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COVID-19 Vaccine Update

02 May 2021

The latest batch of the 24,000 first dose of the COVID-19 vaccines, which arrived in the country this month, is currently being administered to the targeted high-risk groups. These high-risk groups include the remaining frontline workers and those providing essential services during the lockdown and Fiji’s vulnerable population.

The essential services include all vaccine eligible people who are part of the: 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.

Beginning Monday 03 May 2021, the Ministry of Health and Medical Services will roll out the COVID-19 vaccination campaign at the Prince Charles Park in Nadi, and Tilak High School in Lautoka from 9 am to 6 pm. The continuance of this vaccination campaign will depend on the availability of the vaccine doses.

In this phase of vaccination roll-out, the Ministry of Health strongly encourages persons with disabilities and individuals with co-morbid issues such as diabetes, hypertension, heart conditions, asthma, HIV, cancer, patients undergoing renal dialysis and any other medical condition to come forward and get vaccinated.

The Ministry of Health is working with the targeted high-risk groups to ensure that all COVID-19 safe measures are observed at the vaccination site. In the light of recent events and out of an abundance of caution, the public is advised to strictly comply with the COVID-19 safe measures to ensure no compromise of anyone’s safety when at the vaccination site.

For those who are going to the vaccination centers, please:

  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 sanitizer, frequently sanitize 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.

For those who are yet to register and are eligible to be vaccinated in this phase, the Ministry of Health encourages registering online before going to the vaccination centre. If you know someone within your household who requires assistance with the registration, please assist them. If you face any issues with the registration, kindly contact 158 for clarification.

By registering online, you will reduce the amount of time spent at the vaccination site and among others.

To register, go to: vra.digitalfiji.gov.fj  

You will need your Birth Registration Number and a valid photo ID (Passport, Voter ID Card, FNPF Card, Driver’s License, Student ID, TIN Joint Card). The birth registration number is on your birth certificate. If you are facing difficulties in registering, please contact our call centre on 158.

Foreign Nationals Living in Fiji

You will need your Permit Number and a valid photo ID (Passport, Voter ID Card, FNPF Card, Driver’s License, Student ID, TIN Joint Card) to register.

Naturalised Citizens

You will need your Citizen Certificate Number (CCN) and a valid photo ID (Passport, Voter ID Card, FNPF Card, Driver’s License, Student ID, TIN Joint Card).

COVID-19 Update – 02-05-2021

Media Release                       

COVID-19 Update

Sunday, May 2nd 2021

As announced by the Permanent Secretary for Health and Medical Services today, there are 0 new cases to report.

49 active cases remain in isolation. Sixteen are border quarantine cases, 31 are locally transmitted cases, and 2 are under investigation to determine the source of transmission.

Total active cases in isolation = 49 (16 border quarantine cases, 31 locally transmitted cases, 2 under investigation)

Fiji has had 119 cases in total, with 68 recoveries and 2 deaths, since our first case was reported on March 19th, 2020.

A total of 53,253 COVID-19 laboratory tests have been conducted, with a daily average of 832 tests per day over the last 7 days, and a weekly average of 3485 tests per week over the last 2 weeks, with a record 5169 tests done last week. Testing has increased in line with the response to the recent local cases, with 1212 tests conducted yesterday. Our overall test positivity is 0.2% and our 7-day average daily test positivity is 0.6%.

-ENDS-

 

PS Health – Press Statement 02-05-2021
Bula Vinaka.

Today –– after another 1212 tests and 7560 community screenings –– we have no new cases of COVID-19 to report in Fiji.

I know many of you may have cheered, or felt excited when I said that. It’s a natural reflex to have. But no confirmed cases –– at this stage –– is no reason for celebration. It doesn’t mean there are no cases out there; it means none have been detected over the past 24 hours. We are certain there are more cases that will develop or –– worryingly –– that an unconfirmed case of the virus has already developed into a highly contagious disease. Our biggest fear right now is that someone, with symptoms, has not reported to a screening clinic or called 158.

This virus arrives in waves. A lull can often signal a surge. So let’s not let one day of no new cases fool anyone into thinking this storm is over. So, I don’t want any news headlines to have “ZERO NEW CASES” blasted out on their platforms. That will accomplish nothing, except for causing more Fijians to let their guards down. This is a matter of when not if, we detect additional cases, so while it is a glimmer of hope, the road ahead is far from clear.

With everyone safely at home, my contact tracing teams have worked tirelessly through the torrential rains this weekend to identify the contacts of case 113 — the garment factory employee. Of her 877 contacts, 95% have been contacted, screened, and swabbed, including all of her closest contacts who shared her bus and worked in close proximity to her at the factory. They will all remain under home quarantine for at least 14 days from their last contact with the case. 611 have tested negative for COVID-19 so far with more samples being tested.

Our progress puts us on track for the lockdown measures to expire at 0400 hours tomorrow morning. That could change if we are unable to find all or most of that missing five percent of contacts, or our testing reveals new, high-risk cases — we will be loud and clear with the public if that happens. But we are confident, at this stage, that we can identify the remaining contacts in Suva and Nausori and lift the lockdown on schedule. However, we’ll let people know by midnight tonight on radio, the Fijian Government Facebook page, or via text message blast, if something changes.

Assuming we stay the course, the Suva-Nausori Lockdown Zone will revert into two separate containment areas, the Suva Containment Area and the Nausori Containment Area, from 0400 hours tomorrow. The borders of the areas are unchanged. The lifting of that lockdown measure will mean that, within these containment areas, movement — for essential purposes only — may resume. Our system of cross-border deliveries of food and essential items into the containment areas will also resume. And supermarkets, banks, pharmacies and other essential businesses — as identified by the Ministry — may operate from tomorrow.

That, as well, is not cause for celebration. It is certainly not an excuse to disregard any of the measures that will remain in place. At its close, the curfew will have lasted 56 hours, Meanwhile, the incubation period for the virus is 336 hours — or two full weeks. That means there is still a very serious risk that new cases may develop, so we must act accordingly.

Do not go outside of your home to meet with friends and family. If you are missing someone, call them. Do not have parties. Reckless celebrations of the end of the lockdown will give us no choice but to recommend another one — so please make smart choices, and spare the nation from that drastic course of action.

I want to be clear on the rules once again:

  • Curfew hours will be from 11pm until 4 am.
  • Everyone should stay home unless they have an essential reason to leave.
  • You should not mix with anyone who doesn’t share your home with you.
  • No sports of any kind should be played.
  • Places of worship will remain closed.
  • Save for small funeral ceremonies, no non-work gatherings of any size should take place. In fact, you should not come within two metres of anyone if you can help it.
  • Anywhere you go outside of your home, you should have on a mask or face covering
  • Wash your hands well and often. Use sanitiser when you see it.
  • Businesses that are not on the list of essential services should not open.
  • You should not share takis, bilos, or cigarettes. Any person-to-person interaction — even a maskless conversation — can put you at risk
  • And please download careFIJI, and keep your Bluetooth switched on when you are in public spaces. This does not chew battery or data.
If we see serious threats to public wellbeing, such as mass crowding, or people outside, in large numbers, without masks being properly worn, we will recommend that a hard lockdown come back into effect.

I would like to caution everyone not to be too quick to ask why we have more stringent measures in Fiji than in other countries. The simple reason is that all countries are at different stages in fighting this pandemic, and each country has to adopt measures based on its own situation. In the United States, for example, more than 100 million adults have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. That is 40% of the adult population. That fact allowed the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to recommend to cities and states that they can relax the mandate that people wear masks outdoors IF LOCAL CONDITIONS PERMIT IT. The US CDC was very careful in issuing its guidance, as you can see.

We are not at that point in our immunizations here in Fiji, and we won’t be for some time. And please keep in mind that most places in the USA still require people to wear masks indoors, and that public places and businesses are operating at reduced capacities or entirely outdoors, if they are operating at all. Again, these freedoms are possible only because they have achieved widespread vaccination of their population. Remember, too, that — before they had widespread immunisation through vaccinations — the USA suffered some resurgence of the virus a few months ago–when we were still COVID-contained in Fiji– because some localities had loosened restrictions too early.

I think it would be wise to look also at the tragedy that has befallen India, which saw a sudden resurgence of the virus. That was not all because of the variant; that resurgence occurred because infected people freely mingled with uninfected people. With any variant of the virus, that is a recipe for deadly disaster. And it can happen here if we become complacent–or worse, cynical–about these very important prevention measures.

That applies nationwide. Suva and Nausori are not the only source points of our contact tracing efforts.

The two clusters in Ra are still unlinked to other existing cases. We are pursuing two main leads — one is that the cases are related directly to the quarantine facility breach. Two, that these cases may be rippling out from an individual in Ra who attended the funeral in Tavakubu. If you are this person, or you know this person, please contact the Ministry at 158.

We’re also awaiting the results from Melbourne to confirm a genetic link to other local cases in Fiji. Hopefully that guides our investigation to a link with another chain of transmission. But no matter what the sample tells us, our overarching solution will be the same: We need widespread adoption of our COVID-safe health habits. Not only for a weekend, a week, or even a month — these measures must be kept by everyone, everywhere for the foreseeable future.

One of our source points I’d like to flag with you all today stems from case number 98, the patient who resides in Makoi. Her brother-in-law — who was case number 98 — played rugby in a team that competed at the Malomalo 7s at Lawaqa Park Sigatoka on April 16th-17th. Working with the coaches at the tournament, we’ve contacted most of those he may have had contact with– however, there are still some missing pieces. We’re asking any of the rugby players who played in the Malomalo 7s– who are yet to be contacted by the Ministry — to please call 158.

We are receiving a steady flow of requests for food assistance on the 161 line, text messaging, and through email from families in the Suva-Nausori Lockdown Zone. So far, more than 7,000 food packs have been delivered or are being delivered, and we are committed to assisting every family who genuinely needs this assistance. Our logistics, from the time we receive requests to the point of distribution, are working well. Shipments have been going out all day and are being delivered as I speak.

This lockdown would have gone much differently if the Ministry had been left to manage it on our own. Instead, we had wide reaching support across government. I want to thank the agencies and Ministries who worked with us through the lockdown in lock-step. I also thank the businesses and individuals who came forward to offer assistance to our medical teams in the field. Your support allowed us to focus on the life-saving work at-hand. I also want to thank the Water Authority of Fiji for delaying some of their maintenance work in the Greater Suva Area so that Fijians had reliable access to water through the lockdown.

And thank you to everyone for their cooperation through this lockdown — I know it was far from normal. Nothing will be normal about the coming days, weeks, and months. This is not going to be a quick and easy fight. This virus is relentless, so we must be resolute in our commitment to our science-backed medical measures, to each other, and to the protection of our people through COVID-19 vaccines as that opportunity becomes available to us.  My teams are ready for a long-haul campaign of containment but you must limit your movement to help us succeed — every Fijian must be part of the program. We’re counting on your support and cooperation.

Thank you.

PS Health – Press Statement 01-05-2021

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

Bula Vinaka.
We’ve screened an additional 25,064 Fijians through our mobile screening teams and at screening clinics since yesterday. And after another 1026 tests, we have confirmed two new cases of COVID-19.
They are the 5-year-old and the 15-year-old daughters of the mother from Cunningham. Both cases were confirmed in isolation, and their first tests were negative, that means they do not pose a risk to the public and bear no implication on our existing programme of contact tracing.
I have spoken before on the life-or-death importance of Fijians of all ages adhering to the protocols we’ve established, and I can now give you a concrete example of why that is so important and how serious the risk is. The entire family of the person in Cunningham who contracted COVID-19 has also contracted the virus– seven household members in total. Let that be a lesson in how transmissible this variant is and how vital it is that measures are followed by everyone. These measures don’t just protect you. They protect the people you love. They protect your neighbors. And they protect everyone you might come in contact with.
We’re nearly 24 hours into our lockdown of Suva and Nausori. This is not only the most drastic health measure in our toolkit — we’re hoping it will be the most decisive. We generally prefer more targeted measures, and we’ll be able to implement them once we have a handle on chains of transmission. Right now, a lockdown is the prescription that Suva and Nausori need.
I want to assure everyone that your time at home is being put to use saving lives. My teams are making the most of this opportunity to trace and test high-risk contacts of existing cases to break these chains of transmission before they become unmanageable and consume the country.
As I mentioned yesterday, there are 877 contacts of case 113 — the garment factory worker — which are split between two factories: Lyndhurst and Mark One Apparel.
Our lockdown got off to a wet start last night, which did hinder our contact tracing and swabbing throughout Suva and Nausori, but we’re rapidly making up that ground. We have identified all 877 contacts of case 113, — these are individuals who travelled with her on the same bus and who worked with her in close proximity.
Of the 877 total contacts, 833 have been screened and swabbed. 477 have tested negative with the remaining samples due to be tested. All primary contacts will be retested during their mandatory 14 days of quarantine, which begins from their last contact with the case. More samples have been received from today’s contact tracing. Tomorrow, we will know whether or not our testing reveals that the lockdown will arrive at its scheduled conclusion at 0400 hours on Monday morning.
To ease the economic hardship of the lockdown, trucks carrying 5,000 food ration packs were loaded and shipped throughout the Suva-Nausori Lockdown Zone before sunrise today. They are currently making delivery runs to families with a genuine need for food supply.
Our COVID-19 Food Ration hotline went live this morning. We received 100,000 calls as of noon today. I was disappointed to learn that we had several members of the same households inundating the number with calls. We were clear yesterday — food is distributed on a household-by-household basis. Attempts to game the system only succeed at delaying the delivery of food to Fijians with a genuine need. That selfishness has serious consequences for those who need this assistance.
We have an e-mail address available to help divert some of the call volume. If you can use e-mail, please do — it is the fastest way our teams can get into contact with you. You can send your name, address, the number of people in your household, and your mobile number to covid19rations@gmail.com Our teams will follow-up with you as soon as they can.
Our Ra Containment Area was established yesterday, which limits movement in the province, but does allow for essential businesses to remain open. We have not locked down Ra at this stage. However, our investigations into the two unconnected clusters in the province may require more stringent measures in the near future. For now, Fijians within that containment should be on high-alert. Anyone outside of your home should be treated as a potential COVID-positive patient. You are safest at home, and that is where you should stay. If you need to leave, wear a mask, keep your distance from others, and keep careFIJI switched on at all times. If you do not have careFIJI installed, you shouldn’t leave the house. Install it onto your phone, or send someone to do your shopping who does have the app.
I want to make an appeal to our rural communities. I think sometimes we think our remoteness can protect us, but remoteness provides no protection when people are circulating through the country. A number of communities have taken the step of adopting lockdown measures of their own. This is a prudent and responsible action under the current circumstances. So I encourage all of our rural and maritime communities to restrict travel into your communities if you can. This one measure can go a long way toward keeping your communities safe.
I would now like to turn to the subject of vaccinations. Widespread vaccinations among the Fijian public are absolutely critical to controlling this virus, ending this pandemic and keeping Fijians safe.
I have gone over this before, but we have members of the media who insist on asking us nearly every day about the efficacy of vaccines. I have said it before, I will say it again — no one in Fiji is fully vaccinated. You need two doses of these vaccines to be fully vaccinated, and then need to wait an additional two weeks for its full response within your immune system to take effect. Only once every Fijian — who is eligible — achieves that level of immunity, will Fiji truly be safe from this deadly virus.
We expect 64,800 of the 100,800 doses pledged by COVAX to arrive by June. Kia ora to our friends in New Zealand who have pledged half a million doses of COVID-19 vaccines to Fiji. We have received 100,000 doses from India and expect to receive the first shipment of 10,000 doses from Australia as early as next week, with other shipments arriving monthly.
We are grateful for the commitments we have received for vaccines so far, but they are not enough, nor are they coming soon enough, and we are working with our international partners on new commitments. Our current commitments can cover 484,000 Fijians, and we need to cover 650,000. With an outbreak already upon us — the urgency of achieving widespread immunity grows daily.
I know the prospect of vaccines that are weeks away at best don’t ease the difficulty that our health measures pose today. It is not easy to give up the normal activities of daily life and remain at home, but if we all make this effort, we can stop this virus once again and return to those normal activities–to go to work, see family and friends, do our shopping, play sports. As I have said, we would not take this step, if there were any other effective action available to us.
No government can defeat this virus alone. It takes the effort of an entire nation to stop it in its tracks, and that means that every Fijian depends on every other Fijian to do their part in our lockdown zone, in our containment areas, and all across Fiji. This is like a war. Defeat is unthinkable, and compromise is impossible. We have to win, and we will win. And we will need everyone’s best effort.
When it comes to COVID, staying at home is the safest course for all of us — but in Fiji and around the world, we know there is an ugly side to lockdown measures. Without proper resources and support, they can make the already-vulnerable more vulnerable than ever. Our Hon Prime Minister has called domestic violence an ugly scourge on our society. He is absolutely right. And during a crisis, we know these horrific crimes can occur more often. Someone, right now, is stuck at home with an abuser — that is a tragic reality that we cannot turn away from.
So I’m urging everyone, if you, or someone you know, is experiencing domestic violence, please call the National Domestic Violence Helpline number 1560, or the child helpline at 1325. Help will come to you. You can call at any time, any day of the week, to report a crime. Even if you just need someone to talk to, call either of those numbers. That applies for children, for women, and for men as well.
Anyone can be a victim, and that support is available to any who need it.
There are so many people and organisations supporting us, I cannot thank them all today. But I did want to give a special vinaka vakalevu to the Psychiatric Survivors Association for helping us feed and screen the homeless. Not everyone has a home to stay in, but everyone deserves to have their health taken seriously. So thank you, PSA.
I do have some good news that I thought I’d save for the end. Three of our active cases[1] [2] [3] [4] have recovered, have been discharged from isolation, and are heading home to their families.
Some of our patients in isolation at the moment do fall within high-risk categories for severe illness, and we are monitoring them closely. But so far, all of our existing cases are in stable condition. If this virus gets out of control, we will not be so lucky. To keep any more of the most vulnerable members of society out of isolation and out of ICUs, it’s vital we stay the course of our containment effort. Lives depend on it. There is no nobler reason for us to unite behind doing what must be done. STAY HOME, BE SAFE, SAVE LIVES.
COVID-19 Update – 01-05-2021

Media Release

COVID-19 Update

Saturday May 1st 2021

As announced by the Permanent Secretary for Health and Medical Services today, we have 2 new cases to report.

They are the 5-year-old and the 15-year-old daughters of the mother from Cunningham. Both cases were confirmed in isolation, and their first tests were negative, that means they do not pose a risk to the public and bear no implication on our existing programme of contact tracing.

There have been 3 recoveries, and this means we now have 49 active cases in isolation. Sixteen are border quarantine cases, 31 are locally transmitted cases, and 2 are under investigation to determine the source of transmission.

Total active cases in isolation = 49 (16 border quarantine cases, 31 locally transmitted cases, 2 under investigation)

Fiji has had 119 cases in total, with 68 recoveries and 2 deaths, since our first case was reported on March 19th 2020.

A total of 52,040 COVID-19 laboratory tests have been conducted, with a daily average of 802 tests per day over the last 7 days, and a weekly average of 3485 tests per week over the last 2 weeks, with a record 5169 tests done last week. Testing has increased in line with the response to the recent local cases, with 1026 tests conducted yesterday. Our overall test positivity is 0.2% and our 7 day average daily test positivity is 0.6%.