Title of article :
SPECIAL ARTICLE: Roadmap Out of COVID-19
Author/Authors :
J, Thor Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Changi General Hospital - Singapore , E, Pagkaliwagan Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Changi General Hospital - Singapore , A, Yeo Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Changi General Hospital - Singapore , J, Loh Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Changi General Hospital - Singapore , C, Kon Department of Orthopaedic Surgery - Changi General Hospital - Singapore
Abstract :
The recent coronavirus disease (COVID-19) was declared as a public health emergency by the World Health Organisation on 30th January 2020, and has now affected more than 100 countries. Healthcare institutions and governments
worldwide have raced to contain the disease, albeit to
varying degrees of success. Containment strategies adopted
range from complete lockdowns to remaining open with
public advisories regarding social distancing. However,
general principles adopted by most countries remain the
same, mainly to avoid gatherings in large numbers and limit
social interactions to curb the spread of disease. In
Singapore, this disease had a very different progression. The
first wave of the disease started with the confirmation of the
first COVID-19 positive patient in Singapore on 23rd
January 2020. Initially, the daily number of confirmed cases
were low and manageable. With a rise in unlinked cases, the
Disease Outbreak Response System Condition (DORSCON)
status was raised from yellow to orange. New cluster
outbreaks in foreign worker dormitories led to the rampant
spread of disease, with daily spikes of COVID-19 cases. As
of 7th June 2020, we have a total of 37,910 confirmed cases
of COVID-19 infections, the highest in Southeast Asia,
12,999 active cases and a manageable mortality count of 25
deaths. This details our unique method for dealing with a
pandemic, including a brief demographic of trauma patients
during this period. We were able to conserve sufficient resources to ensure that our essential services can still continue. Moving on, we have to ensure the continued protection of our population, especially the vulnerable groups such as the elderly and the immunocompromised, as we reopen.
Keywords :
COVID-19 , trauma , orthopaedics , Singapore , pandemic
Journal title :
Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal