MHMS FIJI
MHMS FIJI
PS Health – Press Statement 06-05-2021

Statement by Permanent Secretary for the Ministry of Health and Medical Services, Dr James Fong.

Bula Vinaka.
As we announced earlier today, the individual admitted to the Lautoka Hospital Intensive Care Unit yesterday from a severe illness due to COVID-19 has sadly passed away.
As I covered in last night’s press conference, the patient was transferred to the ICU yesterday afternoon after his condition began deteriorating, and it was at this time that he was swabbed and tested positive for the virus. Unfortunately, despite the best efforts of the ICU team, he passed away just a few hours later with time of death at 6.35pm.
We are devastated by this loss. For the teams of doctors and nurses I lead, one fatality is far too many. We actually learned of this gentleman’s passing just before our announcement last night, but we chose to delay making the official announcement until after we could properly inform his family members. No family should learn about the death of a loved one on the news or one social media if that can be avoided. We stand by the decision to allow them a window of privacy before the passing of their loved one was announced to the nation.
This may technically be Fiji’s third fatality due to COVID-19 –– but it is our first death from a locally-transmitted case of the virus. So our sorrow –– this time –– is matched by an extreme sense of urgency to stop the spread of COVID-19 in our communities, and to prevent more vulnerable Fijians from succumbing to this deadly virus.
We suspect this patient was the source point of transmission to the two doctors at Lautoka Hospital who were previously announced as COVID-positive, but we still do not know how he contracted the virus.
I read some comments last night and today –– some confused and some angry –– about why this gentleman did not consent to be tested for COVID-19 until, quite sadly, it was too late. I can’t speak to his decision, but I know I speak for the staff of the Lautoka Hospital when I say –– this is not the time for blame. As we have seen, this virus can attack anyone. Pointing fingers is pointless. We urge the public to show concern and sympathy for all people who become infected. We also urge the public once again to agree to be tested if there is even a small chance you may have been exposed to the virus, to cooperate fully with the contact tracing teams, and to observe the practices that will keep us all safe. It could easily be a matter of life-or-death. This is a devastating virus, and as we have said, it is very unforgiving of even the smallest lapse or mistake.
After another 1723 tests, we have confirmed four new cases of COVID-19. The first is another border quarantine case who had travelled with a border quarantine case announced earlier. Dr Sahukhan will share the details of that case later. Three are local cases.
One is a 47-year-old nurse at the Raiwaqa Health Centre. She was swabbed after she reported a slight cough. After her positive result registered today, we immediately closed the Raiwaqa Health Centre to the public. A contact tracing investigation has been launched, all relevant personnel and patients are being quarantined. Her household contacts have also been swabbed. Her 51-year-old husband has also tested positive for COVID-19. He is also a focus of a contact tracing investigation.
We only identified these two cases late today, and we do not yet have a clear link of transmission for either case.
Our other local case is a 25-year-old nurse working within Lautoka Hospital. This nurse was sequestered within the hospital last night along with the rest of the hospital’s personnel and patients. Since her positive test results she has since been entered into isolation. Investigations are ongoing into how she might have caught the virus.
Our testing has ruled out a breach of the Lautoka Hospital Isolation Ward after all staff have returned negative COVID-19 test results. This is a reassuring affirmation of the operational protocols for our COVID isolation ward –– which must be maintained as the most secure facilities in the country. But that’s where the good news ends, because this indicates that the community is the most likely source of the Lautoka Hospital outbreak.
In the early phase of our containment strategy, we hoped to break the early chains of transmission quickly by tracing and testing primary and secondary contacts of existing cases. We have always screened carefully for symptomatic cases among the community as well, however, this surge in cases of unknown origin demands that we develop much stronger mechanisms of community surveillance. As our testing capacity steadily increases, we are going to become even more judicious in our testing of all Fijians with COVID-like symptoms, regardless of their connection to existing patients. But the thing about “community” surveillance is that it requires the community. It requires that all of us are fully invested in the containment of the virus. Screening clinics can be opened, but it takes the initiative of an ill patient to come forward for us to find them. Mobile screening teams can be dispatched, but my teams work far better and quicker when people are honest with them and the public is cooperative. So please, let’s make community surveillance more than a Ministry priority –– it has to be prioritised society-wide.
Following this worrying spate of cases among our healthcare workers, we are also taking urgent steps to prevent more of our health facilities from becoming source points of new outbreaks. Our longstanding protocol has been to screen all incoming patients for COVID-19 symptoms and test if necessary at admission – this will be strengthened. We’ll also be heavily restricting visiting hours at all hospitals and health centres in Fiji to limit mixing between patients, medical personnel, and the general public.
This was not an easy decision for the Ministry. We’ve only considered it given the serious threat this virus poses to our people and to our ability offer other forms of live-saving care. With Lautoka Hospital now serving as a full-time COVID care facility, we need every hospital and health centre in the country open and accessible for other critical medical treatments.
I’ve just finished a video conference with the team who are securely contained within the Lautoka Hospital Command Centre. We will be activating FEMAT –– the Fiji Emergency Medical Assistance Team –– and, as our Hon Prime Minister announced today, we have dispatched the government medical carrier vessel, the MV Veivueti, to support our healthcare management strategy within the Lautoka Containment Area.
• To cater for non-COVID patients, we are setting up a 150-bed Non-COVID Field Hospital in Lautoka. We plan to have this open in 48 hours to handle patients with illnesses that can be treated on a 21-day timeline.
• Extending from that field hospital will be clear patient care flow pathways that allow for patients to be securely moved to other hospitals and healthcare facilities if necessary. We’ll also manage staffing within the field hospital in response to patient demand.
• The Field hospital will enforce strict COVID screening and security to ensure it is a COVID-free facility, while the Lautoka Hospital remains exclusively a COVID care facility.
• To ensure there are no lapses in healthcare services for those looking to visit public hospitals, I have been talking to a number of private general practitioners in the Nadi-Lautoka-Ba area to open the doors of their clinics to those Fijians who normally cannot afford to visit a private practitioner. Under these soon-to-be finalised arrangements, patients who normally go to public hospitals and health centres can access non-COVID treatment or consultations at private clinics in Nadi, Lautoka, and Ba. Government will directly pay the private practitioners for the treatment and consultations provided for such people. Tomorrow, we will be announcing the names of the private doctors who have stepped up in solidarity with the Ministry to ensure our people can access the non-COVID care they require. I urge others I haven’t spoken with to call me. This is an opportunity for us to bring the public and private sector together at a time of urgent need for our people. Again, government will be footing the bill for the services that you provide these Fijians in-need. Most of you have my mobile number, call me and let’s get you on board.
Contingency plans have also been developed for a range of scenarios, including the need to expand capacity in the event of additional community cases in and outside of Lautoka, a severe weather event, or a COVID-leak in the field hospital. This is the first major operation for FEMAT in response to a national disaster –– our teams are ready to show the nation what they can do.
Lautoka and Suva are not the only areas of the country that require vigilance. We now have too many cases of possible community transmission to say ––with confidence –– that the virus is limited to our containment areas. Earlier, we announced that non-essential businesses outside of the containment areas may open. That’s simply no longer worth the risk. These non-essential businesses should close. Nationwide, supermarkets, shops, banks, pharmacies, and other essential industries –– as previously announced – are the only businesses that should open.
The costs of this outbreak are already unacceptably high, and I cannot stress enough how important early, preventive action is to stopping those costs from rising further. Early diagnosis of the virus can increase survivability. Early society-wide prevention measures can decrease widespread transmission. Wash your hands often, wear a mask in public, install careFIJI and keep it running every time you leave the home, and maintain physical distance at all times. The police have announced today they will be enforcing physical distance in public places and businesses. If you see a crowd, don’t add to the problem. Stay away. Better yet, don’t leave home at all. Stay home. My staff in Lautoka Hospital don’t have that privilege at the moment, so let’s honour their sacrifice by staying within the safety of our homes as much as possible.
COVID-19 has never posed a graver risk to Fijian lives than it does today. If our ICUs become stressed with high numbers of COVID-positive patients, we will be hard-pressed, like other countries with high rates of infection, to fully treat people who need critical care, and it will be too late to prevent a great deal of human suffering. We still have the chance to stop that from happening. I’ve detailed the steps the Ministry is taking to make our services as COVID-safe as possible. I ask that households, communities, organisations, and businesses all think just as seriously about the steps they can take as well. The health guidance we publish is the baseline for the actions and behaviour we expect from businesses and the public. If you see an opportunity to go above and beyond our guidance to keep yourself, your workplace, or your household members safe –– take it. You could save a life. And together, as that commitment carries across the country, all of us can spare Fiji from the further heartbreak of losing more patients to this virus.
Statement from the Permanent Secretary for Health
Statement from the Permanent Secretary for Health
The individual admitted to the Lautoka Hospital Intensive Care Unit yesterday for a severe illness due to COVID-19 has sadly passed away. The gentleman had been admitted at Lautoka Hospital since April 19th, when he was admitted for a surgical procedure.
As announced in last night’s press conference, the patient was transferred to the ICU yesterday afternoon after his condition began deteriorating, and it was at this time that he was swabbed and tested positive for the virus. Unfortunately, despite the best efforts of the ICU team, he passed away just a few hours later with time of death at 6.35pm.
This is Fiji’s third reported death due to the coronavirus. And this is our first death for a person who had contracted the virus locally.
We had learned of this gentleman’s passing before the press conference last night, but we chose to delay making the official announcement to the public until his family members could be properly informed. Nobody should learn about the death of a loved one on the news or on social media if that can be avoided. We stand by the decision to allow them a window of privacy before the passing of their loved one was announced to the nation.
As this case has shown, the virus can attack anyone, and with devastating consequences. We urge the public to show concern and sympathy for all people who become infected. We also urge the public once again to get tested if there is even a small chance you may have been exposed to the virus, to cooperate fully with the contact tracing teams, and to observe the practices that will keep us all safe.
COVID-19 Update – 05-05-2021

Media Release                       

COVID-19 Update

Wednesday May 5th 2021

As announced by the Permanent Secretary for Health and Medical Services today, we have 4 new cases to report.

The first is a 53-year-old male who has been admitted at the Lautoka Hospital from 19th of April 2021 for a surgical procedure. He tested positive for COVID-19 today. Please see today’s statement by the Permanent Secretary for more details about this case.

The second case a 27-year-old who resides in Narere. She entered quarantine on 28th April 2021 as a contact of one of the cases from Makoi and was confirmed as positive for COVID-19 this morning. The members of this patient’s household have also been in quarantine from 29th April –– all have tested negative for COVID-19 at this time.

The next 2 cases are border quarantine cases, 33 and 46 year old males who arrived in Fiji on April 27th and are soldiers returning from international peacekeeping duties. They tested positive during routine testing while undergoing 14 days of quarantine in a government supervised border quarantine facility in Nadi.

Also, 9 more patients have recovered from COVID-19. So now there are 39 active cases in isolation. 8 are border quarantine cases, 28 local transmission, 3 are under investigation to determine the source of transmission. The 3 cases under investigation are the second male from Ra (case 116), the 25-year-old doctor at Lautoka Hospital (case 120) and the most recent patient at Lautoka hospital (case 125). At this stage it is suspected the doctor contracted the virus from this patient.

Total active cases in isolation = 39 (8 border quarantine cases, 28 locally transmitted cases, 3 under investigation)

Fiji has had 125 cases in total, with 84 recoveries and 2 deaths, since our first case was reported on March 19th 2020.

A total of 58,321 COVID-19 laboratory tests have been conducted, with a daily average of 1281 tests per day over the last 7 days, and a weekly average of 5995 tests per week over the last 2 weeks, with a record 6821 tests done last week. Testing has increased in line with the response to the recent local cases, with 2065 tests conducted yesterday. Our overall test positivity is 0.2% and our 7 day average daily test positivity is 0.2%.

-ENDS-

COVID-19 Vaccination Update

Public Notice

05 May 2021

05 May 2021

The Ministry of Health and Medical Services wishes to advise that due to the high uptake of the COVID-19 vaccine, the vaccination campaign in Nadi has concluded as of 05 May 2021. Following the vaccination of 10,000 target population in Nadi, the campaign at Prince Charles Park has ceased for this phase.

Please be advised that the vaccination campaign is still ongoing at the Churchill Park in Lautoka and this will end once the vaccine stock finishes.

The Ministry of Health encourages all individuals above 18 years of age who fall in to the following target groups in Lautoka to come forward and get vaccinated:

  • Persons with disabilities.
  • Individuals above 60 years of age.
  • Individuals with Co-morbid issues such as diabetes, hypertension, heart conditions, asthma, HIV, cancer, patients undergoing renal dialysis and any other medical condition.
  • Part of Essential Services: air and rescue services, air traffic control services, ports services, civil aviation, telecommunication services, food and sanitary manufacturing plants and services, electricity services, emergency services, fire services, health and hospital services, lighthouse services, meteorological services, mine pumping, ventilation and winding, supply and distribution of fuel and gas, power, telecommunications, garbage collection, transport services, water and sewage services, Fiji National Provident Fund, Fiji Revenue and Customs Services, civil service, private security services and road services.

When at the vaccination site, we request individuals to be highly vigilant and practice all COVID-19 safe measures with great precaution.

Strictly maintain the following:

  1. Wear a proper mask and do not remove your mask to talk to anyone.
  2. Maintain a safe physical distance of 2 metres;
  3. Carry an effective hand sanitiser, frequently sanitise your hands;
  4. Download and activate the careFIJI application on your mobile;
  5. Do not handshake, mingle or get close with anyone who is not from the same household as you.
  6. Bring your water bottle and essentials so that you do not have to share them with anyone.
  7. Please be patient, do not overcrowd and wait for your turn to get vaccinated.

The Ministry of Health will announce when more vaccines are available in the country. Until then, all vaccine eligible individuals above 18 years of age are urged to register for the vaccine at https://vra.digitalfiji.gov.fj// . For further queries on registration, please email: vrsupport@digitalfiji.gov.fj

 

PS Health – Press Statement 05-05-2021

Statement by Permanent Secretary for the Ministry of Health and Medical Services, Dr James Fong.

Bula Vinaka.

After another 2065 tests, we have confirmed four new cases of COVID-19 since yesterday. Two are border quarantine cases –– these are both soldiers returning from their tours of duty as peacekeepers in the Golan Heights.

Our two other cases are local. One is extremely serious –– I want to talk through exactly how this case came about.

The patient (case 125) is a 53-year-old gentleman who was admitted to the Lautoka Hospital on the 19th of April 2021 for a surgical procedure. The procedure was performed successfully. However, on the 28th of April, he developed some respiratory symptoms.

On the 29th of April, he was seen by case 120, the 25-year-old doctor. He was asked to be swabbed for COVID-19. However, he refused on two occasions. The doctor developed symptoms on May 1st, and tested positive yesterday.

On the 2nd of May, the same patient was assessed by case 121, the 30-year-old, doctor. We know that this doctor, case 121, had tested negative for the virus on April 26th, he tested positive yesterday as part of contact tracing for case 120, and his results indicate he very recently caught the virus.

Early today, the patient’s condition began deteriorating. He was moved into an intensive care unit and swabbed for the virus. Barely four hours ago he tested positive for COVID-19. His condition will be discussed more with his family before any public announcement. His described timeline and the recent deterioration in his condition indicate he is likely a late-stage carrier of the virus. So, we suspect that this patient, who is case number 125, transmitted the virus to the doctors, not the other way around.

We do not know when or where this patient contracted the virus. It could have been from outside or within the hospital. Our response must consider both possibilities.

From a statistical standpoint, ICU cases –– like the one we now have –– may be a red flag for widespread transmission. Essentially, it tells us that there are likely many more cases of the virus out there. We have dreaded a worst-case scenario such as this since the day of our first case in March of last year. Through that time, we have also gone to great lengths to prepare for it. Those months of planning have informed an immediate whole-of-government course of action.

Our first priority is to contain the cases we know about within Lautoka Hospital. To prevent the hospital from becoming ground-zero for a wider outbreak, the members of our disciplined forces have locked down Lautoka Hospital in a matter of hours –– it is now a tightly-contained, full-time COVID care facility.

• More than 400 patients, doctors, nurses, and other staff have been sequestered and will be effectively quarantined within the hospital until we can determine who else may or may not have had contact with this patient. Some staff who have left the hospital have been called back in. RFMF personnel and members of the Police have ring-fenced the entire hospital and will strictly manage who is allowed onto the premises.

• Lautoka Hospital will be closed to the public, all medical services will be re-routed to a network of back-up hospitals in Nadi, Ba, and Sigatoka, as well as the Punjas and Kamikami health centres in Lautoka. We’ve activated the entire government machinery to ensure these critical services remain accessible to our people. As we’ve announced before, the borders of the containment areas are open to those travelling for medical emergencies, so this can already be facilitated.

• Given we expect more cases, and more severe cases. Sections within the Lautoka Hospital are being converted into intensive care units which will house additional beds and ventilators.

• The staff of Lautoka Hospital will be accomodated and work within the hospital while contact tracing continues. Remember, our staffing capacity was already stretched due to quarantine of the close contacts of our two doctors. Those who are working will operate on high-alert, fully-equipped in the proper personal protective equipment. They will be screened regularly and tested often. We are going to provide them with any and all support that they need. Food, supplies, bedding, whatever they require, we will provide.

• Finally, not only in the hospital, but around Lautoka, there is going to be a lot more swabbing.

The protocols for COVID management across our healthcare network are strengthening further so that these facilities can continue offering their normal services to bear the out-patient load from Lautoka Hospital.

Our other local case is a 27-year-old who resides in Narere. She entered quarantine on 28th April 2021 as a contact of one of the cases from Makoi. Further investigations revealed that, during a family gathering on April 17th, she also had close contact with another case from Makoi. She was confirmed as positive for COVID-19 this morning. That gathering is now potentially the source point of three cases. It was only a small family gathering with members from a few different households, but that was more than enough to have national ramifications. It is why one of our first and most important health measures we introduced was to limit gatherings, of all sizes, everywhere in Fiji.

The members of this patient’s household have also been in quarantine from 29th April –– all have tested negative for COVID-19 at this time.

Contact tracing is ongoing into her movements before being quarantined, unfortunately, she did not have the careFIJI app installed, so we are relying entirely on our traditional contact tracing methods. If she had the careFIJI app and had kept it on –– this could all happen much faster. With more than 250,000 downloads, careFIJI is rapidly being widely adopted across Fiji, thank you to everyone who has taken this simple, life-saving step. But on behalf of our contact tracers, I won’t stay quiet about the need for more downloads of the app until that number surpasses 600,000 –– which is the number of smartphones in Fiji.

We have received the genomic sequencing result from the Microbiological Diagnostic Unit (MDU) at the Peter Doherty Institute in Melbourne with regards to the first COVID-19 case of unknown origin in Ra. We can confirm that the virus this patient has is genetically identical to other local cases, and it is the same B1.617 variant that was first detected in India. So, while we have not established a direct person-to-person link to other local cases, we know that this case is linked to the others, and is within the same cluster that links back to the border quarantine facility. While this genetic link is positive news, not yet having a person-person link indicates that other chains of transmission have happened, and are possibly ongoing in the community. There are likely more cases out there linked to this cluster that we have not yet found.

We still have three cases of unknown origin in Fiji, case 116 –– the second gentleman from Ra, whose sample is being genetically sequenced in Melbourne, case 120, the 25-year-old doctor at Lautoka Hospital, and the most recent patient at Lautoka hospital. Though, as I mentioned, we suspect the doctor contracted the virus from this patient.

In light of the severity of the situation at Lautoka Hospital, the Ministry’s recommendation is to maintain the current borders of the existing containment areas. Food, fuel, freight, and medical evacuations, are moving across these containment area borders.

Fiji, I do not use the word “war” lightly. But, right now, we are in a war with this virus and the frontline has just extended to Lautoka Hospital. This will be the greatest test our healthcare system has ever faced –– it will be a test for all of us. Lives are at stake, sacrifices must be made, and every Fijian’s commitment is needed. The virus is insidious, it is unrelenting. All it takes is one unknown case in our community to spark an explosion of cases across the country. If that COVID-positive person remains unidentified, they are at-risk and so in the nation. But if that person comes forward, we can care for them, we can keep them safe, and we can keep the country safe. Every day of early diagnosis adds effectiveness to the treatment we can offer and stops the spread of the virus before it rages beyond our control.

I know our hearts are breaking for this patient and his family and we all have a great deal of empathy for our healthcare staff who are now working and living within Lautoka Hospital. My teams will go to every imaginable length to prevent this virus from spreading further. As our Hon Prime Minister has said, our frontliners deserve more than our empathy, they deserve more than our gratitude –– they deserve our respect for the science that informs their every action. Your adherence to our health measures is the highest form of appreciation you can show. Let’s show it together.