Singapore sees first death due to Covid-19 in nearly 2 months amid rise in cases | World News - Hindustan Times
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Singapore sees first death due to Covid-19 in nearly 2 months amid rise in cases

Bloomberg | | Posted by Harshit Sabarwal
May 03, 2021 02:23 PM IST

An 88-year-old Singaporean woman with a history of cancer and cardiac failure passed away on Saturday after she was treated at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, where a cluster of 37 cases has been identified since last week.

Singapore saw its first fatality due to complications from Covid-19 in nearly two months over the weekend, amid a flareup of cases in a country that’s been one of the world’s most successful in containing the virus.

Singapore has had more than 61,200 total Covid-19 cases, more than 54,500 of them in people living in migrant worker dorms.(Reuters file photo)
Singapore has had more than 61,200 total Covid-19 cases, more than 54,500 of them in people living in migrant worker dorms.(Reuters file photo)

An 88-year-old Singaporean woman with a history of cancer and cardiac failure passed away on Saturday after she was treated at Tan Tock Seng Hospital, where a cluster of 37 cases has been identified since last week.

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The cluster is Singapore’s first in a hospital and raises concern that the city’s hard-won success is slipping, potentially threatening efforts to open up a long-awaited travel bubble with Hong Kong and host major upcoming summits including the World Economic Forum and Shangri-la Dialogue.

“There will be many more” cases in the hospital as patients there are more susceptible given many hadn’t been vaccinated and were already sick with other illnesses, said Leong Hoe Nam, an infectious disease physician at Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Hospital. “Unfortunately, they are easy targets for a Covid-19 super spreader, and in turn patients who have been infected can be new super spreaders,” he said, adding that he has no doubt the government will contain the cluster.

Singapore is one of the more successful spots in the world in curbing the virus, similar to others in Asia that have largely halted the spread but where virtual elimination is being challenged by sporadic flareups. In a bid to stay at zero local cases, these places -- including New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong and China -- react aggressively to small numbers of infections.

Already, fewer people have been allowed at malls and large stores since Saturday and campsites were closed for two weeks. Singapore will also reduce the operating capacity of attractions to 50% from 65% for a week from May 7, and urged people to limit social gatherings to two per day and stay home where possible.

While Singapore is also one the fastest in Asia on vaccination, it trails far behind leading countries globally including Israel, US and UK -- which have administered 10.5 million (57.7%), 246 million (38.2%) and 49.8 million (37.3%) -- doses respectively, according to Bloomberg’s vaccination tracker. At 2.21 million doses given as of April 18, Singapore has inoculated just 19.4% of its population, with less than half having received both jabs.

Shares of flag carrier Singapore Airlines Ltd. dropped as much as 3.2% on Monday, the most in about two weeks, with stock broker UOB Kay Hian Pte. saying the increase in cases threatened the reopening of the economy. The decline came even as the airline said it had raised about S$2 billion ($1.5 billion) to boost funds as it’s hit by pandemic-related restrictions.

Hospital cluster

Singapore has had more than 61,200 total Covid-19 cases, more than 54,500 of them in people living in migrant worker dorms.

The country registered 16 new cases of coronavirus in the local community on Thursday, its highest daily number since July 11, and 10 more infections on Monday, according to Ministry of Health data.

Prior the latest spate of infections, Singapore had several months of low single-digit or no new cases thanks to strict measures that include mandatory mask-wearing, restricted travel and high testing and overall treatment capacity.

All of the cases found on Monday were either patients or staff at Tan Tock Seng Hospital or close contacts who had already been placed on quarantine, according to the government. Prior to the new infections, several patients in the cluster have been linked to a 46-year-old Filipino nurse at the hospital, who was deployed at a general ward and had gotten her second vaccination dose on Feb. 18, authorities said.


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