The beginning of March marked a new phase of Taiwan’s response to COVID-19, as the country began to ease restrictions domestically and for travelers from abroad, giving greater consideration to economic factors.
One of the significant changes for people in Taiwan is the COVID-19 alert system being dropped, as the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) moved to a monthly review of the COVID-19 situation to see if current disease prevention measures need to be changed.
Taiwan first raised the COVID-19 alert to Level 2 on May 11, 2021 and then to Level 3 on May 19. This led to a near lockdown after the CECC reported daily domestic cases of more than 100 for the first time since the pandemic began in early 2020.
The alert was lowered back to Level 2 on July 27, 2021, and was extended every two weeks before expiring on Feb. 28 this year. Some Level 3 measures, such as the face mask mandate, were kept in place.
A mask mandate — which was eased last October but tightened again on Jan. 9, after more than a dozen of domestic cases, including a first locally acquired Omicron variant infection recorded in Taiwan beginning Jan. 3 — were relaxed again from Tuesday.
After recording only 10 locally transmitted cases in December, Taiwan recorded a total of 832 domestic cases during the first two months of 2022. Most of the cases have been linked to the 333 confirmed cases infected with the Omicron variant, according to the CECC data
During the same two-month period, the number of imported cases reported by Taiwan more than doubled, surging from 2,375 on Dec. 31 to 5,000 on Feb. 28, with three deaths linked to the disease.
The CECC’s Feb. 24 announcement of the planned changes came after the number of daily domestic cases in the current outbreak dropped to below 20 beginning Feb. 11. There were 10 days when new case numbers were in the single digits by the end of the month.
According to CECC spokesman and Centers for Disease Control Deputy Director-General Chunag Jen-hsiang (???), the new approach has been adopted after 60 percent of eligible recipients received COVID-19 vaccine booster doses.
The latest CECC data shows since the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccination on March 22, 2021, 82.84 percent of Taiwan’s 23.35 million population have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, while 76.83 percent have been given two doses.
In an interview late last year, Health Minister Chen Shih-chung (???) told CNA that around 89 percent of the population are eligible vaccine recipients who are aged 12 and above.
Chuang added that most of the domestic cases reported this year were either asymptomatic or had mild symptoms, and they were not hospitalized but isolated at quarantine hotels or government-run facilities.
Another change that will affect people in Taiwan and from abroad will be the shortened quarantine time. This will be cut from 14 to 10 days for people who are required to isolate after coming into contact with infected individuals, as well as for all arrivals, including business travelers, who will be allowed entry to Taiwan from March 7.
The CECC said in its announcement that the planned gradual relaxation of border controls, the bulk of which were introduced in March 2020, was designed to better facilitate business activities while maintaining efforts needed to prevent the spread of the disease.
Meanwhile, Chen said the CECC was taking a step-by-step approach in easing the restrictions in order to facilitate a return to relative normality that supports both economic goals and disease prevention.
On the first day of March, Taiwan reported 40 imported and four domestic cases, bringing the total number of COVID-19 cases recorded in Taiwan since early 2020 to 20,533, according to the CECC.
Source: Focus Taiwan News Channel