Hong Kong’s Death Rate Is One of World’s Highest: Virus Update

(Bloomberg) — Hong Kong’s Covid-19 fatality rate is now the highest in the developed world amid a wave of deaths among its under-vaccinated elderly population, ramping up pressure on officials to get the outbreak under control.

The banking regulator in Hong Kong is lobbying the government to shorten the strict hotel quarantine placed on incoming travelers, seeking to reduce the hotel quarantine to 7 days, followed by another week of isolation from home.

Hong Kong plans a lockdown to underpin a mandatory Covid-19 testing drive this month, according to local media. Japan ended a ban on new entry by foreigners and eased quarantine rules.

Key Developments:

  • Virus Tracker: Cases exceed 436 million; deaths top 5.9 million
  • Vaccine Tracker: More than 10.7 billion doses administered
  • Coronavirus Daily: Are you ready for normal life?
  • Hong Kong’s isolation plan crumbles as infections soar
  • Hong Kong deaths among worst on at-risk elderly

Lobbying for Shorter Quarantine (5:35 p.m. HK)

Hong Kong’s banking regulator told finance executives in recent weeks that it’s lobbying the government to shorten the strict hotel quarantine placed on incoming travelers as it seeks to prop up confidence in the city’s status as a financial hub. 

Hong Kong Monetary Authority told a group of banks that it will start engaging with the government to reduce the hotel quarantine to 7 days from 14 days, followed by another week of isolation from home, said people familiar with the talks, asking not to be identified because the meetings were private.

Hong Kong’s Record Death Rate (4:46 p.m. HK)

Hong Kong’s Covid-19 fatality rate is now the highest in the developed world. The financial hub averaged eight deaths per 1 million people in the 10 days through Monday, the most among advanced economies, according to Bloomberg calculations based on Johns Hopkins University data. 

Hong Kong reported a record of 117 new deaths Tuesday. Most of the fatalities during the current wave have been elderly people, and 91% of those who died weren’t double vaccinated, according to government data released Sunday. 

Japan Opens to Newcomers (2:23 p.m. HK)

Japan ended a ban on new entry by foreigners and eased quarantine rules as of Tuesday.

New foreign entrants except for tourists will be admitted, with a cap of 5,000 arrivals a day, from 3,500. Japan also scrapped the quarantine period for those who have had a booster shot and have entered from countries unlisted by the government, and lowered it to three days for those who came from places on the list.

U.S. Warns on Travel to Vietnam (1:39 p.m. HK)

The U.S. State Department raised its travel advisory for Vietnam to the highest level in response to recent surges in Covid-19 infections. Vietnam is ranked as level 4, which means Americans should avoid all travel there, according to a statement. Vietnam on Monday reported 94,385 new cases.

Singapore Eyes Key Case Report (11:44 a.m. HK)

Singapore’s case count has fallen for six straight days, increasing the focus on a report Tuesday that could signal whether omicron infections in the city-state have peaked.

Tuesdays tend to be Singapore’s biggest caseload each week, owing in part to weekend catch-ups and people testing at the start of the week. The past two weeks have seen cases drop before a Tuesday spike, delaying a potential reopening.

Singapore plans to substantially ease restrictions once the current wave peaks.

China Health Expert Sees Opening Up (11:38 a.m. HK)

One of China’s top health experts raised the possibility that China could follow western nations and attempt to live with Covid-19, a rarely voiced view in the country as it persists with its Covid-Zero strategy.

“At an appropriate timing in the near future, China will surely present its version of the roadmap for co-existing with the virus,” Zeng Guang, former chief epidemiologist of Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said on his social media account. 

Virus Fears Wane, NYT Says (10:29 a.m. HK)

Americans are less worried about catching and spreading Covid-19 compared with six months ago, according to a new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, the New York Times reported.

Support is also decreasing for mask mandates, which are easing across much of the U.S., the poll found, according to the NYT.

Hong Kong Weighs Public Transport Halt (10:04 a.m. HK)

Hong Kong is weighing whether to halt public transport during a lockdown or allow residents who test negative with rapid screening kits to leave their homes, the South China Morning Post reported, citing unidentified people.

The government is considering a number of options about the lockdown, including whether it should be citywide or done on a rolling basis, according to the report.

Thailand Cuts Second Visitor Test (9:06 a.m. HK)

Vaccinated foreign visitors to Thailand will no longer be required to take a second RT-PCR test after arrival from Tuesday as the nation woos tourists. The insurance requirement for Thai visas has also been lowered to $20,000 from $50,000.

From Tuesday, authorities will start distributing free rapid antigen test kits through 2,000 centers nationwide amid a health ministry warning that daily cases could spike to 100,000 by mid-April. New infections fell to 20,420 on Tuesday.

Malaysia to Exempt Some Travelers From Test (8:29 a.m. HK)

Malaysia will relax coronavirus testing requirements for some travelers starting Thursday, Health Minister Khairy Jamaluddin said in a statement.

The exemption applies to those arriving in Malaysia via the vaccinated travel lane with Singapore, the Langkawi travel bubble, and short-term business travel via one-stop centers, he said.

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