Morning Briefing: Top stories from The Straits Times on Sept 30

Good morning! Here are our top stories to kick-start your Thursday, Sept 30. 8 seniors die of Covid-19, bringing death toll to 93 in S'pore; 2,268 new cases They comprise five Singaporean men and three Singaporean women, six of whom were unvaccinated. READ MORE HERE 7 wards closed in 6 hospitals in recent weeks as 130 Covid-19 cases detected among staff, patients Visits to hospital wards have been disallowed for four weeks from Sept 24 to Oct 23 due to more Covid-19 cases being detected. READ MORE HERE Nursing home staff soldiering on despite surge in Covid-19 cases and curbs Employees at Hougang's Thye Hua Kwan Nursing Home pull 12-hour shifts, stay away from gatherings to avoid infection. READ MORE HERE More on this topic   Related Story ST newsletters: Get alerts on the latest news ART vending machines make a difference at S'pore hospitals, firms They help hospitals to redirect precious healthcare resources to perform more specialised tasks. READ MORE HERE PSLE pupils' parents anxious, frustrated by Covid-19 rules and delays Some have called for more clarity and coordination among the service providers. READ MORE HERE So, the US is back in Asia: What's next? In the wake of a recent flurry of American initiatives, China needs to offer fresh selling points, says associate editor Ravi Velloor. READ MORE HERE Debrief: Population decline raises issues around Singapore society, identity Observers point to social considerations made more pronounced by the pandemic. READ MORE HERE How Fumio Kishida might steer Japan as the next Prime Minister He now supports a more forceful defence posture despite heading one of the most dovish factions in the ruling party. READ MORE HERE Jack Neo's Ah Girls Go Army coming for Chinese New Year 2022 In the new movie, women have to be conscripted into the military as there are not enough men.  READ MORE HERE Tuas blast inquiry: Engineer says he deleted messages and photo from his phone and dead worker's Mr Lwin Moe Tun was not in the workshop when the explosion occurred. READ MORE HERE

Hospitals under pressure, so younger vaccinated Covid-19 patients should recover at home: Ong

SINGAPORE - While the overall intensive care unit (ICU) capacity is holding up, the Singapore healthcare system's Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments, as well as general wards, are "coming under pressure", Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said on Saturday (Sept 19). "Our hospitals and healthcare workers cannot be over burdened. At this point, this is MOH's biggest challenge and we are doing our best to solve this," Mr Ong said in a Facebook post, adding that this is why younger, fully vaccinated people are being encouraged to recover at home. His comments come a day after the Health Ministry (MOH) said some public hospitals here have been experiencing a surge in patients who have rushed to their A&E departments with mild respiratory infection symptoms. Although MOH did not specify which hospitals it was referring to, public hospitals had put up announcements last week alluding to the situation. On Sept 14, Singapore General Hospital put up a Facebook post saying it was seeing a high number of patients at its Emergency Department, and said priority would be given to the critically ill. "If your condition is not critical, please seek medical attention at a general practitioner (GP) or polyclinic," said the hospital. The National University Hospital put up a similar post on Sept 17. Later that night, MOH urged those who have mild symptoms to avoid seeking treatment at the hospitals and consult a GP at a Swab and Send Home clinic instead. "This allows those with more severe illnesses and who are in need of urgent care to be attended to quickly and helps to preserve hospital capacity for those who truly need hospital care," said MOH. Mr Ong and the multi-ministry task force, which he chairs, have repeatedly said that a key measure of Singapore's fight against the coronavirus is whether its hospital system can cope with the number of cases. In his post on Sunday, Mr Ong also highlighted data from MOH which showed that the chance of someone infected with Covid-19 coming down with severe illness, depends heavily on age and vaccination status. For instance, from May 1 to Sept 16 this year, no one fully vaccinated and under the age of 70 had been admitted to ICU or died from Covid-19. The data also showed that 0.38 per cent of fully vaccinated patients in their 70s had either been admitted to the ICU or died from the disease. This was a lower rate than for unvaccinated patients in their 30s, of whom 0.84 per cent had been admitted to the ICU or died from the disease. Mr Ong also noted that over 98 per cent of those infected from May 1 to Sept 16 this year had either no or mild symptoms, and tended to remain that way until recovery. "That is why we are encouraging younger, fully vaccinated people to recover from home, and admit patients to community care facilities instead of hospitals, and also setting up more community care facilities, which will be ready this coming week," he wrote. "This is so that hospital beds (and) A&E services go to those who need it most."