Effective COVID-19 Control: A Comparative Analysis of the Stringency and Timeliness of Government Responses in Asia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Country/Subregion Selection
2.2. Data
2.3. Indicators and Dimensions to Assess COVID-19 Responses
2.4. Development of the MSI and the IRI
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
Summary of the Government Response among the Study Sites
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
ID | Indicators Name | Meaurment | Coding Instructions |
---|---|---|---|
A1 | Coordinated governance | Ordinal | 0—No measures 1—Health sector coordination 2—Established multi-sector coordinated leading/governance team Blank—No data |
A2 | Legislation and regulations | Binary | 0—No measures 1—Amended existing or developed new legisltions or regulations for COVID-19 Blank—No data |
A3 | Border control | Ordinal | 0—No measures 1—Open to all countries with travelers * screening 2—Border closure with targeted countries 3—Border closure with all countries Blank—No data |
A4 | Canceling public events | Ordinal scale + binary for geographic scope | 0—No measures 1—Recommended cancellation 2—Required cancellation Blank—No data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A5 | Restrictions on gatherings | Ordinal scale + binary for geographic scope | 0—No restrictions 1—Restrictions on very large gatherings (the limit is above 1000 people) 2—Restrictions on gatherings between 101 and 1000 people 3—Restrictions on gatherings between 11 and 100 people 4—Restrictions on gatherings of 10 people or less Blank—No data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A6 | In-person school closures | Ordinal scale + binary for geographic scope | 0—No measures 1—Recommended closing 2—Required closing at some levels 3—Required closing at all levels Blank—No data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A7 | In-person workplace closures | Ordinal scale + binary for geographic scope | 0—No measures 1—Recommended closing (or recommend work from home) 2—Required closing (or work from home) for some sectors or categories of workers 3—Required closing (or work from home) for all-but-essential workplaces (e.g., grocery stores, doctors) Blank—No data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A8 | Stay-at-home requirements | Ordinal scale + binary for geographic scope | 0—No measures 1—Recommended not leaving the house 2—Required not leaving the house with exceptions for daily exercise, grocery shopping, and “essential” trips 3—Required not leaving the house with minimal exceptions (e.g., allowed to leave once a week, or only one person can leave at a time, etc.) Blank- No data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A9 | Closing public transportation | Ordinal scale + binary for geographic scope | 0—No measures 1—Recommended closing (or significantly reduced volume/route/means of transport available) 2—Required closing (or prohibited most citizens from using it) Blank—No data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A10 | Restrictions on internal movement | Ordinal | 0—no measures 1—Recommended not to travel between regions/cities 2—Internal movement restrictions in place Blank—Bo data 0—Targeted 1—General Blank—No data |
A11 | Transparent communications | Ordinal | 0—No measures 1—Establishing a transparent communications mechanism by the government though with pauses 2—Establishing nonstop transparent communications by the government on COVID-19 Blank—No data |
P1 | Contact tracing | Ordinal | 0—No contact tracing 1—Limited contact tracing; not done for all cases 2—Comprehensive contact tracing; done for all identified cases Blank—No data |
P2T | Testing policy | Ordinal | 0—No testing policy 1—Only those who both (a) have symptoms AND (b) meet specific criteria (e.g., key workers, admitted to hospital, came into contact with a known case, returned from overseas) 2—Testing of anyone showing COVID-19 symptoms 3—Open public testing (e.g., “drive through” testing available to asymptomatic people) Blank—No data |
P3 | Quarantine | Ordinal | 0—No quarantine policy 1—Only targeted to international travelers 2—Quarantining all persons with infection risks, including travelers, close contacts, suspected cases and recovered patients Blank—No data |
P4 | Public information campaigns | Ordinal | 0—No COVID-19 public information campaign 1—Public officials urging caution about COVID-19 2—Coordinated public information campaigns (e.g., across traditional and social media) Blank—No data |
P5 | Mask-wearing | Ordinal | 0—No measures 1—Recommended mask-wearing in public places 2—Compulsory mask-wearing in public places Blank—No data |
H1 | Increasing the supply of PPE | Ordinal | 0—No measures 1—Some action to increase the supply of PPE 2—Used all-societal resources to the increase supply of PPE Blank—No data |
H2 | Building/strengthening health facilities | Ordinal | 0—No measures 1—Renovated health facilities or strengthen infection control in health facilities 2—Built new health facilities for COVID-19 patients only Blank—No data |
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Indicator ID | Included in OxCGRT | Indicator Name | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Administrative | |||
A1 | No | Coordinated governance | Recorded establishing a national task force/committee consisting of leaders from different ministries/sectors |
A2 | No | Legislation and regulations | Recorded developing or amending existing legislation and regulations for COVID-19 control |
A3 | Yes | Border control | Recorded border control for COVID-19 control |
A4 | Yes | Canceling public events | Recorded canceling public events |
A5 | Yes | Restrictions on gatherings | Recorded the cut-off size for bans on private gatherings |
A6 | Yes | School closures | Recorded school and university closures |
A7 | Yes | Workplace closures | Recorded workplace closures |
A8 | Yes | Stay-at-home requirements | Recorded “shelter-in-place” and otherwise confine to the home |
A9 | Yes | Closing public transportation | Recorded public transportation closures |
A10 | Yes | Restrictions on internal movement | Recorded restrictions on moving between regions/cities |
A11 | No | Transparent communications | Recorded establishing transparent communications working mechanism |
Public health | |||
P1 | Yes | Contact tracing | Recorded government policy on contact tracing after a positive diagnosis |
P2 | Yes | Testing policy | Recorded government policy on who has access to testing |
P3 | No | Quarantine | Recorded government policy on quarantine |
P4 | Yes | Public information campaigns | Recorded presence of public information campaigns on COVID-19 |
P5 | No | Mask-wearing | Recorded mask-wearing policy for COVID-19 control |
Health system | |||
H1 | No | Increasing the supply of PPE | Recorded actions on increasing the supply of PPE for health professionals |
H2 | No | Building/strengthening health facilities | Recorded actions to build or strengthen health facilities |
Key Control Measures | Geographic Coverage | Common Practice | Variation in Implementation |
---|---|---|---|
Administrative | |||
Establishing coordinated governance [13,14,15,30,31,32,33,34] | All but JP | Established at the very early stage of the outbreak, with high-level political leadership and commitment, and multi-sectoral or multi-ministerial coordination. | Governments differ in the timeliness of establishing this coordinated high-level leadership (e.g., HK, TW, SG, and VN did so even before there were ≤5 confirmed cases) |
Amending/adding legislations or regulations [14,16,17,18,19,35,36] | CHN, TW, SG, SK and VN | Governments usually add new regulations or pass new acts related to COVID-19 control, and impose severe penalties to violators for enforcement. | New rules differ in legislative nature (Act, Regulations, etc.), regulated thematic areas and enforcement stringency (e.g., SG and SK have issued strict penalty rules for violation). |
Transparently sharing epidemiological status [20,22,23,24,25,32] | All | Press conferences were held across the study sites and media tools were used to present timely updates to the public. | Governments differ in the timeliness of establishing these transparent sharing mechanisms. Variations also exist in format and frequency. |
Implementing mobility restrictions interventions [26,27,28,29,37,38,39,40] | All | Governments have used their executive power to implement administrative interventions to restrict people’s mobility, including border control, lockdowns, and social distancing. Lockdowns and social distancing were achieved through interventions such as traffic control, non-essential business closures, shelter-in-place policies, in-person school closures, etc. | Study sites differ in the package of interventions implemented and the stringency of their implementation. |
Public Health | |||
Aggressive contact tracing aided by digital tools [41,42,43,44] | All but JP | Contact tracing is done through massive and careful epidemiological investigations among close contacts of people who test positive. Given its labor-intensive nature, most countries mobilized human resources and adopted digital tools to assist with the process. | All are similar except for Japan, which uses a different cluster-based approach to trace contacts and did not implement aggressive measures, to protect personal privacy. |
Extensive testing [45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52] | All but JP | Governments focused on conducting nucleic acid amplification tests to detect the virus in suspected cases and in close contacts of confirmed cases. | All are similar except for Japan, which had adopted a restrictive testing approach aiming to not overwhelm its healthcare system. |
Strict quarantine [48,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61] | All but JP | Quarantine has been implemented among people with infection risk, including close contacts, suspected cases, travelers, and recovered COVID-19 patients. | All are similar except for Japan, in which quarantine policies are comparatively loose and target only travelers. |
Mask-wearing (compulsory and voluntary) [43,62,63,64,65,66,67] | All | Both healthy and infected people are encouraged to wear masks in public places. | Compulsory mask-wearing was observed in some study sites from the very beginning (e.g., CHN, VN), while voluntary mask-wearing was observed in others (HK, SK and JP). Some adjusted their policy to make mask-wearing compulsory for all, including for healthy people (SG and TW). |
Disinfecting public places [68] | All | Regular and thorough disinfection of public places, especially those with large population mobility and density. | No variations |
Widespread temperature screening | All | Wide thermal equipment was set up in public places such as subway entries and airports and manual temperature checks were given to people before entering a residential area or closed building | No variations |
Health education/awareness campaigns [45] | All | Health education and awareness campaigns were usually implemented on TV, social media, and phones and in public places, etc. | No variations |
Health system | |||
Improving health service delivery [45,62,69,70,71] | All | Governments focused on increasing testing capacity, building new health facilities, increasing the supply of PPE, and improving the triage of patients to improve health service delivery. | Governments differ in the timeliness of initiating these actions, and in the resources utilized for implementation. |
Mobilizing the health workforce [45] | CHN, SG, and SK | Human resources for health were mobilized from other regions to support the most heavily affected places. | Study sites differ in the scale of health workforce mobilization and the types of health workers mobilized. |
Increasing health financing [24] | All | Effective financing strategies were implemented to cover the majority, if not all, of the testing and treatment costs through health insurance plus special subsidies. | Study sites differ in the costs and population coverage (eg. SK had everything covered). |
Enhancing health information systems [45] | CHN | Careful monitoring, review, and timely publication of cases and a strong oversight and accountability mechanism | Data unavailable |
Purpose | Data Collected | Intrusiveness | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
Regular documentation and analysis | Health, travel history, drug purchase behaviors, etc. | High | CHN, TW, HK—border control health declaration by scanning a QR code [72] CHN—“Health code” [73], drug purchase direct reporting system [34], health self-reporting system, online registration system for employees to contain risk, etc. TW [74]—big data system to integrate health insurance and customs and immigration database; a digital platform to operate a nationalized system of mask distribution, and the “NHI Express App” for users to check mask availability SK—big data system to collect people’s credit card transaction data, CCTV footage, and mobile phone locations etc. |
Real-time tracking and alert system | Health, travel history, GPS location, CCTV footage, etc. | High | TW [14]—electronic security monitoring system and SMS notifications; social distancing alert app HK [75]—wristbands and mobile app SK [24]—cell phones vibrate with emergency alerts when cases are nearby |
Contact tracing | Health, basic socio-economic status, travel history, credit card, CCTV footage, etc. | High | CHN [76], TW [14], SK [77], VN [78]—using big data to trace contacts SG [42]—TraceTogether (mobile app) VN [41]—Bluezone (mobile app) |
Online health consultation and diagnosis | Health, travel history, and other relevant information per request | Medium | CHN [79]—remote consultation with doctors online; AI-assisted diagnosis JP [80], VN [81]—remote consultation SK [82]—self-diagnosis app |
Non-human-contact delivery and management | N/A | Low | CHN [79,83]— Drones: delivery of goods and medical samples; disinfection; crowd management Robots: meals delivery and disinfection |
Peer and community support | N/A | Low | CHN [84]—WeChat group to coordinate needs for living essential goods for collective order and delivery SG [85]—“Stay Home for Singapore” portal |
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Chen, S.; Guo, L.; Alghaith, T.; Dong, D.; Alluhidan, M.; Hamza, M.M.; Herbst, C.H.; Zhang, X.; Tagtag, G.C.A.; Zhang, Y.; et al. Effective COVID-19 Control: A Comparative Analysis of the Stringency and Timeliness of Government Responses in Asia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 8686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168686
Chen S, Guo L, Alghaith T, Dong D, Alluhidan M, Hamza MM, Herbst CH, Zhang X, Tagtag GCA, Zhang Y, et al. Effective COVID-19 Control: A Comparative Analysis of the Stringency and Timeliness of Government Responses in Asia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(16):8686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168686
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Shu, Lei Guo, Taghred Alghaith, Di Dong, Mohammed Alluhidan, Mariam M. Hamza, Christopher H. Herbst, Xinqi Zhang, Gabrielle Charis Alano Tagtag, Yi Zhang, and et al. 2021. "Effective COVID-19 Control: A Comparative Analysis of the Stringency and Timeliness of Government Responses in Asia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 16: 8686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168686
APA StyleChen, S., Guo, L., Alghaith, T., Dong, D., Alluhidan, M., Hamza, M. M., Herbst, C. H., Zhang, X., Tagtag, G. C. A., Zhang, Y., Alazemi, N., Saber, R., Alsukait, R., & Tang, S. (2021). Effective COVID-19 Control: A Comparative Analysis of the Stringency and Timeliness of Government Responses in Asia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(16), 8686. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18168686