#Jamaica – March 3, 2020 — FULL STATEMENT from MARCH 2, 2020: The new Coronavirus (COVID-19) has spread to more than 60 countries, fueling widespread anxiety, as many consider the implications for public health.
Here in Jamaica we understand that anxiety and
wish to reassure the public that we are, even now, enhancing our readiness for
the very real possibility of the virus coming to our shores.
Up to March 1, there were more than 87,000
confirmed cases of COVID-19 reported globally and close to 3,000 deaths. Among
those countries impacted are three from within the Caribbean, namely the Dominican
Republic, St. Barts and St. Maarten.
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So far, Jamaica has had no cases. However, we
can accept, given the rate of spread, which has seen more than 30 new countries
impacted in the last week alone, that Jamaica is not immune to COVID-19.
We can also accept that it is not beyond our
capacity to respond and to do so effectively, in the public health interest.
Such has been our history in the face of other global disease outbreaks, including
H1N1, SARS and Ebola.
Against this background, Jamaica’s assault on
COVID-19, for which robust and ongoing public support is critical, is happening
on two fronts:
Actions
to minimize the risk of exposure among the local population; and
Actions to enhance the capacity of the public
health system to manage patients in the event that we have cases.
On MINIMISING
EXPOSURE, we have, through collaboration with a wide cross-section of
stakeholders from the public and private sectors,and through the adoption of a whole-of-government approach:
Imposed travel restrictions to include five
countries, among them China, Italy, South Korea, Singapore, and Iran.
Discouraged non-essential travel.
Are patrolling irregular border crossings.
Sensitized key personnel at all air and sea
ports.
Designated FOUR (4) quarantine facilities.
And identified and are retrofitting isolation
facilities in each of the island’s public hospitals.
On our HEALTH
SYSTEM’S READINESS, we have:
Developed the local capacity to test for the virus,
thanks to training provided by the Pan-American Health Organization.
Assessed the readiness of our health facilities
to meet the anticipated increase in demand on services.
Are addressing existing gaps, including with
respect of additional supplies and equipment, though, at the present time, we
have enough personal protective equipment in the island for our health
facilities. We also have adequate stores of respiratory medicine for the next
three months.
In addition, we have trained and continue to
train health care providers.
These efforts are supported by a communications
campaign to keep each member of the population updated on the virus and its
impacts. Oversight is provided by the multi-sectoral National Disaster Risk Management Council – led by Prime
Minister Andrew Holness – to which the Ministry of Health and Wellness will
present a detailed response plan for approval.
Minister of Health, Dr Christopher Tufton inspects NMIA – file photo by JIS
Still, the success of our efforts depends on
the extent to which stakeholders from the private and public sectors and indeed
every individual who calls Jamaica home understand that they each have a role
to play to preserve public health. This week we will also appoint a COVID-19
coordinating taskforce.
We must, therefore, work together to maintain a
high level of vigilance in our surveillance and response measures. It is also
now more important than ever that each of us:
Maintain a distance of at least 2 metres from
persons who are coughing or sneezing.
Frequently perform hand hygiene by washing
hands thoroughly with soap and water or using a hand sanitizer if hands are not
visibly soiled.
Cover our mouths and noses with a tissue when
coughing or sneezing, and then discarding it.
And resist the habit to touch our faces.
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Yes, COVID-19
is a disease that can cause death, but in the majority of cases, those affected
by the virus survive. If we work together as a community, each of us doing our
part, from prevention to care management, we can and will overcome this public health
threat.