Latest for @dwnews: After being one of the world's #COVID19 success stories for more than a year, #Taiwan is now engulfed by its worst outbreak since the start of the pandemic. Here's how the government has responded and how experts assess the situation: dw.com/en/is-taiwans-…
"Throughout the pandemic, Taiwan has been praised as one of the world's few COVID success stories, having kept its total number of cases in the hundreds. However, over the past several days, Taiwan has reported more than 900 new locally transmitted COVID cases."
"On Monday alone, Taiwan reported 335 new cases, a record daily high. The vast majority of the new cases are concentrated in the capital Taipei, and the surrounding New Taipei City region."
"Authorities are now trying to identify the source of several clusters responsible for the unprecedented outbreak. To contain the spread, the Taiwanese government introduced a series of new measures."
"Since May 15, all bars, clubs and gyms around Taiwan have been closed and a mandatory mask policy is in place. The size of indoor and outdoor gatherings has been limited.
On Tuesday, Taipei and New Taipei City announced closures of all schools from kindergarten to high schools for two weeks."
"Several universities have also moved their classes online and businesses have also been urged to allow employees work remotely. Taiwan also closed its borders to foreign visitors without a residence permit for at least one month.
On May 17, New Taipei City Mayor Hou You-yi raised the city's alert level and warned that people or businesses violating protocols will be penalized."
"The latest outbreak in Taiwan comes after a COVID case cluster broke out at a quarantine hotel near Taiwan's airport last month. Authorities later found out that the hotel had been mixing airline staff quarantining at the hotel with regular visitors in the same building."
"The number of cases quickly went from single to triple digits within a week, prompting health officials asking people not to leave their houses or make unnecessary travel plans."
"Taiwan's initial success in containing the virus allowed life in Taiwan to return to relative normalcy since last year. However, there is concern that its success in containing COVID, means it lags behind on keeping up-to-date with the latest knowledge on pandemic prevention."
"The successful control quickly led Taiwanese people into what I called post-pandemic mode, largely living a very normal life," said Chi Chunhuei, the director of the Center for Global Health at Oregon State University in the United States.
"Most Taiwanese people's experience of dealing with the pandemic was based on their experience dealing with the first wave of the pandemic from last year.
Unlike most countries around the world, they didn't have the experience of dealing with the variants, including the British variant that is currently circulating across Taiwan," he told DW.
Chi believes authorities somehow "neglected the need to catch up with the new knowledge the world discovered over the last year." "Taiwan needs to quickly adjust the preventative measures, and I think the move to raise the warning level is a good move," he said.
Other experts think that as the number of cases continues to rise in Taiwan, the government should consider adjusting its coronavirus testing strategies.
Taiwan has begun to set up rapid testing stations near some epicenters of the current outbreak, and health authorities said they plan to increase the number of these locations over the next few weeks.
"Now that Taiwan is using a mobile app to conduct 'digital contact tracing,' it should also establish a pathway that allows the government to inform anyone who has come into contact with confirmed cases to get tested and if they were tested positive," said Jason Wang, ...
... director of the Center for Policy, Outcomes and Prevention at Stanford University in the US.
Wang said that Taiwan's app-based digital contact tracing system should be updated to allow people who have come in contact with the virus to find an easy way to get tested. "The government should also be able to ask them to go into quarantine," he told DW.
Chi Chunhuei from Oregon State University added that Taiwan needs to pick up the pace on vaccinations, especially high-risk groups that include airline staff.
"Since Taiwan was so successful, most of the government officials and the general public didn't feel the urgency of getting vaccinated," Chi said.
"Last year, Taiwan did really well with a very strong defense, but in order to win the game, they need to launch an offensive, which is vaccination."
Taiwan has only vaccinated about 1% of its population so far. The priority has been high-risk groups like the elderly, medical personnel, and other emergency workers. A small number of other people have also been vaccinated through a self-paying program.
While vaccinations lag, Chi said that over the next few weeks, the top priority for Taiwan is to impose stricter indoor gathering regulations.
"I think most Taiwanese people are now refraining from going to restaurants or department stores or using public transportation," he said. "I have confidence in most Taiwanese people that they can stick to the regulations during this pandemic."

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More from @WilliamYang120

20 May
Breaking: #Taiwan reported 295 #COVID19 cases, 286 local cases and 9 imported.
New Taipei City: 157 (Zhonghe: 40) Taipei: 87 (Wanhua: 40) Taoyuan: 17 Yilan: 8 Changhua: 6 Keelung: 5 Kaohsiung: and Taichung 2 each

There are 63 without clear sources of infection. Wanhua travel history: 84
There is another death case, a woman in her 70s who works in Wanhua.
The lady who unfortunately died refused to go to the doctor in the beginning and was later found dead at home. She lived alone. Her family members have been hospitalized.
Read 30 tweets
20 May
After reporting more than 200 cases four days in a row, new #COVID19 cases continue to emerge in #Taiwan and there are signs that the virus has spread beyond the initial hotspots. One nurse at Hualien's veteran hospital becomes the latest confirmed case ...udn.com/news/story/120…
... after taking care of her uncle at Far Eastern Hospital in New Taipei City. Far Eastern Hospital reported an internal cluster case just two days ago.
Additionally, an ER doctor at Cathay hospital in New Taipei City's Xizhi was also tested positive after he allegedly came into contact with a confirmed case and was then infected.
Read 10 tweets
20 May
Samoa's new prime minister is expected to shelve a $100 million port development project backed by #China. She calls the project excessive for the small Pacific island that is already heavily indebted to China. usnews.com/news/world/art…
Fiame Naomi Mataafa, the opposition leader set to become Samoa's first female prime minister after a weeks-long political impasse, said she intended to maintain good relations with China but she had more pressing needs to address.
The proposed construction of the wharf in Vaiusu Bay has been a divisive issue in Samoa, playing a part in April elections where long-serving leader Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi lost his parliamentary majority.
Read 6 tweets
20 May
Breaking: #Taiwan held its first nationwide #COVID19 prevention meeting across the central government and all local governments. All local governments are now being asked to identify their #COVID19 hotspots and they need to set up rapid testing stations.
The central health authorities will now also lay out a very clear protocol for placing all infected patients as well as the flows to handle all new cases and share them with all local governments.
The central government will now immediately share necessary medical resources that are requested by local governments.
Read 8 tweets
20 May
As the US remains isolated at the UN due to its stance over the ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestine, #China seizes the chance to burnish its multilateral leadership credentials. usnews.com/news/world/art…
"The U.S. position is a gift to China, frankly. The U.S. has been trying to put pressure on China to back U.N. action over situations like Myanmar, and now Washington is stopping the Security Council speaking on the Middle East," said @RichardGowan1.
"This is hurting the Biden team's reputation at the U.N., and leaves China looking like the responsible power."
Read 13 tweets
19 May
Latest for @dw_chinese (Eng version): Amid the worst #COVID19 outbreak in #Taiwan, I talked to public health expert Chi Chunhuei about what might have caused the spike in the number of local cases and what should #Taiwan do to get through this challenge. williamyang-35700.medium.com/what-are-the-k…
"Taiwan has done well since the beginning of the outbreak by strictly guarding the border while domestically following a strict guideline of mask-wearing and maintaining social distancing. This allowed Taiwan to have no local cases by mid-April 2020."
"From then until December 2020, Taiwan had no domestic coronavirus cases. The successful control quickly led Taiwanese people into what I called post-pandemic mode, largely living a very normal life.
Read 33 tweets

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