We are now into day six of the movement control order (MCO) to prevent the spread of Covid-19 in Malaysia.
If we want to get it right and make the best use of the MCO, we need to listen to international experts and nations that are able to control the epidemic.
There are three important key strategies in stemming this epidemic:
1. Strong & transparent leadership
2. Physical (social) distancing
3. Testing
We hope Malaysians play an active part and not continue with disbelief, denial and disregard of the importance of doing this.
Strong leadership is a major reason the virus outbreak is controlled in South Korea.
In a recent BBC interview, Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha underlined the basis of their strategy – openness, transparency and fully keeping the public informed.
She said extensive testing is the key to South Korea’s low coronavirus fatality rate. We need this in our country.
Who are we testing, what is our testing capacity and how do we improve it?
Being critical of our abilities is not aimed to defeat them but to ask how we can put in place the optimal strategies that will give us the best outcome. The Ministry of Health is doing extensive work in a very difficult situation. Our aim is to support and improve our efforts.
World Health Organization expert Dr Mike Ryan said that a lockdown of nations alone is insufficient to stem the coronavirus spread.
“What we really need to focus on is finding those who are sick, those who have the virus, and isolate them, find their contacts and isolate them,” he said, adding that if nations don’t put in place the strong public health measures now, there is danger of the disease jumping back up when lockdowns are lifted.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO’s director-general, said: “We have not seen an urgent enough escalation in testing, isolation and contact tracing, which is the backbone of the response”. We have a simple message for all countries: Test, test, test.
“Test every suspected case. If they test positive, isolate them and find out who they have been in contact with two days before they developed symptoms and test those people, too.”
We appear to have some testing capacity but those of us who are trying to make sense of the numbers are concerned.
According to MOH, it is doing 3,500 daily tests currently and hope to ramp that up to 16,000 a day by April.
Some are showing a graph comparing us to Italy and showing that we have less of an escalation than them and suggest MCO is working, but you must remember that in this coronavirus outbreak you get the data you test for.
So are we testing adequately? One international database suggests we have tested only about 13,000 as of March 20.
With the virus spreading wider in the community it is important that we test, at the very least, three groups of people:
a. All contacts of those found to have the virus (positive) or at risk.
This means testing not just the contacts who look ill but also those who look well (asymptomatic contacts). In addition we need to test all those who are coming back from high risk countries/locations. The MOH policy has been to test only those who are symptomatic contacts or symptomatic at risk travellers only (see MOH guidelines).
This is of concern as the experience from Wuhan, Italy and other location shows that about 30-40% of those infected remain largely well (or developed symptoms later), especially those who are younger.
However, these individuals may be important in the spread of the virus to others and account for between 10-40% of the epidemic. We cannot control this epidemic if we do not test all contacts (ill or well) of an infected person or traveller from a high risk location.
b. Tests all healthcare professionals (HCPs) who are unwell
The healthcare sector is our last line of defence in this epidemic. If the staff goes down, we lose the opportunity to save lives. Many frontline HCPs have expressed that they are not able to get a test when they feel unwell (fever or respiratory illness).
We are currently only testing those who have come in contact with a positive case, but this is insufficient at this stage of the epidemic as we cannot trace where some people get their infection.
Our national influenza surveillance (ILI/SARI) shows at least 1% are positive for Covid-19 in the country. We have to assume that the virus is spreading in the community.
In addition we have irresponsible individuals that lie about their contact history. Of even more concern is the desperate shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) all over the country for HCPs.
I am seriously worried that so many have had to resort to home-made PPE which cannot be said to be safe and effective in protecting them. Once one HCP is infected the risk to others in that facility is huge and it hampers the functioning of the health facility for days.
We cannot control this epidemic if we do not immediately test all HCPs that become mildly unwell, regardless of their contact with infected cases.
c. Test all viral pneumonias
In the face of community spread, we need to test all patients who present with a severe viral infection (influenza-like) or pneumonia.
We have to make the assumption that all such individuals have Covid-19 until proven otherwise. We cannot allow these individuals to be housed in our normal wards or be treated in outpatient with other persons (not to mention the risk to HCPs).
We cannot depend on a history of travel or contact with proven cases. Currently we are NOT doing this. We cannot control this epidemic if we do not test all severe viral infections (influenza-like) or pneumonias that present to clinics or hospitals.
An important message to remember about testing is that one negative test does not mean you are not infected. We see many individuals expressing they have been tested and are clear of the virus.
We know from the experience in Wuhan, China that some only became positive after testing two or three times, as the virus may be in the incubation period and the test is only positive later.
So the question to ask is, have we been re-testing those who were negative again and again?
When testing numbers are limited, as in Malaysia, we may get a better idea of the outbreak by looking at deaths and ICU admission.
I have plotted two graphs: one that shows our outbreak in comparison to selected neighbouring countries and another that tracks our ICU admission and deaths.
The rapid escalation of deaths and ICU admission suggests our epidemic is growing fast.
I was recently misquoted by some in social media after an interview with Astro Awani, possibly because they did not listen to the full interview.
What the 1% means
Allow me to summarise our plight in a fresh way. Remember these figures as we work as a nation to address this threat to our families, our economy and the fabric of our society: 80%, 15%, 5%, 1%.
For every 100 infected persons:
- 80% will do well.
- 15% will be ill enough (respiratory problems) to need admission and oxygen
- 5% will require ICU care and ventilation (machine support)
- 1% will die.
The 1% is a conservative figure assuming world class facilities and the availability of ICU care for the 5% of those who get ill.
Do we have this scope of facilities when many become ill?
Hence, if 60% of our population gets infected then, we can expect at least 200,000 deaths. This is a very conservative number as we cannot provide ICU care for so many, even over time.
It all depends on how well we control and limit our epidemic. In addition don’t forget all the regular admissions and ill patients we will need to deal with. Some may die because we are managing the coronavirus outbreak.
To improve our response, I would like to offer three suggestions.
1. “Test, Test, Test”. Let us work together to increase our testing capacity now, not tomorrow. Let us not be shy to buy test kits from other nations (South Korea, Taiwan, China). Our very rich individuals and companies play a vital role to get this done. I recognise they are reluctant to donate money, as they are afraid it will be misused but we can advise them which tests to buy and donate them to MOH.
Private laboratories can also play an important role here. Few can afford the RM700-900 for a test. Consider slashing your prices down to a bare minimum of RM30-50. You have been earning from the public for years, time to give back to the nation in its time of desperate need.
2. we need to harness all the smart and kind people in our country, many of whom have a lot of time on their hands, to support us during this epidemic.
Civil society organisations (CSOs) have been organising practical support for the poor, disabled and immigrants. Others have mobilised to support HCPs. Some have been creative in mapping out this epidemic, see one good example here. Some are working on mapping vulnerable populations and offer information to government for decision making.
There are many more who are available and willing to support the government’s initiatives to end this outbreak. We only need to ask for help. We don’t have to go through this alone.
3. Extend the MCO for another 4-8 weeks, painful as that sounds. The mad exodus a week ago, the gross delay in finding those from the tabligh cluster and their mobility, the lack of finding links to some cases, all tell us that we will have a larger wave of cases coming in the next 2-4 weeks (with serious case 2-3 weeks after that).
In the coming weeks and months everyone will probably know one person who is infected, if not our family members or ourselves.
I pray that we do not come to the place where every Malaysian knows one family member or friend who died from this outbreak.
We have the capacity to stop the coronavirus outbreak, but only if we choose to work together.
Dr Amar-Singh HSS is a senior consultant paediatrician.
The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of FMT.
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