Wednesday, 15 April 2020
Covid-19 and human rights: We are all in this together
on who is suffering most, why, and what can be done about it. They prepare the ground now for emerging from this crisis with more equitable and sustainable societies, development and peace.
Download here (WHO, April 2020)
Media freedom and fake news during the time of Covid-19
Read here (ISIS Malaysia, April 15, 2020)
MySejahtera app to help Malaysians manage Covid-19 outbreaks
Eleven people died in Manaus, in the state of Amazonas, Brazil, during a study conducted with high doses of the drug chloroquine
‘The patients in the study were also given the antibiotic azithromycin, a drug that presents the same cardiac risk. The data is still preliminary, not conclusive, which means that more studies are needed on the relationship between the drug, the disease and the deaths.’
Read here (TeleSureTV, April 15, 2020)
Reflexivity in the age of pandemia: Adaptive policy making and the Covid-19 crisis
’We require far-reaching changes to the way we design and organise our cities and supply chains, and a rethinking of the way we interact and transact as a global society. Arundhati Roy wrote recently that, “Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew.” In this paper, we argue that such a response would require reshaping policy making around the concept of reflexivity and made operational through an adaptive policy making approach.’
Read further and download here (Think City, April 2020)
‘Kerala model is nothing but focus on education and welfare’
Read here (The Quint, April 15, 2020)
Boris Johnson recovery shows need for rehabilitation after coronavirus
‘Rehabilitation reduces bed block as patients are discharged more quickly. It also takes pressure off GPs and reduces re-presentations to emergency departments for issues that can be dealt with at home.’
Read here (The Sydney Morning Herald, April 15, 2020)
Could the next normal emerge from Asia?
Read here (McKinsey & Co, April 2020)
Google provides info on community mobility in response to Covid-19
‘These Community Mobility Reports aim to provide insights into what has changed in response to policies aimed at combating COVID-19. The reports chart movement trends over time by geography, across different categories of places such as retail and recreation, groceries and pharmacies, parks, transit stations, workplaces, and residential.’
Read here (Google, constantly updated)
China’s initial coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan spread twice as fast as we thought, new study suggests
Read here (South China Morning Post, April 15, 2020)
Covid-19 is an opportunity for gender equality within the workplace and at home
Read here (BMJ Opinion, April 15, 2020)
Medical researchers have been studying everything we know about Covid-19. What have they learned – and is it enough to halt the pandemic?
Read here (The Guardian, April 15, 2020)
Tuesday, 14 April 2020
‘On cronies, cranks and the coronavirus’: Opinion piece by Paul Krugman
Read here (New York Times, April 14, 2020)
Vietnam winning new war against invisible enemy
Read here (IPS News, April 14, 2020)
Up to 70% of those infected may show no symptoms, making coronavirus tough to tackle
The other two reasons: (1) high virus secretion at its onset (2) as Sars-CoV-2 is a novel pathogen, the whole of Singapore is susceptible to it.
Read here (Strait Times, April 14, 2020)
Intermittent social distancing may be needed through 2022 to manage Covid-19
‘The research, published April 14, 2020 in the journal Science, predicted several scenarios for how the coronavirus might spread over the next five years, taking into account factors such as whether or not the virus will exhibit seasonality, whether people who are infected go on to develop short-term or long-term immunity, and whether people would get any cross-protective immunity from having been infected with other types of coronaviruses that cause common colds.’
Read here (Harvard School of Public Health, April 14, 2020)
First UN solidarity flight departs Addis Ababa carrying vital COVID-19 medical supplies to all African nations
Read here (WHO, April 14, 2020)
From ‘gold standard’ to a coronavirus ‘explosion’: Singapore battles new outbreak
‘Health officials said the man had visited Mustafa Center, a giant shopping complex in Singapore’s Little India district that is popular with foreign workers.
‘But as recently as two weeks ago, shoppers were going in and out of the building without temperature checks, and few employees were seen wearing masks. On Tuesday, the government said 86 infections had been linked to Mustafa Center.’
Read here (Los Angeles Times, April 14, 2020)
Will religion lead Covid reform? Joachim Ng
‘The Works of Mencius contain these verses: “Beasts devour one another, and people hate them for doing so” (Book 1, Pt1, Ch4, v.5). “So is the superior person affected towards animals, that, having seen them alive, he cannot bear to see them die; having heard their dying cries, he cannot bear to eat their flesh” (Ch7, v.8).
‘If religions continue their spiritual distancing from one another and from the original faith in nature, they will lose their relevance to society. This is the moment of truth: Will religion lead Covid reform?’
Read here (theSun Daily, April 14, 2020)
Coronavirus doubters follow climate denial playbook
Read here (Yale Climate Change Connection, April 14, 2020)
The plague writers who predicted today
Read here (BBC, April 14, 2020)
‘Short-sighted.’ Health experts decry Trump’s freeze on US funding for WHO as world fights pandemic
‘In an interview in December 2019, Tedros told Science that WHO’s reliance on just a few donors left the organisation vulnerable. “If one of them refuses to continue funding,” he said, “WHO could get into a serious shock”.’
Read here (Science, April 14, 2020)
Singapore announces enhanced “circuit breaker”: Masks now mandatory in public places
Read here (Ministry of Health, Singapore, April 14, 2020)
Monday, 13 April 2020
Coronavirus saliva test gets FDA emergency use approval, Rutgers University says
- The Food and Drug Administration granted emergency use authorisation for a coronavirus test relying on saliva samples developed by a Rutgers University-backed entity, Rutgers said Monday.
- The test could increase, by tens of thousands of tests per day, the number of screenings for Covid-19, Rutgers said.
- The test was developed by Rutgers’ RUCDR Infinite Biologics and its collaborators, Spectrum Solutions and Accurate Diagnostic Labs.
Read here (CNBC, April 13, 2020)
It is the math, stupid
‘The real pandemic will start the day we start lifting the lockdown.’
Read here (Center for Inquiry, April 13, 2020)
Use crisis to make post corona society fairer and sustainable, say scientists
Read here (Dutch News, April 13, 2020)
Of haircuts, MITI website crashes and living with Covid-19
Read here (Focus Malaysia, April 13, 2020)
Misinformation: China… and now Russia
‘The Kremlin’s audience for open disinformation is surprisingly large. The YouTube videos of RT, Russia’s global television network, average one million views per day, “the highest among news outlets,” according to a U.S. intelligence report. Since the founding of the Russian network in 2005, its videos have received more than four billion views, analysts recently concluded.’
Read here (New York Times, April 13, 2020)
Sunday, 12 April 2020
Sound advice from a USM medical microbiologist
Read here (The Star, April 12, 2020)
Clinical trials on repurposing two vaccines, BCG and polio: Both statements start with "There is no evidence..."
Download here (Polio Eradication Initiative, March 2020)
On BCG: ‘There is no evidence that the Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccine (BCG) protects people against infection with COVID-19 virus. Two clinical trials addressing this question are underway, and WHO will evaluate the evidence when it is available. In the absence of evidence, WHO does not recommend BCG vaccination for the prevention of COVID-19. WHO continues to recommend neonatal BCG vaccination in countries or settings with a high incidence of tuberculosis.’
Read here (WHO, April 12, 2020)
African nations demand answers from China over mistreatment of their citizens in Guangzhou
Read here (South China Morning Post, April 12, 2020)
Malaysia's response to Covid-19 ranked fourth strictest in South East Asia
‘A higher position in the Stringency Index, however, does not necessarily mean that a country's response is “better” than others lower on the index, according to the Blavatnik School of Government.
‘The score is based on measurements of seven response indicators. They include policies such as school and workplace closures, travel bans, public event cancellations, public transport closures, public information campaigns and movement restrictions. Other six measures gauged by the tracker include fiscal or monetary measures, investment in vaccines, Covid-19 testing framework and contact tracing measures.’
Read here (The Star, April 12, 2020)
Saturday, 11 April 2020
How the virus transformed the way Americans spend their money
[NOTE: These figures, while they don't apply to many developing countries as a whole, give us a glimpse of how the more urbanised, consumerist parts of our economies may be affected. Also the patterns of spending give us an idea of what we may expect in large sections of the economy dependent on travel and tourism, including “medical tourism”, international students, retailing in malls, etc. They also tell us why we should now focus on basic needs.]
Read here (New York Times, April 11, 2020)
Behind Trump’s failure on the Covid-19 virus
‘During the last week in March, Kellyanne Conway, a senior White House adviser involved in task force meetings, gave voice to concerns other aides had. She warned Mr. Trump that his wished-for date of Easter to reopen the country likely couldn’t be accomplished. Among other things, she told him, he would end up being blamed by critics for every subsequent death caused by the virus.
‘Within days, he watched images on television of a calamitous situation at Elmhurst Hospital Center, miles from his childhood home in Queens, NY. where 13 people had died from the coronavirus in 24 hours.’
NOTE: On April 13, when NY Governor Cuomo said the ‘worst is over’, the total cases in New York was 195,031 with 10,056 deaths (NYT report of April 13)
Read here (New York Times, April 11, 2020)
Jane Goodall says ‘disrespect for animals’ caused pandemic
‘It’s also the animals who are hunted for food, sold in markets in Africa or in the meat market for wild animals in Asia, especially China, and our intensive farms where we cruelly crowd together billions of animals around the world. These are the conditions that create an opportunity for the viruses to jump from animals across the species barrier to humans.’
Read here (The Malay Mail, April 11, 2020)
Coronavirus found in air samples up to 4 metres from patients: China study
Read here (Channel News Asia, April 11, 2020)
The second wave: How did the fight go wrong? (Singapore)
COMMENT: The second front could have been opened up due to an underestimation of how effectively the virus could spread within the community especially by asymptomatic carriers
Read here (Tan Tarn How, April 11, 2020)
Verena Friederike Hasel: NZ's Covid-19 coronavirus response ‘extraordinary’
Read here (NZ Herald, April 11, 2020)
First case of Covid-19, presumably Type A, occurred ‘no earlier than September 13, 2019 and no later than December 7, 2019’
View here (CGTN, Youtube, April 11, 2020)
Friday, 10 April 2020
Top physicians pen letter to PM calling for gradual relaxation of MCO
Read here (Malaysiakini, April 10, 2020)
John Hopkins produces a 15-page ‘national plan to enable comprehensive COVID-19 case finding and contact tracing in the US’
- Ready access to rapid diagnostic tests for all symptomatic cases or those with a reasonable suspicion of COVID-19 exposure;
- Widespread serological testing to understand underlying rates of infection and identify those who have developed immunity and could potentially return to work or school without fear of becoming infected; and
- The ability to trace all contacts of reported cases.’
Download here (John Hopkins Center for Health and Security, April 10, 2020)
UK government urged to investigate coronavirus deaths of BAME doctors with ‘disproportionate severity of infection’: They often feel 'bullied and harassed'
“BAME doctors often feel bullied and harassed at higher levels compared to their white counterparts,” he said. “They are twice as likely not to raise concerns because of fears of recrimination”.’
Read here (The Guardian, April 10, 2020)
Health insecurity and its impact on refugees in Malaysia
Read here (ISIS Malaysia, April 10, 2020)
Report of special survey on effects of COVID-19 on economy & individual - Round 1
Read here (Department of Statistics Malaysia, DOSM, April 10?, 2020)
Why blood from coronavirus survivors could be a lifeline for the sick
View video here (Wall Street Journal, April 10, 2020)
Iceland study confirms a great fear: 50% asymptomatic
Read here (USA Today, April 10, 2020)
Cruising ban now extended for months! What you need to know
‘On 9 April 2020, the USA CDC (Center for Disease Control) issued an updated “no-sail cruise ban” for cruise lines and ships operating in and out of USA ports and waters. This strong ruling suggests cruising will be prohibited in and out of the USA until at least 18 July 2020, and probably longer. The lift of the cruise ban is also subject to the CDC agreeing cruise lines proposal on how to address at least 7 major areas and issues, which could significantly change the facilities and way that cruising operates. In this video, I explore the ban including (1) how long the order looks to ban cruising, (2) why they are taking such a strong stance and (3) the 7 things that cruising have to address and convince them on before the cruising ban will be lifted.’
View here (Tips for Travellers, Youtube, April 10, 2020)
Hong Kong’s edge over Singapore shows early social distancing works
Read here (Bloomberg, April 10, 2020)
I’ve read the plans to reopen the economy. They’re scary. There is no plan to return to normal
‘I thought, perhaps naively, that reading them would be a comfort — at least then I’d be able to imagine the path back to normal. But it wasn’t. In different ways, all these plans say the same thing: Even if you can imagine the herculean political, social, and economic changes necessary to manage our way through this crisis effectively, there is no normal for the foreseeable future. Until there’s a vaccine, the US either needs economically ruinous levels of social distancing, a digital surveillance state of shocking size and scope, or a mass testing apparatus of even more shocking size and intrusiveness.’
Read here (Vox, April 10, 2020)
Prepare for the ultimate gaslighting
‘We are a good people. And as a good people, we want to define — on our own terms — what this country looks like in five, 10, 50 years. This is our chance to do that, the biggest one we have ever gotten. And the best one we’ll ever get.’
Read here (Medium, April 10, 2020)
Drugmaker Gilead Sciences funds study on "compassionate use of Remdesivir for patients with severe Covid-19" showing positive results
In this short conclusion in its introduction, the paper published by the New England Journal of Medicine, mentions specifically who funded it.
Read here (New England Journal of Medicine, April 10, 2020)
Stanford University epidemiologist John Ioannidis calls out media for panicking the public over COVID-19, reasons that ‘flattening the curve’ may make things worse for overall health system
Read here (Straight, April 10, 2020)
Leaders in Africa, South Asia, and Latin America need to look carefully at alternative policies
- A universal mask-wearing requirement when workers leave their homes (as masks and homemade face coverings are comparatively cheap, and such a policy is likely feasible for almost all countries to implement);
- Targeted social isolation of the elderly and other at-risk groups, while permitting productive individuals with lower-risk profiles to continue working;
- Improving access to clean water, hand-washing, and sanitation, and other policies to decrease the viral load; and
- Widespread social influence and information campaigns to encourage behaviours that slow the spread of disease but do not undermine economic livelihoods. This could include restrictions on the size of religious and social gatherings or programs to encourage community and religious leaders to endorse safer behaviours and communicate them clearly.’
Thursday, 9 April 2020
For the record: MMA's open letter to the Rt Honourable Prime Minister of Malaysia
Read here (MMA, April 9, 2020)
Does coronavirus survive even longer in your fridge or freezer?
- Viruses similar to the novel coronavirus have demonstrated an ability to live for extended periods of time in cooler temperatures.
- Past studies have shown that these viruses can live up to a month in temperatures similar to that of a household refrigerator.
- The virus is also believed to be capable of surviving after being frozen, which means it could also persist in the environment of a household freezer.
Read here (BGR, April 10, 2020)
How rituals and focus can turn isolation into a time for growth
Read here (Wall Street Journal, April 9, 2020)
Ray Dalio discusses depression economics and what to expect
- The world is going through a massive stress test, akin to the 1930s, when there would be widespread economic collapse, money printing and subsequent restructuring. Wealth will be redistributed but the levers of power will decide how it would be (within nations and internationally). This will cause a lot of friction, even wars.
- Even today, there is demonisation of "others" even if they are being helpful. For example, while China is helping many countries, anyone holding such views can be ostracised in the US.
- It is an opportunity to reform capitalism to create more equal opportunities, greater harmony, more innovation and more productivity via universal education.
- Companies that win will be those that provide basic needs and those that are adaptive and creative. Algorithmic thinking, especially in investment, will give way to more human interventions and creative input.
- For the individual investor, he calls for humility and diversification, and not to try to time the market. Cash, he stresses, is not good investment.
View here (TED, April 9, 2020)
Cambridge researchers identify 3 variants of Covid-19, say their methods could be used to help identify undocumented infection sources
Read here (Cambridge Research News, April 9, 2020)
WHO initiates a SOLIDARITY trial for vaccine
‘Its goal is to “coordinate evaluation of the many preventive candidate SARS CoV-2 vaccines under development, to evaluate promptly, efficiently and reliably their safety and efficacy, enabling assessment of whether any are appropriate for deployment to influence the course of the pandemic”.’
Read here (WHO, April 9, 2020)
How ‘bureaucratic inertia and disinterest’, an ‘alphabet soup of overlapping authority’, ignoring early warnings and muddled decision-making delayed coronavirus testing in the US
‘When the CDC stumbled out of the blocks in early February, releasing a flawed test that took it weeks to correct, labs across the country had been effectively sidelined. Many public health labs were waiting for the revised CDC tests, while commercial and clinical labs were barred from conducting their own tests unless they went through a complex, slow process of applying for their own "emergency use authorisation" from the US Food and Drug Administration.
‘As a result, the government squandered a critical month during which aggressive and widespread testing might greatly have reduced the speed and scale of the pandemic.’
Read here (CNN, April 9, 2020)
Coronavirus replicates in throat making it easy to transmit, German scientists say
Read here (South China Morning Post, April 9, 2020)
Does COVID-19 prove women are best suited to lead in a crisis?
Read here (Byline Times, April 9, 2020)
Trump is creating a ‘dangerous situation’ by promoting an unproven coronavirus treatment, according to an expert on misinformation
Read here (Business Insider, April 9, 2020)
Covid-19 and healthcare's guerrilla warfare
This is a most personal and touching account by a doctor on the frontline in the US. Dr Avinesh S Bhar, now in Georgia, grew up in Kuala Lumpur.
Read here (SLIIP, April 9, 2020)
Kerala’s Covid-19 approach: Less disruptive, less costly and more effective than most others
- All-of-government approach: involving a range of relevant state government ministries and agencies to design measures to improve consistency, coordination and communication, and to avoid confusion.
- Whole-of-society approach: wide community consultations, including experts, to find the most locally appropriate modes of limiting infections, along with means to monitor and enforce them.
- Social mobilisation: communities were provided essential epidemiological information to understand the threat and related issues, ensure compliance with prescribed precautionary measures, and avoid panic.
- No one left behind: adequate supply of essential commodities, particularly food and medicines, has been ensured, especially to protect the most vulnerable sections of society.’
‘Dignity not destitution: An ‘economic rescue plan for all’ to tackle the Coronavirus crisis and rebuild a more equal world’. A paper by Oxfam
‘New analysis shows the economic crisis caused by coronavirus could push over half a billion people into poverty unless urgent and dramatic action is taken... We can only beat this virus through coming together as one. Developing countries must act to protect their people, and demand action from rich nations to support them. Rich country governments must massively upscale their help – led by the G20. This paper lays out an Economic Rescue Plan For All that meets the scale of the crisis, mobilising at least $2.5 trillion dollars to tackle the pandemic and prevent global economic collapse. It prioritises helping people directly: giving cash grants to all who need them. An immediate suspension of the debt payments of poor countries, combined with a one-off economic stimulus by the IMF and an increase in aid and taxes, can pay for this.’
Download here (Oxfam, April 9, 2020)
Many Malaysians say not financially prepared for an extended MCO — Survey released by the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM)
Read here (The Edge, April 9, 2020)
Wednesday, 8 April 2020
A toxic ‘infodemic’: The viral spread of COVID-19 conspiracy theories
‘Another part of the problem seems to be a lack of high-level coordination, said Wardle, as certain virus-related posts have been banned on some platforms but permitted on others. “It’s a whack-a-mole approach,” she said, “and it’s nowhere near enough”.’
Read here (Huffington Post, April 8, 2020)
First-wave COVID-19 transmissibility and severity in China outside Hubei after control measures, and second-wave scenario planning: a modelling impact assessment
‘In all selected cities and provinces, the Rt decreased substantially since Jan 23, when control measures were implemented, and have since remained below 1. The cCFR outside Hubei was 0·98% (95% CI 0·82–1·16), which was almost five times lower than that in Hubei (5·91%, 5·73–6·09). Relaxing the interventions (resulting in Rt >1) when the epidemic size was still small would increase the cumulative case count exponentially as a function of relaxation duration, even if aggressive interventions could subsequently push disease prevalence back to the baseline level.’
Read here (The Lancet, April 8, 2020)
“If you insist on every single contractual right... that will suck the life out of the economy”
Read here (CNBC, April 8, 2020)
Dr Amar Singh on life after Covid-19 and other personal beliefs
Amar is a columnist with Malay Mail Online on Covid-19. He is a retired paediatrician, public health practitioner, columnist and avid birdwatcher. This video is part of a series ‘Do More: Take control of your life’ created by former staffer of The Edge, Khoo Hsu Chuang.
View here (Do more, YouTube, April 8, 2020). Listen to podcast here
Wuhan opens up
Read here (BBC, April 8, 2020)
Study finds link between low Vitamin D levels in people and higher mortality and higher occurrence of Covid-19; suggests supplementation
It finds a positive correlation and says: ‘Vitamin D levels are severely low in the ageing population especially in Spain, Italy and Switzerland. This is also the most vulnerable group of population for Covid-19’. It concludes: ‘We advise Vitamin D supplementation to protect against SARS-CoV2 infection’.
Read here (Research Square, April 8, 2020)
Amartya Sen: Overcoming a pandemic may look like fighting a war, but the real need is far from that
Read here (Indian Express, April 8, 2020)
Tuesday, 7 April 2020
Six points from Dr Amar Singh's article: ‘To understand our epidemic stop looking at daily Covid-19 numbers’
(2) The number tested positive (daily or cumulative) is dependent on the number of tests we conduct. Some modelling studies estimate the actual number in any country to be 10 times that.
(3) If we used death rate and assumed 1 death per 100, we would have 6,200 cases (as at April 6) but this figure is distorted by other factors. E.g. we could have missed out counting Covid-19 among other pneumonia cases. Pneumonia accounts for 11.8% of deaths in Malaysia or 390 per week.
(4) There are two lag times that affect the figures: (a) First, “it takes about 7-14 days before an infected person presents clinically. It takes another 7-14 days before illness severity and dying (ventilation and ICU care).” (b) Second, there is a backlog of testing. “Some say it takes 5-7 days to get results. Even health care staff that have potentially been exposed may have to wait for 4-5 days to get their status known.”
(5) We have community spread: “From MoH Influenza-Like Illness (ILI) & Severe Acute Respiratory Infection (SARI) surveillance that is conducted at selected sites, about 1.2 per cent of these patients have been Covid-19 positive in the past week. This indicates community spread, as these persons have no contact with known cases. We do not know how many patients with pneumonia and severe respiratory illnesses (influenza-like illness) we have missed in the past 4-6 weeks.”
Point 5 justifies a lockdown because, given community spread, gatherings of people could become “transmission amplification events”.
(6) We need to do more to protect our front-line workers. “Many staff have had to rely on homemade (not all reliable) or donated PPE. We are still struggling with the distribution of national PPE supplies. Even as far back as March 20, MoH reported that 15 HCPs had been infected by Covid-19 as part of their work.”
Read here (Malay Mail, April 7, 2020)
Hydroxychloroquine or else! Trump threatens India
‘The Indian government had put a hold on exports of hydroxychloroquine as well as on the pain reliever, paracetamol, saying stocks were depleting because of the hit to global supply chains after the coronavirus emerged in China late last year.
‘But Trump spoke to Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the weekend seeking supplies and on Monday said India may face retaliation if it didn’t withdraw the ban on exports.’
Read here (Reuters, April 7, 2020)
Austria and Denmark are first to announce easing of coronavirus lockdowns
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz credited his country’s early response [to the virus]; it imposed a national lockdown on March 16, earlier than some of its neighbours. “We reacted faster and more restrictively in Austria than in other countries and were therefore able to prevent the worst from happening so far...” Austria has seen three consecutive days in which the number of coronavirus recoveries have exceeded the number of new cases.
Denmark also imposed its lockdown relatively early, on March 11, and invested in widespread testing. Announcing the plan for lifting restrictions, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said, “It’s like walking on a line. If we stand still along the way, we can fall. If we go too fast, things can go wrong. Therefore, we must take one cautious step at a time. And we do not yet know when we have firm ground under our feet.”
Read here (Washington Post, April 7, 2020)
How are people being infected with COVID-19? A lot we still do not know
Three types of transmission are discussed: Respiratory, aerosol and contact. ‘Unfortunately, there's a lot we still don't know about the way the virus that causes COVID-19 spreads.’
Read here (Live Science, April 7, 2020)
Media consumption in the age of Covid-19
Read here (Visual Capitalist, April 7, 2020)
Monday, 6 April 2020
Towards a market structure that serves the greater good
‘Markets will continue to exist and play a part in the economy. But it must be subordinated to society, to be regulated by the state to serve a greater good. For market to function well as a public good, it must not only be free but also fair. Both attributes are equally important, like the two wings of birds. The new economy must prioritise people’s as well as nature’s wellbeing over profit making for a few.’
Read here (IPS News, April 6, 2020)
Will Covid-19 remake the world?
Read here (Project Syndicate, April 6, 2020)
Key food prices on the up: Hopefully they are short-term spikes
‘To be clear, it’s likely the supply disruptions could prove temporary. And that will probably mean that wheat and rice will stabilise. In the last several years, food costs have been relatively benign thanks to plentiful supplies. Global rice and wheat reserves are both projected at all-time highs, according to the US Department of Agriculture.’
Read here (Bloomberg, April 6, 2020)
Why smart people believe coronavirus myths
(1) ‘Truthy fakes’ within the information overload: “Purveyors of fake news can make their message feel ‘truthy’ through a few simple tricks, which discourages us from applying our critical thinking skills – such as checking the veracity of its source. As the authors of one paper put it: ‘When thoughts flow smoothly, people nod along’... ‘The simple presence of an image alongside a statement increases our trust in its accuracy – even if it is only tangentially related to the claim.’
(2) Repetition of a statement – whether the same text, or over multiple messages – can increase the “truthiness” by increasing feelings of familiarity, which we mistake for factual accuracy. So, the more often we see something in our news feed, the more likely we are to think that it’s true – even if we were originally sceptical.
(3) ‘Cognitive miserliness’ (some of us possess substantial mental reserves, but don’t ‘spend’ them) renders us susceptible to many cognitive biases, and it also seems to change the way we consume information (and misinformation).
Matthew Stanley, Duke University in Durham, North Carolina: ‘...around 13% of US citizens believed this theory [that Covid-19 was a hoax], which could potentially discourage hygiene and social distancing... “We need more communications and strategy work to target those folks who are not as willing to be reflective and deliberative.”
Read here (BBC, April 6, 2020)
Hurrah to The Atlantic for focus on must-read stories about Covid-19
‘We have never, in the 163-year history of this magazine, had an audience like we had in March: 87 million unique visitors to our site, and more than 168 million pageviews. The number of unique visitors is astonishing — more than double the previous one-month record. But the most notable statistic, the one with possibly the greatest salience for The Atlantic’s future, is this: Your work has brought in more than 36,000 new subscribers over the past four weeks, even as we have lifted paywall restrictions on our coronavirus coverage.’
Those traffic numbers are very impressive. To put them in context, 87 million uniques is not far off what The New York Times (118 million in January, per Comscore), Fox News (104 million), The Washington Post (92 million), or the Daily Mail (89 million) might get in a normal, non-COVID-19 month. (The Atlantic’s media kit cites 33.7 million uniques as of a year ago, March 2019.)
Read here (Nieman Lab, April 6, 2020)
Free book on coronavirus for primary schoolchildren
Download here (Nosy Crow, April 6, 2020)
Covering a pandemic: Ian Bremmer explores the media's handling of the coronavirus pandemic
View here: (GZeroMedia, Youtube, April 6, 2020)
Lockdown can’t last forever. Here’s how to lift it
Opinion by Gabriel Leung, infectious disease epidemiologist and dean of medicine at the University of Hong Kong.
Read here (New York Times, April 6, 2020)
WHO issues guidelines on the use of masks in community, homecare and healthcare settings
Read here (WHO, April 6, 2020)
Sunday, 5 April 2020
Decentralisation is helping Germany beat Covid-19
‘Such an environment allows for a variety of laboratories – some attached to universities or hospitals, others privately run, medium-sized businesses – which act largely autonomously of central control.’
Read here (The Guardian, April 5, 2020)
Paul Krugman: ‘We really are talking about a depression level event’
View here (MSNBC, Youtube, April 15, 2020)
‘SARS-CoV-2 RNA found in air pollution particles in Italy’
Read here (Medrxiv, April 15, 2020)
Saturday, 4 April 2020
18 lessons of urban quarantine urbanism
‘To what world will we reemerge after the distress and devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic? Calling for a geopolitics based on a deliberate plan for the coordination of the planet, design theorist and The Terraforming Program Director Benjamin H. Bratton looks at the underlying causes of the current crisis and identifies important lessons to be learned from it.’
Read here (Strelkamag, April 4, 2020)
Making the invisible visible: Faces of poverty in Malaysia revealed under the MCO
‘Moving ahead, a serious rethink of how to address vulnerabilities and the poor is needed, beyond cash transfers of assistance and other immediate relief measures. The poor as a whole need to be recognised and disaggregated, with more attention to how to treat those facing the most serious hardships. A key step is to start getting the numbers right and to stop leaving out the many different groups being affected.
‘Practically, a task force can be set up to look at different sets of policies that are more holistic in addressing needs and causes along the various dimensions, with greater collaboration with NGOs, academics and international organisations, notably United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). This will allow for better targeting of available limited resources, offer opportunities to find new resources and importantly, allow for the framing of sound policies that will not just ameliorate problems caused by Covid-19, but also work to address the underlying social conditions that will inevitably worsen as the economy contracts.
‘A crucial part of the way forward is to make the reality of poverty more visible.’
Read here (Malaysiakini, April 4, 2020)
Arundhati Roy: ‘The pandemic is a portal’
‘Whatever it is, coronavirus has made the mighty kneel and brought the world to a halt like nothing else could. Our minds are still racing back and forth, longing for a return to “normality”, trying to stitch our future to our past and refusing to acknowledge the rupture. But the rupture exists. And in the midst of this terrible despair, it offers us a chance to rethink the doomsday machine we have built for ourselves. Nothing could be worse than a return to normality.
‘Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next.
‘We can choose to walk through it, dragging the carcasses of our prejudice and hatred, our avarice, our data banks and dead ideas, our dead rivers and smoky skies behind us. Or we can walk through lightly, with little luggage, ready to imagine another world. And ready to fight for it.’
Read here (Financial Times, April 4, 2020)
Friday, 3 April 2020
Covid-19: To mask or not to mask? — Amar Singh
Read here (The Malay Mail, April 3, 2020)
Shockwave: Adam Tooze on the pandemic’s consequences for the world economy
When Covid-19 hit, the three main economic blocs responded, strapped to the underpinnings of their own socio-economic systems. Many East Asian countries, notably China, South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore, employed ‘the hammer and the dance’ by hitting the virus hard and fast. Europe ended up in an uncoordinated and dispiriting stalemate. ‘From the point of view of the wider world, what matters is that Europe does not unleash a sovereign debt crisis.’ In the US, ‘more than the flame-out of Trump, is the gulf between the competence of the American government machine in managing global finance and the Punch and Judy show of its politics. That tension has been more and more glaring since at least the 1990s, but the virus has exposed it as never before.’
‘If you swiftly declare an emergency and are prepared to interrupt business as usual, both the medical and economic costs of confronting the virus appear more reasonable, and the conventional priorities of modern politics remain basically in place... As the Europeans and Americans have discovered, once you lose control all the options are bad: shut down the economy for an unforeseeable duration, or hundreds of thousands die.’
Tooze concludes that ‘for those of us in Europe and America these questions [about opening up] are premature. The worst is just beginning.’
Read here (London Review of Books, April 3, 2020)
Beijing approves TCM drugs for Covid-19
‘China has added three patented items of traditional Chinese medicines (TCM) to the treatments for COVID-19. The drugs, specifically Jinhua Qinggan granules, Lianhua Qingwen capsules, and Xuebijing injections have undergone clinical trials with the National Medical Products Administration and now list treating COVID-19 as one of their uses.
"That means these three drugs have passed strict reviews by the administration, and can be commonly and widely used in China. Their effects are exact and backed with ample evidence. So people may have a new choice if there's a similar epidemic in the future," said Zhang Boli, president of Tianjin Hospital of TCM.’
Read here (CGTN, April 4, 2020)
Bringing in the experts: Blame deflection and the COVID-19 crisis
Read here (LSE, April 3, 2020)
Coronavirus: Out of many, one -- What the US federal government and the states should do to fight the coronavirus
‘The US is now the country with most coronavirus cases in the world. It is likely to keep that title in the history books. Two key reasons are government decentralisation and concerns about the economic impact of aggressive social distancing measures. Here’s what we’re going to cover today, with a lot of data, charts and sources: (a) What’s the situation in the US and its states (b) Why the coronavirus should be a bipartisan issue (c) The economics of controlling the virus (d) Which decisions should be left to the federal government or to states
Read here (Medium, April 2, 2020)
Read here for a list of people who have endorsed or shared his article
Thursday, 2 April 2020
Nations with mandatory TB vaccines show fewer coronavirus deaths
Read here (Bloomberg, April 2, 2020)
Privacy: Thrown to the wind in the pandemic?
‘So are we becoming more relaxed about privacy because of the pandemic, or are we in danger of allowing governments and corporations to trample over our rights using the excuse of the emergency?...
‘Earlier this week the British Prime Minister shared a picture of an online Cabinet meeting, complete with the Zoom meeting ID and the usernames of ministers. And millions of us are sharing views of our kitchens over this and other video-conferencing apps, without apparently being too concerned about poor privacy controls.
‘Meanwhile, the National Health Service in England has sent out a document that appears to mark a shift in its policy on patient data, giving staff more latitude to share information relating to the coronavirus. In particular, it mentions the use of data to understand trends in the spread and impact of the virus and “the management of patients with or at risk of Covid-19 including: locating, contacting, screening, flagging and monitoring such patients”.’
Read here (BBC, April 2, 2020)
China rolls out the Health Silk Road
The four rules of pandemic economics: A playbook that should govern America’s short-term reaction to the health crisis.
The impact of the coronavirus on global higher education: Exclusive QS survey data
Download here (QS, April 2, 2020)
Corona, East and West: Has Western-centrism mitigated against our well-being in the UK?
Read here (Discover Society, April 2, 2020)
Wednesday, 1 April 2020
Three lessons from this pandemic by Dr Lim Mah Hui & Dr Michael Heng
‘First, the pandemic exposes the flaws of neoliberalism which deifies the free market and vilifies the state... Under this scenario, risks are socialised while profits are privatised. It weakens the capacity and readiness of society to respond to unanticipated nation-wide crisis.
‘Second, had the rich western countries cast off their ideological blinkers and used the opportunities after the GFC to invest in infrastructure, research and development, public goods, reduction of huge inequalities and other form of capital development, the whole world would have been in better conditions to deal with the unfolding situation.
‘Third, the crisis underscores the interdependence resulting from systematic integration over the past several decades. It is a cliché now to say that pathogen respects no border. It took only a few weeks for the virus to travel worldwide. A global solidarity is needed to tackle problem of this nature which unfortunately is not being displayed...
‘The world has to act in a concerted action. We are all in the same boat; a leak in one part will sink the boat no matter where the source.’
Read here (IPS News, April 1, 2020)
Timeless lessons from Albert Camus’ “The Plague” (published 1947)
View here (The School of Life, YouTube, April 1, 2020)
Covid-19 in Malaysia: Fours ways to address the problem of transmission
1. Masks for all those venturing out of their homes
2. More effective quarantining of contacts
3. Earlier testing of symptomatic cases
4. Winning the trust of the migrant worker population
Read here (Aliran, April 1, 2020)
Questions on the government stimulus package
Read here (FreeMalaysiaToday, April 1, 2020)
MIT revives project to build makeshift ventilators at US$400-500 using existing hospital supplies: An idea developing countries can consider too
This is the reasoning behind the project:
‘We are one of several teams who recognised the challenges faced by Italian physicians, and are working to find a solution to the anticipated global lack of ventilators. In the US alone, the COVID-19 pandemic may cause ventilator shortages on the order of 300,000-700,000 units (CDC Pandemic Response Plans). These could present on a national scale within weeks, and are already being felt in certain areas. An increase in conventional ventilator production is very likely to fall short and with significant associated cost (paywall warning).
‘Almost every bed in a hospital has a manual resuscitator (Ambu-Bag) nearby, available in the event of a rapid response or code where healthcare workers maintain oxygenation by squeezing the bag. Automating this appears to be the simplest strategy that satisfies the need for low-cost mechanical ventilation, with the ability to be rapidly manufactured in large quantities. However, doing this safely is not trivial.
‘Use of a bag-valve mask (BVM) in emergency situations is not a new concept. A portable ventilator utilizing an ambu-bag was introduced in 2010 by a student team in the MIT class 2.75 Medical Device Design (original paper here and news story here), but did not move past the prototype stage. Around the same time, a team from Stanford developed a lower-cost ventilator for emergency stockpiles and the developing world. It looks similar to a modern ICU ventilator (Onebreath), but “production for US hospitals would start [in] about 11 months”, making it “a second wave solution” (MIT Tech Review Article).
‘Last year, the AMBU®️ Bag concept was re-visited by two student teams, one from Rice university (here & here), and another Boston-based team who won MIT Sloan’s Healthcare prize (MIT News: Umbilizer).’
Read here (MIT, April 1, 2020)
Mathematical modelling, "herd immunity" and the resultant failure of "test, test, test" in Britain
‘Testing, isolation and quarantine – basic public health interventions – were barely on the agenda. Warnings from Chinese scientists of the severity of Covid-19 had not been understood.
‘“We thought we could have a controlled epidemic. We thought we could manage that epidemic over the course of March and April, push the curve to the right, build up herd immunity and that way we could protect people,” said Horton. “The reason why that strategy was wrong is it didn’t recognise that 20% of people infected would end up with severe critical illness. The evidence was there at the end of January.”
‘Anthony Costello, a UK paediatrician and former director of the WHO, also fiercely criticised the decision to stop tests. “For me and the WHO people I have spoken to, this is absolutely the wrong policy,” he said. “The basic public health approach is playing second fiddle to mathematical modelling.”
Read here (The Guardian, April 1, 2020)
Case for wearing face masks (3): WHO considering changing guidelines
‘The data from Hong Kong was shared confidentially with the WHO, but is likely to be published soon, Heymann said. He added that, in reassessing its policy, the WHO would take into account health workers’ need for masks in all countries.’
Read here (The Guardian, April 1, 2020)
Face masks: Asia may have been right about coronavirus and face masks, and the rest of the world is coming around
‘In fact, there is evidence of the exact opposite: that masks help prevent viral infections like the current pandemic.
‘Burch pointed to a Cochrane Review -- a systemic analysis of published studies on a given topic -- which found strong evidence during the 2003 SARS epidemic in support of wearing masks. One study of community transmission in Beijing found that "consistently wearing a mask in public was associated with a 70% reduction in the risk of catching SARS.”’
Read here (CNN, April 1, 2020)
Worst ever Covid variant? Omicron
John Campbell shares his findings on Omicron. View here (Youtube, Nov 27, 2021)
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‘The New York Times recently published a list of “true leaders” in the fight against COVID-19. They spend exactly one sentence on Asia and t...
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‘It appears that vaccine hesitancy is due to lack of information and trust. Despite the government's assurances about Covid-19 vaccines,...
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‘We also used this investigation to quantify the impact of behaviours (i.e. mask wearing, handwashing) that were promoted to reduce the risk...