Interesting blog on Cambodia's testing policy while opening-up

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nndavid
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Interesting blog on Cambodia's testing policy while opening-up

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https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2021/12/0 ... -covid-19/

Cambodia tests living with COVID-19
2 December 2021
Author: Jayant Menon, ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute

Cambodia recorded its sharpest daily decline of COVID-19 cases when they fell from 978 to 232 between 30 September and 1 October 2021. This dramatic 76 per cent drop was due to a change in Cambodia’s testing approach. By eliminating random testing of asymptomatic individuals, testing numbers only reflect cases that present for testing following the onset of symptoms.

A street food vendor sells snacks at Kandal Market, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 12 August 2021 (REUTERS/Cindy Liu)
This change has affected policy relating to lockdowns and border closures. After the Pchum Ben festival ended on 7 October, Cambodian Prime Minister HE announced that should case numbers remain low the country will reopen.

With the sharp drop in testing, case numbers have remained predictably low, leading to the easing of lockdowns and the opening of borders. On 1 November, HE declared Cambodia ‘fully reopened’ and that it could ‘expect crowded shops and roads’. But is this approach to ending the pandemic illusionary, delusionary or visionary?

The answer depends on whether it is time to redefine the pandemic by changing how it is measured. Do circumstances warrant a shift in focus from infection to hospitalisation rates? The answer depends on the vaccination rate, and the capacity and quality of the healthcare system.

At above 85 per cent of its total population, Cambodia’s vaccination rate is one of the world’s highest. It has vaccinated most children aged between 6–12 and started a vaccination program for 5-year-olds. Cambodia has one of the youngest populations in Asia and so extending vaccinations to these age groups is important for reaching herd immunity. Although adequate supplies of vaccines from China were important in achieving the vaccination outcome, Cambodia deserves credit for enabling a rapid rollout under challenging circumstances by managing the logistics efficiently.

Although the healthcare system in Cambodia is improving, its capacity is still limited. There are only 0.7 hospital beds per 1000 people, compared to 2.6 in Vietnam and an average of 4.7 among OECD countries. A surge in cases requiring hospitalisation could quickly overwhelm the healthcare system. But how will the decision to drastically reduce testing affect this risk?

It would certainly diminish the usefulness of reporting the positive infection rate. Apart from being an indicator of adequate testing in itself, accurate infection statistics could be used to monitor the outbreak and introduce pre-emptive lockdown or social distancing measures. The Cambodian infection rate fell from 12.8 per cent of tests on 28 May to 7 per cent on 19 June, presumably due to the lockdown. The World Health Organization has suggested that rates under 10 per cent indicate adequate testing — but that rate is no longer useful when testing is confined to those displaying symptoms.

Reopening while reducing domestic surveillance like testing could backfire if emerging signs of an outbreak that could overwhelm the healthcare system are missed. This converts risk — where the probability of occurrence can be estimated — into uncertainty, where it cannot. Instead of reducing testing to justify scrapping domestic surveillance, early warning systems should be retained, or strengthened, when exposing healthcare systems to increased risks. The return of healthcare system stresses in parts of Europe and South Korea highlight this concern.

With limited healthcare capacity, Cambodia will have to rely on the efficacy of its extensive vaccination program to protect the community. The biggest threat to this approach is the emergence of a new variant that significantly erodes the efficacy of current vaccines in preventing severe disease.

Although this concern underlies much of the hesitancy with opening borders in Asia, evidence suggests that border closures have failed to keep new variants out. Borders are, by design, never completely closed, because that would be both impractical and unsustainable. Since borders are not completely shut, domestic safeguards need to be perfect but are not.

Selective travel bans could only work if the time taken to determine the risks carried by new variants were drastically reduced. It took about two weeks to genetically profile Omicron and declare it a variant of concern. If it turns out to be as transmissible as feared, the bans would have come too late; if not, they were unnecessary to begin with. Border measures will not protect against this or future variants, but improved domestic protocols, including testing, might.

The current state of healthcare in Cambodia is a reminder that the lives-versus-livelihoods trade-off is different in poor countries. When fiscal resources are limited and safety nets are wanting, lives and livelihoods are often one and the same among the poor. Poor countries must consider the lives lost or shortened by lockdowns against lives lost directly to the virus. With more than a third of GDP generated by tourism, border closures are no longer justifiable.

The switch from pandemic to endemic may prove to be visionary, even if the sudden drop in infections is largely illusionary, and changing policy based on it remains delusionary.

Jayant Menon is a Visiting Senior Fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

An earlier version was published here by ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute as a Fulcrum commentary.
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Re: Interesting blog on Cambodia's testing policy while opening-up

Post by AndyKK »

The above is a interesting article and straightforward without any technical jargon to bog down the reader. It's always been about manipulation of numbers I believe, and higher the numbers, you have more to play with. But, that said the risk of coming in contact with the virus is very real. If it was to unfortunately happen to any of us, it would be an advantage if there was competent medical experience to hand, but again I personally don't think much of getting first class care if a person was in need. I don't know how the system would cope if there was such large numbers of people needing medical attention like we have seen happening in other parts of the world, such has first world hospitals and staff being over whelmed, and budgets stretched by the number of people who are in need of help.
I have found that Cambodia have this unique get out clause "we don't have" I am sure the people who have been here for sometime have at one point had heard that reply.
Again, a developing country will seem more orientated with money from their outset, only natural to want to equal the first world countries. And with no, or very little safety net, unlike some of the western countries with a well established social system, the people are in need to carry on with life's normalities' and more so to work, earning money too live day by day. Understandable for the government to open the country with hope that it will bring along income for it's people, if not what are the alternatives.
Always "hope" but never "expect".
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Re: Interesting blog on Cambodia's testing policy while opening-up

Post by atst »

Seems the best thing you either lock everything up forever, or put your faith in the vaccines we have all been told we must have.
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What's a poor man do when the blues keep following him around.(Smoking Dynamite)
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