About a week ago I wrote an article about “Prepare for the Delta Wave of COVID-19 Outside the Klang Valley” to highlight the deteriorating situation in some states. This article is to share the realities and crisis that is already upon us.
The graphic above shows a situational analysis of what is potentially impending for different states. The crisis situation in the Greater Klang Valley (Selangor, WPKL, Putrajaya and Negeri Sembilan) will probably slowly settle over the next 2-4 weeks due to the huge Delta outbreak, massive vaccination ramp-up and enhanced resources poured in (government and civil society).
However, total numbers in the country and even deaths may not come down as the Delta wave hits other states hard, especially Sabah, Kedah, Perak, Johor and Pulau Pinang. These states are deteriorating rapidly and may become worse than Klang Valley as they have low vaccination rates (due to low vaccine supply) and some have a weak hospital infrastructure (especially Sabah). All these states have second dose (completed) vaccination rates under 20%.
The table below shows the ICU beds COVID-19 usage for these 5 states. It is important as we look at this data to understand the realities:
We need an all-of-society approach to deal with the crisis as it grows. I would like to make some suggestions for the health departments, state governments, corporate bodies, civil society and the general public. More details can be found in the ‘Health Emergency Action Plan: Roadmap to Recovery from COVID-19’ we wrote recently (downloadable link: https://bit.ly/2UeDRV1).
1. True, reality-based data sharing of the situation by state health departments
It is vital that the public in each crisis state (Sabah, Kedah, Perak, Johor and Pulau Pinang) be aware of the full reality. The time for “don’t worry, everything is OK” or “we are in control of the situation” or “we have prepared for this crisis” is past, these statements are of no value. Delta does not respect or care about these attempts to ‘not alarm’ the public. We can never be prepared enough for Delta and the Klang Valley, with all its resources, shows this clearly. State health departments must have daily crisis sharing with the public (media, Facebook, other online outlets). Trust is crucial to fighting the pandemic and this is based on transparency.
2. State-level disaster management teams led by state Health Directors supported fully by State governments and with a strong liaison to corporate bodies and civil society (NGOs)
Those of us outside of the Klang Valley know that no help is coming for our states. The federal government has limited funds, having invested significant resources to support the Klang Valley. Hence we must work very closely with wealthy business leaders and NGOs to ramp up resources and services. We need strong, decisive leadership and not individuals from the state administration looking to make a financial gain out of the crisis.
3. Don’t put all our eggs in the vaccine basket
While we advocate for more vaccine supply and ramp up vaccination we must not put our hopes in that measure alone; we need to use good public health measures as the World Health Organisation repeatedly tells us. Lockdowns are not the solution. Good mask use, avoiding all unnecessary social interaction, effective contact tracing, using RTK-Ag testing for confirmation, etc. The continued use of large PPVs centres is a risk for COVID-19 transmission. We should fully transition to using maternal and child health clinics, school health teams, GPs, private hospitals, outreach teams.
1. Purchase and Donate Equipment to the Hospitals & Quarantine Centres
Corporate bodies, NGOs and the public should liaison directly with individual specialists and medical offers to know the real needs on the ground while protecting their identity. They will better inform you about what items they need and where to get them.
a. Important items to manage patients include: Oxygen Concentrators, Oxygen tanks, Oxygen regulators, Infusion pumps (to deliver drugs), Portable suction machines, Portable vital sign monitors, BP Monitoring Sets, ECG machines, Stretchers, Canvas beds, etc.
b. Support the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) of health staff which are in high usage, including: N95 masks, powered air-purifying respirators (PAPR), isolation gowns, face shield or goggles, gloves, disposable caps, foot wear, etc.
c. Provide MDA approved RTK-Ag saliva test kits to enable health staff to speed up and increase testing of all contacts in clusters and the community.
d. Consider offering reliable emergency transport services because the health department ambulance services will be overrun. This may help reduce brought in dead cases.
e. Grow ICU capacity by creating new ICUs – this requires the larger corporate bodies to fund and rapidly construct (within 2-4 weeks) purpose-built ICU facilities (with HDUs) at major hospitals.
2. Supporting Positive Individuals and Contacts
Individuals who are found positive or are contacts of positives will be required to home isolate or be admitted to quarantine facilities. Those in home isolation will require support including:
a. Reliable Finger Pulse Oxymeters for monitoring.
b. Medical support for monitoring (video calls daily from health professionals).
c. Some may require practical support in terms of meals.
d. RTK-Ag saliva testing support for those who are contacts (symptomatic or asymptomatic). We should also fund these so that we can enable the public to self-test.
e. Purpose-run Quarantine Facilities for those that do not have homes or accommodation suitable for home isolation (crowded homes, limited space, migrants, etc). This would mean using hostels and hotels to house them (good ventilation and no central air conditioning; private rooms with toilets).
3. Supporting Communities Hard Hit Economically by the Pandemic
A significant portion of our public is struggling with daily needs and we need to support them. Although government agencies are doing some of this work, many ‘fall through the cracks’ and have minimal support. Some mechanisms to do this are:
a. Partner with reliable local NGOs and disaster organisations that are doing food delivery to the poor and are setting up and maintaining food banks.
b. Family to family support – adopt poorer families for 6-12 months and offer a fixed sum of money monthly to aid groceries and utility bills.
c. Giving away food coupons that can be redeemed at sundry shops/convenience stores to buy groceries.
d. Hire individuals who have lost jobs to work as volunteers to support others.
e. Also remember we need to support families traumatised by COVID-19, who have lost loved ones, lost their jobs, etc and are struggling to cope emotionally. This includes children who have become temporary (both parents hospitalised) or permanent orphans.
I appeal to the state governments of Sabah, Kedah, Perak, Johor and Pulau Pinang to be transparent so that extensive and comprehensive emergency actions can be taken by all of society to deal with the crisis that is at hand. There are mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers who need to be saved in the coming weeks. Please let us not wait until we reach a Klang Valley crisis status.
This opinion piece was contributed by Dato’ Dr Amar-Singh HSS, Senior Consultant Paediatrician. If you have an article or opinion that you would like to contribute for the benefit everyone, share it with us here.
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