, a four-fold increase from the June average of 120 calls. It was also double the 300 calls received each day by the hotline in July, she said.

Of those who reached out to the OHCC, about 40 percent were referred to hospitals, another 48 percent to isolation centers and temporary treatment and monitoring facilities, while the rest involved consultations and inquiries, according to Health Undersecretary and treatment czar Leopoldo Vega.

Most calls to the 24-hour hotline came from Metro Manila, Calabarzon and Central Luzon.

Velasco also said during the briefing that the OHCC came up with a surge capacity plan after it noticed the increasing trend in the volume of calls the hotline received in recent days.

New Delta cases

The DOH on Thursday also said it recorded 8,127 new COVID-19 cases, which brought the country’s total case count to 1,627,816.

In a separate bulletin, the health department, along with the University of the Philippines-Philippine Genome Center (UP-PGC), announced that the country’s genomic surveillance effort detected an additional 116 cases of the more transmissible Delta variant of COVID-19, thought to be fueling the surge in infections in the country.

Of the 116 new cases, 82 percent or 95 were local cases. One was a returning overseas Filipino, and the DOH said it was still trying to determine the travel history of the remaining 20 cases.

Majority or 83 of the local cases have indicated addresses in the NCR, while three were from Calabarzon. Four cases have addresses in Central Visayas, two in Davao Region, and one each in the Zamboanga Peninsula, Cagayan Valley and Ilocos Region.

The 116 newly detected Delta cases have been tagged as recovered, the DOH said. The latest round of whole genome sequencing brought the country’s total tally of Delta variant cases to 331.

However, the UP-PGC was able to sequence less than 1 percent of all COVID-19 cases in the country, indicating that the occurrence of the Delta variant in the country could be higher.

The DOH also said 113 cases of the Alpha variant and 122 cases of the Beta variant were also detected.

Published : August 06, 2021

By : Maricar Cinco, Patricia Denise M. Chiu/Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN