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[COVID-19 Virus] The Sinkies are fucked Thread.

Ralders

Alfrescian
Loyal
Mothership-Covid-19-update-Robynne-Hu.jpg

The Ministry of Health (MOH) has preliminarily confirmed 32 cases of Covid-19 infection in Singapore as of 12pm on Thursday (Aug. 19).
This brings the total number of Covid-19 cases in Singapore to 66,366.

29 locally transmitted cases​


There are 29 new cases of locally transmitted Covid-19 infection.

11 are linked to previous cases, and have already been placed on quarantine.
Five are linked to previous cases and were detected through surveillance.
13 are currently unlinked.

Three imported cases​


There are three imported cases, who have already been placed on Stay Home Notice (SHN) or isolated upon arrival in Singapore.
One was detected upon arrival in Singapore, while two developed the illness during SHN or isolation.
Further updates will be shared by MOH later this evening.
 

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
11 are linked to previous cases, and have already been placed on quarantine.
Five are linked to previous cases and were detected through surveillance.
KNN why the leeporting is always so confusing KNN 11 were linked to previous cases and 5 were also linked to previous cases KNN in order to leetect that 11 isn't surveillance were also done ? KNN hence why cannot simplee put 16 were linked to previous cases ? KNN
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
KNN why the leeporting is always so confusing KNN 11 were linked to previous cases and 5 were also linked to previous cases KNN in order to leetect that 11 isn't surveillance were also done ? KNN hence why cannot simplee put 16 were linked to previous cases ? KNN

Making complicated things simple is intelligence.

Making simple things complicated is stupidity.
 

bobby

Alfrescian
Loyal
There are three imported cases, who have already been placed on Stay Home Notice (SHN) or isolated upon arrival in Singapore.

Isn't every foreign arrival is subjected to SHN or quarantine ?????
 

ginfreely

Alfrescian
Loyal
You GUTLESS SELF ADMIT CANTONESE @Cottonmouth aka @glockman self admitted JEREMY QUEK ASIAN TURTLE SON OF WHORE hiding in rat hole act garang scam my family good name Knnbccb. Go to my facebook to scam my GOOD name to churn evil filthy lies of me a virgin as a fake virgin and dirty toilet bowl cheap cock sucker slut whore mistress and a dirty whore with millions of Indian customers and gula Melaka nipples and chow hai eat cock drink sperm and insult me pig and to harass me with porn photos AND TO ISSUE VIOLENT THREATS to win ok you dirty coward criminal?
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
NZ and SG are now locked in battle to see which country can spread the infection more efficiently.

I've been going all over the place in the last 3 days without a mask vs sinkies who are all masked up. Let's see whether masks actually work.
 

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Singapore won't reach COVID herd immunity: Lawrence Wong


SINGAPORE — Singapore will not reach herd immunity in the pandemic despite its high COVID-19 vaccination rate, said Finance Minister Lawrence Wong on Thursday (19 August).

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"The path towards being a COVID resilient nation is going to be a long and hard slog. Even with very high vaccination rates, we are not going to reach herd immunity, where the outbreak just fizzles out," Wong warned during a virtual multi-ministry taskforce conference.


Instead, Singapore must be mentally prepared that cases will rise as the country resumes activities and reopen its economy in a controlled manner – "we are feeling the stones as we cross the river”, he added.

In the past 19 months, Singapore has been able to manage the pandemic effectively, keeping its hospital system intact and minimising fatalities, Wong said. The Republic's overall aim is to move towards the end of the pandemic with "minimum death and damage" as a society and a return to normal lives, he added.

In Singapore, 77 per cent of the population have completed their full regimen, or received two doses of COVID-19 vaccines, with 82 per cent having received at least one dose.

Almost 90 per cent of the eligible population are expected to be fully vaccinated next month.

In a report by Reuters on Tuesday, citing the National University of Singapore (NUS) infectious disease modelling expert Alex Cook, as many as 1,000 may die in the next year or two in Singapore if vaccinations among the elderly do not improve.

Delta variant still a concern​

In response to a question byYahoo News Singapore , MOH director of medical services Kenneth Mak said that of the nine COVID-19 related deaths in Singapore this month, a number of them were found to be linked to the Delta variant or its minor mutations.

This finding was based on the fatalities who had undergone phylogenetic testing, said Professor Mak, who did not specify the number of such patients.

“They are not all necessarily the same but as a cluster evolves, sometimes you do see minor mutations or minor variations take place, but they are all related to the Delta variant that we have picked up. So these deaths are not...of other variants.”

Almost all recent deaths in the past weeks were linked to some of the latest community clusters, Professor Mak added.

Singapore’s latest and 46th fatality from the pandemic was a 64-year-old Singaporean man who had not been vaccinated against COVID-19, the Ministry of Health said on Wednesday.

Since May, the Delta variant has become the dominant variant circulating in Singapore.

According to the GISAID (global initiative on sharing avian influenza data), the world's largest database of novel coronavirus genome sequences, the first case of the Delta variant in Singapore was detected on 26 February.

The database shows that there were 2,913 cases of the Delta variant here as of 11 August, with all infections here in the previous four weeks attributed to the variant.

There were no cases of the Delta Plus variant from the phylogenetic testing done for all infections here as of 6 August.

The Delta Plus is a sub-lineage of the Delta variant first identified in India, which has been the dominant strain behind recent surges of infections worldwide.

The Plus variant has acquired the spike protein mutation called K417N, which is also found in the Beta variant first identified in South Africa.
 

tobelightlight

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore will not reach herd immunity in the pandemic despite its high COVID-19 vaccination rate, said Finance Minister Lawrence Wong on Thursday (19 August).
Why is a Finance Minister talking about health matters????? That is not about finance.. what kind of minister is he?
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
In a report by Reuters on Tuesday, citing the National University of Singapore (NUS) infectious disease modelling expert Alex Cook, as many as 1,000 may die in the next year or two in Singapore if vaccinations among the elderly do not improve.

1000 is no big deal in fact this proves that Covid is even milder than the 1957 and 1968 flu epidemics which hit the Island.

Although the raw numbers are lower percentage wise the deaths were astronomical compared to the estimate above as Singapore had a population of less than 1.2 million at the time. Today we're talking an estimated 1000 deaths out of 6 million inhabitants which is an infinitesimally small percentage.

I don't recall any lockdowns or stupid masks back in 1957 and 1968. People, myself included, just soldiered on. There were no snowflakes around at the time. We were far more resilient as a nation in those days. Hardship built character and resolve.

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...he-world-coughed-and-singapore-caught-the-bug

1957: LET IT BURN OUT​


The Asian flu of 1957 and 1958 was also known as "the Singapore virus", although for a more salutary reason: It was first isolated here by University of Malaya professor Lim Kok Ann (see other story).


The virus, thought to have originated in Guizhou, China, and which spread through Hong Kong, reached Singapore in late April 1957 and infected 30 marine workers living in a kampung on the offshore settlement of Pulau Brani.


It peaked in mid-May and burned out in slightly over a month, causing an estimated 680 deaths in Singapore, according to Prof Lee's paper.


Singapore University of Technology and Design assistant professor of anthropology Lyle Fearnley notes the 1957 flu was the first pandemic tracked around the world by the World Health Organisation (WHO), which had established a network of surveillance laboratories known as the World Influenza Programme. Singapore would prove to be a crucial "epidemic intelligence" point in this network.

1968: "NO FLU EPIDEMIC IN SINGAPORE"​


Of the three pandemics, the 1968 Hong Kong flu was the mildest, lasting a few weeks in August. Unlike the other two, it resulted in no school closures - the Government considered it, but decided so many people had already been infected that there was no point - and no substantial health and safety measures were adopted.


On Aug 9, then director of medical services Ho Guan Lim told ST that there was "no flu epidemic in Singapore", though five days later, the paper reported large numbers of patients with flu-like symptoms descending upon clinics.


Prof Lee's paper estimates that more than 540 people died from this outbreak, which was declared over by Sept 7.


Says Prof Lee: "In medical science, in public health, we try to look for evidence. Every pandemic is actually an opportunity to learn more and gain more evidence. Of course, we don't wish for it to happen, but when it does, we really need to take the opportunity to learn from it."
 
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