Portugal Situation Report Saturday 5th June 2021

Introduction

Good morning – Clearly the most important decision over the last few days was the announcement by UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps that Portugal had been moved from the Green list to the Amber list with effect from flights arriving in England after 0400 hrs Tuesday 8th June 2021.

The reaction to this was predictable, with a considerable number of points made comparing the rate of new Covid-19 cases here to the UK, the issue of variants which according to the UK government formed part of their decision, as well as the timing of the decision itself.  The president of Tourism of the Algarve, João Fernandes, classified as “political” the decision of the United Kingdom to remove Portugal from the “green list” of travels. He said “It is a decision that the British Government took as a matter of internal policy and not as a matter of risk”.

Whatever the reasons, Safe Communities Portugal is not in a position to provide a scientific analysis, but our headline story from Expresso, does provides a well-considered analysis on this subject using scientific data. It is worth a read.

What this decision does highlight yet again is that international travel, as was shown last year, is always going to carry with it a degree of risk. The risk is that leading up to the holiday or whilst you are away, the UK and other governments may review the situation and impose measures that considerably affect your arrangements. This can result in cancellation, or indeed if overseas scheduling an early return, if you can with greater expense. In this specific case this means quarantine upon return to England plus the need to take two PCR tests after arrival. Clearly in booking holidays overseas, people will need to take into account the risk of potentially going into quarantine plus the costs of tests for a family.

Regarding the latter there were comments that if the situation was urgent, why wait until nearly 6 days for implementation, others stating it was too rushed. Probably a no win situation as if it had been implemented with a deadline of one or two days, which happened last year, it would have left people virtually no time to obtain a negative test before returning to the UK.

As it was there was clearly going to be considerable pressure on the SYNLAB testing centre at Faro airport. This is what prompted the ANA authority to contact SCP yesterday morning to put out an urgent plea to tourists here, that unless they have already booked and confirmed a test, go to the many testing centres in the Algarve that provide this service. We published this yesterday together with the test centre list. Today there are nearly 100 departure flights scheduled with around 24,000 departing passengers for this weekend.

We have also brought to the attention to the authorities concerned of feedback on this post that some people are being informed by some private labs to go to the airport for testing. This is being dealt with to ensure the labs concerned are aware of the situation.

We would like to thank this urgent message reaching over 30,000 people and shared over 400 times since posting yesterday.

This shows importance of urgent communication through social media at its best and this is the same as what is needed in urgent crisis situations such as major rural fires, where accurate and quick communication, free from detracting personal comment is essential. Thank you therefore for the vast majority of you who respected the “no comment rules” so that those genuinely needing assistance could find it quickly. I would also like to thank those who posted relevant information to help others.

CP railway ticket office workers and inspectors are to carry out a national strike of three days between Sunday and Tuesday, 6th – 8th June, in protest against the proposed career regulation and demanding salary increases and compliance with the agreement of company. CP warn of significant disruption of services state on their website and that those who already have tickets to travel on Alfa Pendular, Intercidades, Internacional, InterRegional and Regional trains may  request a refund of the total amount of the ticket purchased or its revalidation, free of charge. If you are on holiday here and travelling to and from the international airports by train please check with CP beforehand so you do not miss your flight

Details here https://www.cp.pt/passageiros/pt/consultar-horarios/avisos/greve-6a8junho?fbclid=IwAR0NGxfWVxwi1UEml0uA0J9qBoveOTGP8IHSO22GX7OZIV6Fwc6l4lR7k-Y

Lastly turning to fires, if the forecasts are correct we are likely to see by Tuesday next week a considerable increase in the fire risk in particular the north of the country. We having been given advice over the last two weeks on prevention measures, but it is also important for those in rural areas especially those that are prone to rural fires, to have a proper action plan in place in case a fire approaches your home. In a fast moving fire which may affect your home it is too late to come up with some ideas, so having a rehearsed plan that all the family are aware of essential.

I will be mentioning this on KissFM radio on Owen Gee’s Solid Gold Sunday around 0915 hrs this Sunday 6th June and will be posting on Facebook some tips.

Have a Safe weekend

Headlines

Portugal off the green list. “Caution”, “decision taken by the wrong people”, but “nothing against Portugal”, according to experts

blog.wego.com

Scientific knowledge does not explain the English decision to close the green corridor to Portugal based on the Nepalese mutation, but it will explain the excess of zeal, the political weight of not wanting to risk new confinement and wanting to “play it safe”, say the experts heard by Expresso. As for the mutation, it has not yet been recognized by the World Health Organization

What variant is this? When talking about the Nepalese mutation that was at the origin of the UK removing Portugal from the green corridor, the question seems valid even for specialists. What is known is that the outbreak that violently hit India eventually reached Nepal, a country where genomic sequencing is barely done. It is also known that among the identified variants, there is at least one case of the Delta variant, first found in India, which carries a mutation called K417N – the same one detected in several countries, including the United Kingdom, the United States and India. In Japan it appeared 14 times (13 cases among travellers from Nepal), writes “The Guardian”, although it is not clear the variant started. And in Portugal, the Ricardo Jorge Institute claims that 12 cases were registered.

Altogether, no more than 90 cases have been registered so far, with the same K417N mutation being found in the Beta variant, first detected in South Africa.

For scientists, the Beta variant is a concern because there is evidence to suggest that it is partially resistant to vaccines. But the so-called Nepalese mutation, which appears to have evolved from Delta, is so recent that the World Health Organization (WHO) has not officially recognized it.

The framework serves for Tiago Correia, professor of International Health and researcher at the Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa (IHMT), to be permanent: The British decision “has no scientific basis”. It is more easily the result of “the fear of the lack of scientific answers”.

Not that the public health specialist makes sense of the view that the UK has something against Portugal. “It seems to me an excess of domestic perspective” to look at the decision like that. “Travels to our country were not prohibited”, only a quarantine was imposed on those who return, which “seems and is excessive”, but should be seen as a measure of “caution”, he considers.

“The UK is a revolving door to the world. For the tourists that leave and for the amount of people that enter. I believe that the example of Seychelles and Chile, where cases started to grow again despite the large swaths of the population being vaccinated,” scared the political power, says Tiago Correia. “Returning to confinement is a political burden that the country does not want to risk”, he concludes.

Responding to the few known cases, Óscar Felgueiras, a mathematician at the University of Porto, speaks of a “false pretext”. “It is perfectly clear that this is not the main reason. I believe that the end of the green corridor makes sense, but the justification will be for the fact that Portugal has a higher incidence than that of several European countries”. “In the UK the number of infected people is on the rise and they want to play it safe,” he told Expresso.

For the immunologist Luís Delgado, it is “a decision taken by the wrong people”. The professor at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Porto defends the “common sense” of having a “global international network to carry out the epidemiological ‘follow up’ of the variants”, as there is great “the risk of some jeopardizing the coverage given by the vaccines”, but it doesn’t make sense “to be a secretary of state or a mayor” to decide later, “without scientific basis”: “If there is one thing this pandemic has taught us, it is that decisions cannot be made in the light of the political interests of the moment, in an open-close/close-open”, which is not understood.

DGS admits community transmission of the Indian variant in Portugal

If this pace of increase in cases is maintained, the country could reach 120 per 100,000 population within 30 days, half for Lisbon and Vale do Tejo. DGS admits that there may be community transmission of the Indian variant of Covid-19 in Portugal.
In a statement sent this Friday to the newsrooms, it is stated that “as of June 2, 74 cases of the B.1.617.2 lineage (associated with India) have been identified.”

The existence of this variant in the country, namely what it called a “Nepalese mutation”, was invoked by the British Government to justify removing Portugal from the green list of countries to travel on Thursday. The decision, which will have negative effects for tourism in Portugal, takes effect on Tuesday.
The report, produced by DGS and INSA, also reads that “the genomic sequencing revealed several different introductions of this variant in Portugal. The absence of an epidemiological link in some of the more recent cases may indicate the existence of community transmission of the same.”

The overwhelming majority of cases in Portugal are still of the English variant (87.7%) and there are still just over a hundred cases of the South African variant, as well as about 140 cases of the Manaus variant in Brazil.

INSA REPORT will be published on our website this morning

 

Covid-19 Update

The DGS Covid-19 situation report was published yesterday with the following data:

Confirmed Cases: 851,461 (+ 430 / + 0.05 %)
Number of admitted: 267 (+ 13 / + 5.12 %)
Number of ICU admitted: 53 (+ 1 / + 1.92 %)
Deaths: 17,029 (+ 0 / + 0.00 %)
Recovered: 810,959 (+ 300 / + 0.04 %)
Active cases: 22,473 (+130 /+0.58%)

Safe Communities comparisons/trends: show that deaths were zero;  there was a large reduction in new cases compared to yesterday and below last weeks’ daily average (491) However this was still higher than recoveries and again  around half new cases in Lisbon and Tejo Valley, similar to yesterday.

There were more in hospital after three days of decreases. Covid-19 Patients reduced by 6581 compared to number in hospital 1st February 2021.  In ICU there was a small increase but one of the lowest total figures since September 2020. Active cases however again rose and were the highest total since 3rd May 2021. Over 1300 additional active cases since Tuesday last week.

Health

Covid-19 Vaccinations Self-scheduling for those 45 years and over now available

The self-scheduling system for the vaccine against covid-19 is now available for people over 45 years of age, said today to Lusa, a source from the ‘task force’ responsible for the vaccination plan. According to the same source, given the “good pace” at which the process has been taking place, “whoever proposes to self-schedule will have a vacancy as of June 14”. The availability of this tool for people over 45 years old follows the calendar established by the ‘task force’.
The process is the same as previously for other age groups

The link is here:

https://covid19.min-saude.pt/pedido-de-agendamento/?fbclid=IwAR0rWReqvYhFYvsRiaMyfwf8Hsm-KMRfL05TmQY57DccaUcwxs5B8-PNtnI

 

More than 20 municipalities with incidence rate over 120 per 100,000

Portugal currently has 20 municipalities with an incidence of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus above 120 cases per 100,000 inhabitants in the last 14 days, two more in relation to those recorded on Friday.

According to data released today in the epidemiological bulletin of the Directorate-General for Health, as in the previous bulletin, there are no municipalities at very high risk, that is, with an incidence in 14 days exceeding 960 cases per 100,000 inhabitants.
The municipality of Ribeira Grande (546) remains at high risk of contagion, which has an accumulated incidence of over 480 cases per 100,000 inhabitants and is the only one in this group.

Of the 20 municipalities, four record an accumulation, in the last 14 days, of more than 240 cases per 100,000 inhabitants, two less than in the previous report: Golegã (318), Nordeste (288), Odemira (449) and Vila Franca of the Field (299). The remaining 15 municipalities have values ​​between 120 and 239.9 cases per 100 thousand inhabitants.

With zero cases in the last 14 days, 67 municipalities are referred, six more in relation to the previous bulletin. The 14-day cumulative incidence of today’s bulletin refers to the days between May 19th and June 1st.

Covid-19: PSD requires urgent hearing of Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Assembly of the Republic on removal of country from UK ‘green list’

Lisbon, 04 Jun 2021 (Lusa) – The PSD parliamentary group today requested an urgent hearing to the Minister of Foreign Affairs regarding the removal of Portugal from the so-called ‘green list’ of travel in the United Kingdom, resulting from the pandemic.

According to the request delivered today in the Assembly of the Republic and disclosed to journalists, the Social Democrats requested “an urgent hearing” to the Minister of State and Foreign Affairs, Augusto Santos Silva, “in the sense to explain the efforts he has made up to the moment of the decision and what initiatives he will develop so that Portugal’s image is not harmed”.

The PSD parliamentary bench considered that the removal of Portugal from the British ‘green list’ of destinations considered safe for citizens for citizens, following the pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2, is “a setback that jeopardizes the recovery of vital sectors for the country’s economy, such as tourism, hotels and restaurants”.

The decision, announced on Thursday and which enters into force at 04:00 on June 8, requires citizens returning from Portugal to fulfil a ten-day quarantine on return. This measure will also be “harmful” for the Portuguese community residing in the United Kingdom, which will be “who will suffer most from these restrictions, the party added.

The British Government justified Portugal’s descent to the ‘amber list’ with “the positivity rate” that “almost doubled since the last review in Portugal” and with “a sort of Nepal mutation”, of the variant detected in Indian Territory explained Transport Minister Grant Shapps.

Other news

Union of SEF inspectors displeased with meeting with MAI

Lisbon, 04 Jun 2021 (Lusa) – The SEF Investigation and Supervision Career Union left today’s meeting with the Minister of Internal Affairs unsatisfied and is preparing to debate ways to fight against the restructuring of the service without the approval of the parliament.

“The minister presented a process of restructuring the Foreign and Border Services which we consider to be incipient and messy, insisting that the changes must be approved by the Government through a diploma, something we disagreed out of hand and against which we are going to fight,” he told Lusa the president of the union, Acácio Pereira.

According to the union leader, little or nothing useful came out of the meeting with Eduardo Cabrita, right away, because, said the union leader, the government official said that the SEF is a State organization and that it can be restructured without the approval of the Assembly of the Republic. A position directly against that of the unions, he said.
Acácio Pereira added that the union has a congress scheduled for Sunday and that the issue of restructuring and possible ways of fighting it will be discussed by the members.

“We will fight for what we understand to be the legal and adequate principles for the restructuring of the service”, he underlined.

After this meeting, another one will take place between the minister and the Union of Inspectors of Investigation, Inspection and Borders (SIIFF), which, like the first, has as its only agenda item “the statute of inspectors in the investigation and inspection career, in the framework of restructuring of the SEF”.

The Council of Ministers resolution that defines the political guidelines for the restructuring of this service was published in Diário da República on April 14th.

Overseas Situation Report Saturday 5th June 2021

 

By Mike Evans

In this report with a look at what the future might hold in a world where Covid still exists.

Experts say COVID-19 will likely continue to fade in the United States, but the disease probably will not disappear. They expect COVID-19 could be similar to the influenza virus that re-emerges every year in a slightly different form. They say there are still many unknowns about the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, including how often it will mutate.

Though the COVID-19 pandemic is starting to fade in the United States, it’s unlikely that the novel coronavirus is going away, at least for the near future. As case rates drop and more people become vaccinated, COVID-19 will likely transition from a pandemic – the worldwide spread of a new disease – to an endemic phase, where the virus is always present in the population in some form, albeit under controllable levels, experts say. “It’s likely that it will become endemic because people carry it without knowing or showing symptoms, and some people have diminished immunity that will continue to make them susceptible even post-vaccination,” said Gerald Commissiong, CEO of Todos Medical, Ltd., a COVID-19 screening and testing company. “Combined with the likelihood of waning immunity and emerging variants, we should expect that COVID-19 is a virus that will be with us for the long haul,”

Many experts think the United States will need at least 70 percent of the population to be immunized to achieve herd immunity, although it’s not certain yet what level will need to be achieved.

“We don’t know really what the required level of herd immunity is to keep COVID-19 out of circulation,” said Dr. Susan Kline, MPH, an infectious disease physician with the University of Minnesota Medical School and M Health. “For some diseases, a much higher level of vaccination is required to keep the disease from breaking out, e.g., measles, where it is estimated that 95 percent of the herd must be vaccinated or immune to keep the disease under control.” While measles is caused by a different virus from coronavirus, it’s telling that even this virus that sees high childhood vaccination rates still emerges occasionally among regional populations with lower vaccination rates.

A similar dynamic could likely emerge with COVID-19.

“We don’t need to look very far to see what happens when there are low vaccination rates in populations,” Dr. Beth Oller, a family medicine physician in Kansas, told Healthline. “Measles is still a common disease in many parts of the world. The [Centres for Disease Control and Prevention] reported 1,282 measles cases in 31 states in 2019. This was the greatest number of cases reported in the U.S. since measles was eliminated from the country in 2000, and we came close to losing our measles elimination status.”

Ultimately, this means people will need to be mindful of their behaviour and should not expect a total return to pre-pandemic behaviour.

Instead, experts say we should endeavour to continue to observe masking and physical distancing protocols in groups of unfamiliar people and take a cautious approach to mingle with larger groups.

“If people forgo these precautions, this threatens the delicate and shifting balance of the herd,” Dr. Elizabeth Wang, an infectious diseases physician at the University of Maryland St. Joseph Medical Centre, told Healthline. “For example, if a person pre-vaccination used to only interact with one person on a daily basis, he now believes post-vaccination he can meet 10 people without masking. How many people he’s meeting changes the entire herd immunity equation. If his social behaviour once again begins to promote the spread of the virus, a higher percentage (more than 70 percent) will now need to be vaccinated in order to achieve herd immunity.” There’s still a lot of unknowns when it comes to how often COVID-19 might mutate and how frequently people might require booster shots of the vaccine, among other issues.

“Influenza is somewhat predictable in how it changes yearly, so yearly flu vaccines can be mostly predicted – and there are vaccines on the horizon for influenza that may not need to be given yearly,” Dr. Jill Foster, a paediatric infectious disease physician with the University of Minnesota Medical School and M Health Fairview, told Healthline. “COVID, however, has demonstrated remarkable ability to mutate and change how easily it spreads and how severe disease is. For a while, it will be a race of vaccine coverage for it against the variants. So far, we’ve been winning, but one bad variant that spreads easily, causes severe disease, and evades vaccine, and we’ll be set back by months,” she added.

As we look around the world at the new variants appearing we can but wonder if we will able to live a normal life in the way we use to.

Until the next time Stay safe.

 

 

Azores Situation Report Saturday 5th June 2021 

 

From our colleague in the Azores 

Portugal, including the archipelagos of Madeira and the Azores, will leave the British Government’s “green list” of international travel on Tuesday at 04:00, announced the British Ministry of Transport.

According to the ministry, Portugal goes to the “yellow list” to “safeguard public health against worrying variants” and protect the British vaccination program.

In a statement, the British Government said that, according to the European database GISAID, 68 cases of variant B1.617.2 were identified in Portugal, identified for the first time in India, named by the World Health Organization as Delta variant, “with an additional potentially harmful mutation”.

The UK Health Directorate (Public Health England) is investigating this variant and mutation to better understand whether it might be more transmissible and more resistant to vaccines.

The British Government also says that the positive rate of tests for the new coronavirus in Portugal is almost double that registered about a month ago, surpassing the national average in the United Kingdom.

Countries on the “yellow list” are subject to tighter restrictions, namely a 10-day quarantine on arrival in the UK and two PCR tests on the second and eighth day, as is already the case with most European countries, such as Spain, France and Greece.

The “green list” exempts travellers arriving in British territory from quarantine, while the “red list” requires a 10-day quarantine at a designated hotel, in addition to two PCR tests.

In the published update of international travel lists, the UK Transport Ministry added Afghanistan, Bahrain, Costa Rica, Egypt, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Trinidad and Tobago to the “red list”.

The British Executive also reiterates the appeal to the British not to travel to destinations on the “yellow list” in order to protect public health because the “prevalence of worrying variants and overall rates of coronaviruses are higher”.

The traffic light system is based on four criteria: vaccination rates, number of cases, prevalence of “concerning variants” and quality of testing data.

According to data from the British Government, since the beginning of the pandemic, nearly 128,000 people have died in the UK, the worst mortality rate in Europe.

The covid-19 pandemic caused at least 3,693,717 deaths worldwide, resulting from more than 171.5 million cases of infection, according to a balance made by the French agency AFP.

In Portugal, 17,029 people died out of 851,031 confirmed cases of infection, according to the latest bulletin from the Directorate-General for Health.

Covid-19 

2nd June 

26 new positive cases of covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all on the island of São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, following 2,510 tests carried out in the reference laboratories of the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 17 cases (nine in Rabo de Peixe, four in Matriz, two in Pico da Pedra, one in Porto Formoso and one in Ribeirinha). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada, there were nine new cases (three in São José, and one in each of the parishes of Capelas, São Roque, Fajã de Cima, Fenais da Luz, Relva and Pilar da Bretanha).

Also, there has been a total of 26 recoveries.

3rd June 

27 new positive cases of covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all in São Miguel, in a context of community transmission, resulting from 3,036 tests carried out in reference laboratories in the Region and another two in non-conventional laboratories.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande had 14 cases (five in Rabo de Peixe, three in Maia, two in Porto Formoso, two in Conceição, one in Ribeira Seca and one in Lomba da Maia). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada there were seven new cases (two in São José, two in Fajã de Baixo, two in Arrifes and one in Fenais da Luz). In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case, in São Pedro, and in the municipality of Lagoa, five new cases were diagnosed (three in Santa Cruz, one in Rosário and one in Cabouco).

Also, there was a total of 20 recoveries.

4th June 

22 new positive cases of covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all on the island of São Miguel, following 2,070 tests carried out in the reference laboratories of the Region and one in an independent laboratory.

Of the total number of new positive cases, 21 are related to the context of community transfer and one refers to a traveller, non-resident, with positive analysis on the 12th day.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande had 11 new cases (three in Rabo de Peixe, two in Matriz, two in Maia, one in Lomba da Maia, one in Fenais da Ajuda, one in Conceição and one in Pico da Pedra). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada, there were nine new cases (two in Roque, two in Fenais da Luz, two in the Fajã de Baixo, one in the Arrifes, one in São Vincente Ferreira and one in São José). In the municipality of Povoação, there was a new case in the parish of Furnas, and in the municipality of Lagoa, a new case was diagnosed in the parish of Cabouco.

Also, there have been a total of 27 recoveries.

As of today, 12 patients are in hospital, all at the Divino Espírito Santo Hospital in Ponta Delgada, with three of them in intensive care.

The archipelago currently has 279 active positive cases, all on the island of São Miguel. There are no active local transmission chains and 203 have been extinguished so far. There are 1,504 people under active surveillance today.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, 5,653 positive cases of COVID-19 have been diagnosed in the Azores and 5,211 people recovered from the disease. There were 33 deaths, 79 people who left the archipelago and 51 cases with history of previous cure.

To date, 514,565 tests have been carried out in the archipelago to detect SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes covid-19 disease.

From last December 31st, 2020 until May 28th, 126,130 doses of covid-19 vaccine were administered in the Azores, corresponding to 79,832 people aged 16 years or more who received the first dose, and 46,298 people who received both doses, under the Regional Vaccination Plan.

 

Algarve Situation Report Saturday 5th June 2021

 

Covid-19

The Algarve has 276 active cases of Covid.19, informed the District Commission for Civil Protection of Faro based on data from ARS Algarve.

Until yesterday, 22,094 infected were registered, 11 more in the last 24 hours and 21,462 recovered (cumulative).

There are 261 patients recovering at home and 15 hospitalized, 2 in the Intensive Care Units and 1 ventilated. Since the beginning of the pandemic, 356 deaths have been registered in the region.

At the moment 894 people are under active surveillance.

Compared to last week’s bulletin, 43 more active cases and 142 new cases are confirmed. A further 99 people are recovered.

There are 5 more hospitalized (15), maintaining the number of patients in intensive care (2) and ventilated (1). Another 55 people are under active surveillance.

 

Covid-19: Removing Portugal from the “green list” was a British political decision, says Turismo do Algarve

Faro, 04 June (Lusa) – The president of Tourism of the Algarve, João Fernandes, today classified as “political” the decision of the United Kingdom to remove Portugal from the “green list” of travels, imposing a quarantine from Tuesday on those who reaches British territory.

“It is a decision that the British Government took as a matter of internal policy and not as a matter of risk”, said the president of the Algarve Tourism Region (RTA), stressing that the justification given by the UK authorities “does not use Portugal as a reference” for covid-19 infections and even Malta, “which has an incidence of nine cases per 100,000 inhabitants, was left out” of the “green list”.

João Fernandes acknowledged that the British decision “has a clear impact on the region”, as the United Kingdom is the “main source market” of tourists to the Algarve, and regretted the “embarrassment” that the measure causes, “from the outset for those who already they are here and are scheduled to return after Tuesday, which is the day from which this measure takes effect”.

“We are already witnessing a concentration of repatriation flights and a cancellation of flights for the subsequent period and of hotel reservations as well. We hope that this measure is reviewed as soon as possible, because it is completely unfair”, he considered.

João Fernandes also said that the Algarve had “100,000 movements of passengers of British origin during the last two weeks” and that, according to data provided by the Regional Health Administration among British passengers, “there was only a record – and all of them are tested – six cases”.

“Six cases per 100,000 inhabitants is a much lower number than that registered in the United Kingdom itself, not least because the British, before traveling to Portugal, have to take a PCR [test]”, he added.

Now, he said, the region must “look forward and continue to bet on other markets that are in good demand in the Algarve, such as the German, French, Irish Spanish, Dutch markets”, which are “recognizing Portugal as a safe destination and the best beach destination in the world, according to the latest recognition from the World Travel Awards”.

The representative considers that Portugal can return to the “green list” in the next re-evaluation of the British Government, within about three weeks.

“Even because, being clearly a political decision, because the British Government bet that by June 21st it would conclude its de-confinement process, it makes sense that this review is favourable to an opening to several countries, including Portugal”, he argued.

João Fernandes also left a warning to British tourists who “are now returning in a hurry”, noting that they can use the approximately 130 covid-19 testing sites identified on the website www.visitalgarve.pt, before traveling to the airport, to facilitate controls and their departure from the country.

Municipality of VRSA inaugurated Local Support Centre for Integration of Migrants

The municipality of Vila Real de Santo António inaugurated, last Tuesday, the Local Support Centre for the Integration of Migrants (CLAIM), operating in the main building of the City Council, from Monday to Friday, from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm, next to the customer service area.

The new office’s mission is to support the entire process of welcoming and integrating migrants, articulating its activity with various local structures and promoting inter- culturality at the local level, as explained by the municipality in a statement.

The inauguration ceremony was attended by the Secretary of State for Integration and Migration, Cláudia Pereira, the Mayor of VRSA, Luís Romão, and the Board Member of the High Commission for Migration, José Reis.

CLAIM is a service provided by the Municipality’s Division of Social Development and Human Resources that results from a protocol signed with the High Commission for Migration, IP. It will provide support and general information in areas such as regularization, nationality, family reunification, housing, voluntary return, work, health, education, among other issues.

 

Overseas Situation Report Wednesday 2nd June 2021

 

By Mike Evans

Try walking forward while looking over your shoulder and see how far you get. The same goes for life. Look forward!” – Martin Henderson

 

We start this report with the news that Peru has admitted to understating the number of deaths as a result of Covid-19 and we look at a roundup of stories that connect with the virus.

Peru on Monday dramatically increased its official Covid-19 death toll to 180,764, following a government review.

Peru has been among the hardest hit Latin American countries, with its hospitals overcrowded with patients and demand for oxygen outstripping availability. Experts had long warned that the true death toll was being undercounted in official statistics. The government said it will now update its death count, which stood at 69,342 as of Sunday, in part because of a lack of testing that made it difficult to confirm whether a person had died due to the virus or some other cause.

Health Minister, Oscar Ugarte, said the criteria for identifying the coronavirus as a cause of death were changed. Previously, only those who “had a positive diagnostic test” were considered to have died from the virus, but other criteria have since been incorporated. The new toll from Covid-19 includes deaths reported between March 2020 and May 22 of this year. Among Latin American countries, only Brazil and Mexico have reported higher death tolls from the disease.

Meanwhile In the Asia-Pacific region, Malaysia began a two-week national lockdown on Tuesday, with police checkpoints on road junctions around the capital Kuala Lumpur as authorities tackle a wave of Covid-19 infections that has hit record levels in recent weeks.

Prime Minister, Muhyiddin Yassin, called it a “total lockdown,” though essential services are allowed and some factories can operate with a reduced workforce. The latest outbreak has been more severe, partly due to highly transmissible variants.

In South Africa – despite the Covid-19 pandemic, it appeared that many foreign tourists were still travelling to visit. This was revealed in Stats SA’s Travel and Migration report for March, which was released on Tuesday. It gave insight into traveller numbers to and from the country. The latest Travel and Migration Report showed that more than 635,000 travellers passed through South African ports of entry in March.

They comprised more than 214,000 South Africans and around 420,000 foreigners. Almost 2,700 Americans visited in March, while the country welcomed more than 2,000 Germans and over 1,700 from the UK, a country where only essential travel was allowed.

There were also significant travellers from France, India, China and the Netherlands, while most visitors from Africa were from Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia. Almost 140,000 indicated that they were here on holiday, but some were visiting for business, study or medical treatment. Most tourists were from Europe, totalling almost 9,000 in March. It does rather make one think that these travellers may have exacerbated the increase in cases seen during this period.

Continuing on the travel theme, there are reports this week of concerns surrounding the Covid-19 vaccine certificates. A travel risk intelligence specialist has warned of long airport delays as travellers use paper documents to show their Covid status.

The paperwork can be faked so there could be lengthy queues while checks are carried out, said Adam Schrader, Operations Director at Riskline.

“Governments and travel authorities are now hastily rushing to introduce vaccination passports to meet the demand to open up travel and holidays,” he said.

“While digital vaccine passports are in development and testing, the absence of any universal standards means that many people around the world have already been issued with paper documentation for their vaccinations.

The unvaccinated who still want to travel will turn to counterfeit documents and fake vaccination passports which are already available on the dark web. Some violators may not be caught.”
He added: “Until all countries introduce digital vaccination records, security will be weak and be dependent on hard-pressed border and travel staff checking documents diligently. The queues will be lengthy.”

After being housebound for more than a year due to Covid-19 restrictions, many vaccinated Westerners are eager to travel again — and tour operators are only too happy to oblige.

Costa Cruises is among the companies booking trips through the Mediterranean this summer. While cruise ships are a common sight in the region, in the last year, they’ve also been put to a less glamorous use.

Italy, more than most countries in the region, has been struggling to deal with the thousands of migrants from Africa and the Middle East who risk their lives to cross the Mediterranean. Every week, hundreds are rescued at sea. The Italian public has become increasingly resistant to bringing them into the country, and the pandemic has only hardened that resolve.

In an attempt to save lives while containing the spread of Covid-19, in 2020 the Italian government chartered nine cruise ships. Staffed by the Italian Red Cross, they are intended to quarantine migrants rescued at sea, in order to keep them from bringing Covid-19 ashore. The ships have become giant, floating holding pens. On any given day last fall and winter, several hundred migrants and a few dozen Red Cross staff were on board La Suprema. The passengers were confined to designated floors and areas, which were cordoned off with barriers of clear-plastic sheets that had been taped across doorways, to lessen the potential flow of Covid-contaminated air. The ship felt less like a vacation destination than a nursing home — humid with worried people waiting and smelling of boiled broccoli and carrots. The ship’s gold-coloured railings served as clothes lines. The video game arcade became a medical storage closet, with boxes of latex gloves, hand sanitizer and toilet paper stacked between the Galaga and Pac-Man machines.

Most of the time, they were anchored about one and a half kilometres from shore, off the coast of Sicily. The liner was circled at all times by two patrol boats from Italy’s Guardia di Finanza, which polices immigration and financial crimes.

Several times a day, Red Cross staff led the migrants out of their cramped hallways to the ship’s upper deck, where they were allowed half-hour recesses.

The migrants spent most of their time sitting on the floor in the hallways outside their cabins, huddled around their cell phones. The cabins typically held two or three people, the majority of them men between 15 and 25 years old, from Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Somalia, Bangladesh or Eritrea.

It’s hard to miss the irony in using cruise ships to forestall the spread of the coronavirus. One of the first serious Covid-19 outbreaks outside China was on the Diamond Princess, a British cruise ship that had stopped in the port of Yokohama, Japan, in early February 2020. Roughly one-fifth of the passengers tested positive; about a dozen people ultimately died. Mass outbreaks followed on other ships.

Until the next time, Stay Safe.

Total Cases Worldwide – 171,625,780

Total Deaths Worldwide – 3,568,091

Total Recovered Worldwide – 153,959,634

Total Active Cases Worldwide – 14,098,055 (8.2% of the total cases)

Total Closed Cases Worldwide – 157,527.725

 

Information and resources:

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/

 

Madeira Situation Report 2nd June 2021

 

By Daniel Fernandes

Covid-19 update

There were 37 new Covid-19 cases, 73 recoveries and no deaths from Covid-19 in Madeira since the previous Madeira Situation Report.

On Saturday, there were 12 new Covid-19 cases (from 1 passenger who had arrived from France and 11 cases of local transmission) and 25 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital remained 8, 2 of whom were intensive care.

On Sunday, there were 15 new Covid-19 cases (from 1 passenger who had arrived from the Czech Republic and 14 cases of local transmission) and 16 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital increased to 9, 2 of whom were in intensive care.

On Monday, there was 1 new Covid-19 case of local transmission and 16 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital decreased to 7, 2 of whom were in intensive care.

And on Tuesday, there were 9 new Covid-19 cases (from 1 passenger who had arrived from South Africa, 3 passengers who had arrived from Northern Portugal and 5 cases of local transmission) and 16 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital remained 7, 1 of whom was in intensive care.

There were 171 active cases on Tuesday, of which 11 had been imported while the other 160 cases had been a result of local transmission. As of Tuesday, there had been 9,470 cases, 9,227 recoveries and 72 deaths.

On Tuesday, there were 13 patients in isolation in a dedicated hotel, 151 patients in isolation in their own accommodation and 7 patients in hospital, 1 of whom in intensive care.

On the same day, there were 50 suspected cases under epidemiological investigation and analysis, which were all linked to patients who tested positive for Covid-19, to calls made to the SRS24 helpline, to referrals by SESARAM (Madeira Regional Health Service) and to airport screening.

There were 19,389 travellers under monitoring by the health authorities. Monitoring is being carried out through the ‘MadeiraSafe’ app. There were also 569 people, who had contact with positive cases, being monitored by the health authorities of several Madeira municipalities and of Porto Santo.

As for Covid-19 testing on passengers who had arrived at Funchal and Porto Santo airports, 216,446 samples had been collected until Tuesday (at 15h30). By Tuesday, 445,131 samples from RT-PCR tests had been processed and 58,461 antigen rapid tests had been carried out in the Autonomous Region of Madeira.

The SRS 24 helpline (Regional Health Service – 800 24 24 20) received 503 calls from Friday to Tuesday. Overall, it has received 51,194 calls.

The Covid-19 mental health helpline (Linha de Acompanhamento Psicológico da Direção Regional de Saúde – 291 212 399 – available every day from 09h00 to 21h00), which was set up to provide emotional and mental support to anyone in Madeira received 15 calls from Friday to Tuesday. Overall, it has received 3,592 calls.

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/29/12-novos-casos-de-Covid-19-25-recuperados-96-suspeitos/

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/30/15-novos-casos-de-Covid-19-16-recuperados-43-suspeitos/

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/31/hoje-surgiu-apenas-um-novo-caso-de-Covid-19/

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/06/01/9-novos-casos-de-Covid-19-16-recuperados-50-suspeitos/

 

Covid-19 vaccination update.

As of May 30th, 144,578 Covid-19 vaccine doses (93,879 1st doses & 50,699 2nd doses) had been administered in the Autonomous Region of Madeira since the start of the vaccination campaign on December 31st. This means 37% of the Region’s population has been administered the 1st vaccine dose while 20% have been fully vaccinated.

A total of 12,406 vaccine doses (3,436 1st doses & 8,970 2nd doses) were administered in the previous week. The plan for this week is to continue inoculations of both 1st and 2nd doses throughout the Region.

Pedro Ramos, Madeira’s Health and Civil Protection Secretary, said the Region is expected to have administered 150,000 vaccine doses in the next few days, of which 100,000 will be 1st doses.

He announced that pregnant women who are at a certain stage of their pregnancies are already being inoculated as long as they have medical approval.

He also revealed that among the 50,000 fully vaccinated people in the Region, 315 were infected with Covid-19. Nevertheless, he assured that they remained asymptomatic and had not required hospitalisation. He said these figures highlighted the efficiency of vaccination and were a reminder that vaccination does not provide full immunity against Covid-19.

The Madeira Regional Government would like vaccination of youngsters aged 12-15 to be complete before the start of the next school year. They will be administered the Pfizer vaccine as soon as the Directorate-General of Health (Direção-Geral da Saúde) gives approval to vaccination of this age group.

A shipment of 35,100 Pfizer Covid-19 vaccines arrived in Funchal on Monday morning. And 5,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine had been due to arrive in the Region on Tuesday. Administration of the single-dose vaccines will start today on about 1,500 hospital patients who had been selected by SESARAM (Madeira Health Service).

https://www.jm-madeira.pt/regiao/ver/130504/Administradas_mais_de_144_mil_vacinas_contra_a_COVID-19_na_RAM

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/31/madeira-com-mais-35-100-vacinas/

https://www.jm-madeira.pt/regiao/ver/130483/Vacinas_da_Johnson_and_Johnson_chegam_hoje_a_Regiao_

https://observador.pt/2021/05/30/Covid-19-governo-da-madeira-pretende-vacinar-jovens-antes-de-inicio-ano-letivo/

https://www.jm-madeira.pt/regiao/ver/130271/Madeira_ja_tem_50000_pessoas_com_vacinacao_completa

 

CR7 Museum reopened.

CR7 Museum reopened on Monday after being closed for a year. Visitors to this popular museum can learn about Cristiano Ronaldo’s career, the most important moments during his career, the best goals he scored and look at a number of trophies he has won throughout his career.

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/31/museu-cr7-reabre-depois-de-quase-um-ano-encerrado/

 

Increase in the number of Binter flights to the Canary Islands.

The reopening of the Funchal-Tenerife route in July means that Binter will increase the number of flights between Funchal and the Canary Islands. The airline already has flights between Funchal and Gran Canaria on Thursdays and on Sundays.

From July 10th, Binter will have flights between Funchal and Tenerife on Tuesdays and on Saturdays. On Tuesdays, the flight from Tenerife North – Ciudad de La Laguna Airport will depart at 15h40 and land in Funchal at 17h00. The flight from Funchal will depart at 13h30 and land in Tenerife at 14h50. On Saturdays, the flight from Tenerife will depart at 14h40 and land in Funchal at 16h00. The flight from Funchal will depart at 12h30 and land in Tenerife at 13h50.

Bookings can be made on Binter’s website (www.binter.pt), by phone (291 290 129) or through a travel agency.

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/06/01/binter-vai-aumentar-ligacoes-entre-a-madeira-e-as-canarias/

 

 

Algarve Situation Report Wednesday 2nd June 2021

 

COVID-19: Unilabs and HPA Saúde Group inaugurate laboratory in Faro.

Unilabs Portugal and the HPA Saúde Group, with the collaboration of the Faro City Council, inaugurated, on Monday, May 31, a new Molecular Biology Laboratory.

The new structure, integrated in the «Summer Safe Algarve» operation, will allow to expand the response capacity in quantity and response time to Covid-19 tests, especially at the level of the standard PCR tests.

The Molecular Biology Laboratory will have the capacity to carry out more than 15,000 tests per day and represents an investment of 1.5 million euros, with the creation of 100 jobs in the laboratory and in the testing network to be set up on the ground, throughout the Algarve region.

With the increase in tourism expected for the summer months in the Algarve, and the mandatory testing to enter Portugal and return to the countries of origin, Unilabs, in partnership with the HPA Saúde Group, will thus strengthen the capacity testing facilities in the region, allowing for a quicker response, without the need to transport samples outside the district.

The screening centre is located at Rua Engenheiro Nuno Abecassis, in Faro, parallel to the Decathlon chain store in Faro.

Hand in hand with the installation of this centre, a network of specific locations and routes programmed in hotel units will be created, in order to expand the ease and convenience in accessing these health services.

 

Covid-19: Rolling Loud Portugal Festival that would take place in Portimão is postponed again to 2022.

The North American festival Rolling Loud, which was due to open in July in Europe with an event in Portimão, has been postponed to 2022 because of the pandemic situation, the organization announced today.

“While we see that the world is opening up again and we are encouraged by many positive indicators about European travel, stays and events, we feel that the rescheduling of the festival is the best in the name of the safety of all our fans traveling to Portugal, to the festival “, reads a statement shared on social networks.

The first edition of Rolling Loud Portugal should have already taken place in Portimão in the summer of 2020, next to Praia da Rocha, but it was postponed to July this year, but it is now rescheduled, due to the pandemic, for the days from 06 to 08 July 2022.

The festival, made mainly of hip hop, had on the poster names like Travis Scott, A $ AP Rocky, Future, Wiz Khalifa, A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Chief Keef, City Girls, Dababy, Gucci Mane, Gunna and Meek Mill.

The organization does not give names for 2022, saying only that it is working “in the biggest hip hop line-up that Europe has ever seen”.

According to the organization, the tickets already purchased are valid for 2022, but a refund will also be possible.

Calling itself the largest hip-hop festival in the world, Rolling Loud only admits those over 18 years of age.

 

One dead and one injured in a vehicle crash into a ravine in Silves.

The falling of an off-road vehicle into a ravine in the area of ​​São Bom Homem, in the municipality of Silves, today caused a death and a person slightly injured a source from Civil Protection told Lusa.

According to the District Relief Operations Centre (CDOS) in Faro, the accident that occurred in the middle of the afternoon on Monday resulted in the death of a 62-year-old man and injuries to a 57-year-old woman, both of German nationality.

“The causes of the accident are being investigated” said the source.

In the rescue operations of the victims, 25 members of the firefighters from Silves, from the National Institute for Medical Emergency (INEM) and from the National Republican Guard, from the Municipal Civil Protection of Silves, were involved, supported by an INEM helicopter.

 

Azores Situation Report Wednesday 2nd June 2021

 

From our colleague in the Azores 

 

Azores Fare.

Passengers, resident in the Azores can travel back and forth between the islands of the archipelago, starting today, for the maximum price of 60 euros.

Reservations related to the so-called ‘Azores Fare’ can be made through the sales channels of SATA Air Azores, which makes inter-island trips, and travel agencies.

Passengers who have already purchased a ticket with the normal resident fare for inter-island travel starting today (and who have not yet started their travels), may request a refund of the differential for the Azores Fare.

 

Azores Bathing Season 

The bathing season started yesterday, Tuesday 1st June in the Azores. There are 32 zones, and a manual on the use of these spaces is being finalized in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, which does not provide for fines, but warns users of their responsibility.

82 bathing waters are available for the public to use this year, six of which are for the first time.

 

Covid-19 

29th May. 

18 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all in São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, resulting from 2,197 tests carried out in reference laboratories in the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 10 cases (five in Rabo de Peixe, two in Ribeirinha, two in Lomba de São Pedro and one in Pico da Pedra). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada there were three new cases (one in Capelas, one in Santa Clara and one in Fenais da Luz), in the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case in São Miguel and in the municipality of Lagoa there are four new cases, in Cabouco.

Tthere were a total of 19 recoveries. With the recovery of the only positive case on the island of São Jorge, it has no positive cases.

30th May. 

32 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all in São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, resulting from 2,340 tests carried out in reference laboratories in the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 20 cases (14 in Rabo de Peixe, two in Ribeirinha, two in Matriz, one in Conceição and one in Porto Formoso). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada there were 11 new cases: three in Arrifes, three in Fenais da Luz, two in Capelas, two in São José and one in Fajã de Baixo. In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case, in São Pedro.

There was a total of 21 recoveries

31st May. 

23 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores in, all on the island of São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, following 945 tests carried out in the reference laboratories of the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 11 cases (three in Rabo de Peixe, six in Ribeirinha, one in Matriz and one in Porto Formoso). There were 11 new cases in the municipality of Ponta Delgada (two in Arrifes, two in Capelas, two in Relva, one in São Sebastião, one in São Pedro, one in Santa Clara, one in Fajã de Baixo and one in Fenais da Luz). In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo, there was a new case in Ponta Garça.

There has been a total of 21 recoveries.

1st June. 

19 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all on the island of São Miguel, following 2,312 tests carried out in the reference laboratories of the Region and two in independent laboratories. One case concerns a traveller, non-resident, who tested positive upon arrival. All the other cases refer to the community transmission.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registers 10 cases (four in Rabo de Peixe, two in Ribeirinha, two in Matriz, one in Maia and one in Lomba da Maia). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada, there are six new cases (three in São Vincente Ferreira, one in Santo António, one in Fenais da Luz and one in Covoada). In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case in Ponta Garça and in the municipality of Nordeste, there was also a new case in Vila do Nordeste.

There have been a total of 31 recoveries.

As of today, there are 13 patients hospitalised, all in the Divino Espírito Santo Hospital in Ponta Delgada, with three of them in intensive care.

The archipelago currently has 277 active positive cases, all on the island of São Miguel.

There are no active local transmission chains and 203 have been extinguished so far. There are 1,396 people under active surveillance.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, 5,578 positive cases of Covid-19 have been diagnosed in the Azores and 5,138 people recovered from the disease.

There were 33 deaths, 79 people who left the archipelago and 51 cases with history of previous cure. Up to now, 506,949 tests have been carried out in the archipelago for SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes Covid-19 disease.

From December 31st, 2020 until May 28th, 126,130 doses of Covid-19 vaccine were administered in the Azores, corresponding to 79,832 people aged 16 years or more who received the first dose, and 46,298 people who received both doses, under the Regional Vaccination Plan.

 

Portugal Situation Report Wednesday 2nd June 2021

 

Introduction

Good morning – As you have hopefully noticed, we have been placing some emphasis over the last few days on public safety, especially as regards to the prevention of rural fires. This becomes increasingly important as we head into the summer months, when the risk of such fires increases. To increase awareness on this topic and particularly “risk awareness”, the Algarve Resident in its edition tomorrow will contain a one page feature, which I have written on rural fire prevention. Please take time to read this and by doing so help keep yourself and others safe.

When is a bubble not a bubble? That is the question seemingly contained in the President of the Republic’s statement on Monday where he commented on the lack of adequate arrangements concerning the Champions League final in Porto on Saturday. Clearly the arrangements where not as originally announced and as a result there were large numbers of people gathering in public areas with no social distancing and no wearing of facemasks. It seems that there is little understanding of the behaviour of football supporters when it comes to crowd management, particularly during periods of celebrations.

Talking about crowds we remind visitors to play by the rules here in Portugal, when it comes to social distancing and wearing of masks in outdoor crowded places, as well as complying with the ban on the drinking of alcohol in public areas. Visitors to Portugal are of course welcome, but please realise that everything is not yet back to normal as far as social activities are concerned.

We have seen the images of the events following the match in Porto, as well as reports in some areas that a minority of visitors are not following the laws here, and therefore respecting all that people here have worked so hard to achieve over the last year.

For those planning to travel to Portugal please realise that the laws here maybe different compared with your own country. Respect our laws please.

The emphasis in tackling Covid-19, like rural fires, should be on awareness and prevention and enforcement only as the last resort. The police here are fully stretched dealing with their normal day to day duties and can ill afford to spend time have to deal with those who cannot be bothered to follow the rules in place. We at Safe Communities are, I believe from the considerable feedback we receive from you, doing our part in helping to keep people informed. For example our two posts on WELCOME to Portugal poster reached almost 70,000 people and several hundred shares and our two posts on beach rules over 61,000. Please therefore share these posts widely so as many people as possible are informed.

Yesterday the Head of the Vaccination Task Force stated that there are more than 60,000 people over the age of 50 waiting for confirmation of self-scheduling for vaccination against Covid-19. The number of registrations was so high that the services will need three days to book all orders.

We suggest therefore in light of this, that after these 3 days those who have still not received a confirmation should call the SNS number 808 24 24 24, even if you have done so previously.

Remember dial 9 for English, Listen for option 5 (or enter 5 immediately) If you speak Portuguese do not use option 9 await option 5 – You are given some information including “if you have not received an SMS dial 3”, then “for vaccination issues” dial 1.

Safe Communities Portugal is pleased to answer your questions where we can. We have noticed sometimes, however, that the same questions are asked several times, when the topic has already been fully explained or a link provided to where such information can be found. This places a great deal extra work on our volunteers, at a time when we have so many other priorities to deal with. We encourage people therefore to please read information and advice provided in the first instance. A reminder that we have a new, very comprehensive website and the answers to many questions can be found here. A question often takes time for us to research, and often the same research can be undertaken by the person asking the question.

The use of photographs on Facebook if used properly can help convey the sense and purpose of the information being posted. We take as much care as possible in this respect. Conversely the posting of pictures/videos which are unsourced clearly designed to stir emotions and provoke a negative response are seldom helpful as they can be misleading. Some tabloids are very experienced at this! In the interests of the integrity of our Facebook page and ensuring accuracy, any photos uploaded under comments should state when and where the photo was taken. We reserve the right to remove any that do not.

Please have a Safe day.

 

Headlines

WHO approves emergency use of Chinese vaccine Coronavac.

The World Health Organization approved, on Tuesday, the use of the Chinese vaccine CoronaVac, from the Sinovac laboratory, in the prevention of Covid-19.

The WHO committee of vaccine experts recommended this vaccine, which requires two doses every two to four weeks, for people 18 years of age or older. The CoronaVac vaccine is already applied in 22 countries and territories, according to data collected by AFP. In addition to China, it is used in Brazil, Tunisia, Chile, Indonesia, Mexico, Thailand and Turkey, among others.

This is the second Chinese immunizer approved by the WHO, and from now on it can also be used by the international Covax device for the distribution of vaccines, mainly in disadvantaged countries.

“The world is in desperate need of several anti-vaccine-19 vaccines to address the huge inequalities across the planet,” said Mariangela Simao, WHO’s Deputy Director-General in charge of access to medicines and health products.

CoronaVac’s effectiveness in preventing symptomatic Covid-19 cases is 57%, but it is 100% effective in preventing serious cases and hospitalizations in the populations studied, according to the WHO. Efficacy in people over 60 has not been studied.

 

Covid-19 Data.

On Tuesday Portugal did not record any deaths from Covid-19 in the last 24 hours, but 445 new cases of the disease were registered, according to the daily report of the Directorate-General for Health (DGS).

Confirmed Cases: 849.538 (+ 445 / + 0.05 %)

Number of admitted: 268 (-15 /-5.30 %)

Number of ICU admitted: 50 (-2 /-3.85 %)

Deaths: 17,025 (+ 0 / + 0.00 %)

Recovered: 809.813 (+ 678 / + 0.08 %)

Active cases: 22,700 (- 233 /- 0.97%)

Safe Communities comparisons/trends show that there are three days with zero deaths out of the last 4; new daily cases were slightly above Monday’s figures but below last week’s daily average (491); recoveries were greater than new cases reversing the trend and of the new cases around 55% were in Lisbon and Tejo Valley, similar to yesterday.

In hospitalisations there was a decrease, reversing the previous days increase.  Covid-19 patients reduced by 6580 compared to number in hospital 1st February 2021. In ICU also a decrease, the total being one of the lowest however since September 2020 There was a welcome decrease in active cases, reversing the increasing figures over the last two days. Still over 500 additional active cases since a week ago, however.

 

Health

Private Hospitals cannot charge for personal protection equipment.

The Health Regulatory Authority (ERS) warned, this Tuesday, private hospitals cannot charge for personal protective equipment to users of the National Health Service (SNS) to whom they provide care.

In a statement, the ERS stresses that the private, cooperative and social sectors with conventions with the NHS can only charge moderating fees for the provision of health services to users of the public system.

The charging of amounts for personal protective equipment used because of the Covid-19 pandemic or “any other amount for services provided to users of the NHS” is “a violation of the rules on access to health care, foreseen and punished” by the law, stresses the ERS.

The health regulatory body reinforces that forcing users of the NHS to pay for equipment is “a violation of their right of access to the provision of care” and “a breach of contract” of the convention agreements.

ERS claims to have “knowledge of various user complaints” from the public system who have been charged for equipment and stresses that private individuals can only charge, “and when applicable, the amount due as a moderating fee” for the activities covered by the convention.

 

Vaccinations

Covid-19: About 63 thousand young people between 16 and 24 years old have already been vaccinated in Portugal.

Lisbon, 01 Jun 2021 (Lusa) – About 63,000 young people aged between 16 and 24 have already been vaccinated against Covid-19 in Portugal, where 19% of the population is already immunized with the two doses, reveal data from DGS released today.

According to data from the DGS weekly vaccination report, 1,099 young people between 16 and 17 years of age were vaccinated with the first dose and 323 had the complete vaccination.

“The class of people under the age of 18 includes young people between 16 and 17 years old who have an indication of vaccination according to DGS Standard 2/2021 and who have been given the Comirnaty vaccine (Pfizer-BioNTech)”, says the DGS.

The data also indicates that 38,276 young people between 18 and 24 years of age are already vaccinated with the first dose and 23,158 (3%) with the two doses of the Covid-19 vaccine.

According to DGS, vaccination by decreasing age groups, up to 16 years old, and of people aged 16 or over, applies to those who have diseases with an increased risk of severe Covid-19 or death, such as diabetes, severe obesity, active cancer disease, transplantation and immunosuppression, severe neurological diseases and mental illness.

According to the weekly vaccination report released by the DGS, 3,757,395 people are already vaccinated with the first dose, which corresponds to 37% of the population, and 1,979,425 have the complete vaccination (19%).

 

Tele-consultations skyrocketed with the pandemic and April saw over 138,000.

Lisbon, 01 Jun 2021 (Lusa) – The Minister of Health, Marta Temido, today highlighted the increase in tele-consultations in the National Health Service since the beginning of the pandemic, which went from 15,000 in April last year to more than 138,000 in the same month this year.

“This shows how much this tragic opportunity of the pandemic has done for the development of tele-health”, said Marta Temido, at the opening ceremony of the eHealth Summit, an event on innovation and digital transformation in health organized by the Ministry of Health under the Portuguese Presidency of the Council of the European Union (EU).

Marta Temido also stressed that, with the demands imposed by the pandemic, the National Health Service managed to modernize itself, “guaranteeing a panoply of responses that go beyond therapeutic counselling”.

She highlighted the need to take full advantage of the advances achieved in digital health, pointing to tele-monitoring and the work developed with the “Trace Covid” platform, which has allowed the registration and management and clinical surveillance of citizens suspected of Covid-19 by public health teams and family doctors.

“The pandemic was not only predictable, but it was predicted,” said Marta Temido, for whom “shock waves” cannot be converted into “demagogy and populism”.

“So that we can leave with lessons learned and with social and economic development models that are more robust, resilient and cohesive and so that we can not only be better prepared technologically and scientifically for new emergencies, but socially more cohesive to face them,” she said.

 

Recovered people can now schedule a vaccine.

Those who recovered from Covid-19 more than six months ago and are over 50 years old can now schedule a date to be vaccinated. The limitation that existed on the Covid-19 Portal has now been lifted, said Gouveia e Melo, who admitted that it may not be necessary to vaccinate children.

Vice Admiral Gouveia e Melo, responsible for the vaccination task force, assured that health centres are calling people who fell ill with Covid-19 (with a positive test for more than six months) and, in the meantime, recovered. Anyone who wants to, and is over 50, can now go to Covid-19 Portal to sign up.

 

Covid-19: Minister says consultations and surgeries are already close to 2019 levels.

Coimbra, 31 May 2021 (Lusa) – The Minister of Health stressed today that there was an increase of 450,000 consultations and 40,000 surgeries, at the hospital level, in the first four months of the year, numbers already close to the levels of 2019, pre-pandemic.

“At this time of less pressure on health care, recovery is already noticeable. In the first four months of this year, at the hospital level, there was an increase of 450,000 consultations and 40,000 surgeries, compared to the same period”, said Marta Temido, who was speaking during the opening session of the National Congress of the Order of Doctors, which takes place in Coimbra.

The minister stressed that this increase means that the levels are already “very close” to those of 2019, before the Covid-19 pandemic.

Also in primary health care, there is an increase compared to 2020, with 12.1 million non-urgent medical consultations, he said.

“We need and count on everyone to continue this path”, stressed Marta Temido.

The Minister of Health also stressed the need to recover the assistance activity, recalling that financial incentive mechanisms were approved for carrying out the postponed assistance activity.

These incentives, at the hospital level, “have already made it possible to recover more than 82,000 first consultations and 30 thousand surgeries”, he pointed out.

According to the official, this inventive regime was extended to primary health care, which may start its activity under this regime in June.

 

Travel

Refunds for cancelled flights are taking an average of 20 days.

The President of the National Civil Aviation Authority (ANAC) rejected this Tuesday that there are “significant delays” in refunds to passengers with flights cancelled due to the pandemic, adding that “they are taking, on average, around 20 days”.

“What we are aware of is that requests for refunds of passengers in cash are taking, on average, around 20 days and that there will be no significant delays in this matter,” said Luís Miguel Ribeiro during a hearing at the Economy Committee, Innovation, Public Works and Housing, in parliament.

According to the President of ANAC, “people started to know and exercise their rights in due time and, therefore, this issue, more or less, was emptied”.

“This matter, as far as we are aware, is being adequately dealt with by the airlines and we have no echoes of large accumulations of debt in this regard,” he reiterated.

Asked by the deputies about the approximately 500 million euros in ticket refunds that TAP will have accumulated between March 2020 and March this year, according to data advanced by Saturday, Luís Miguel Ribeiro said he did not know this amount, but he warned that it was ” probably from a ‘cake’ that includes passengers’ credits that have been turned into vouchers “and that” may or may not be reimbursed or converted into an effective journey “.

“There is a block of passenger rights that keep their claims on the company, but they have the right to travel next, if they want, or to demand reimbursement. This is a set with an expressive value and what we are waiting for. Is that now, with the relaxation of restrictions, many of these so-called ‘vouchers’ are used and that credit is transformed into a trip “, he said.

As he pointed out, in these cases there may be no question of an effective cash refund that will have to be made to passengers.

“If people took advantage of the opportunities presented by the various carriers to, under favourable conditions, transform their credit into the right to travel at a lower price in the future, this, in fact, appears in the companies’ accounts as a right to a refund, but that will be transformed into a service provision “, he said.

“So” – he added – “some caution is needed when interpreting these values, which may not turn into a ‘cash outflow’ for carriers”.

 

Other news

President of the Republic believes that no European country will follow the path of ‘Brexit’.

The President of the Republic said today that no European country will want to leave the European Union after ‘Brexit’, saying that “unity means strength” and that, despite differences, European partners usually agree at the “last minute”.

“I think that any country that observes (…) what happened in the United Kingdom, will say ‘it is better not to experiment, no, we will stay inside’. The EU is very diverse, we are different, but we play together, we discuss, we debate and, at the last minute, we agree. Because we know that unity means strength, and that makes a difference,” said Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa.

The President of the Republic was speaking at a local high school in the city of Kranj, about 30 kilometres from the Slovenian capital, where he gave a class with his Slovenian counterpart, Borut Pahor, on the topic “How do children and young people see and how do they want it? Europe’s future, in terms of values ​​and practical priorities”.

Questioned by a student, if he foresees any further departure from a member state of the European Union, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa who “does not believe”, even “analytically”, that another “problematic scenario” may arise, stating that “there is nothing to see What happened”.

Thus explaining to Slovenian students the “special relationship” that links Portugal to the United Kingdom, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa said that many of his British friends consider that the withdrawal from the European Union, as “often happens in referendums”, arose due to a “Negative coalition”.

The President of the Republic also recalled that, in the days following the referendum, he was invited by the former British Prime Minister, Theresa May, to Downing Street, the seat of the British Government in London, where he realized that the British partners did not know “what to do next”.

“And there was [Theresa May], trying to explain that they were not prepared for that, that they had to think about that later, because they had to convert a negative coalition into a positive position, which is very difficult”, pointed out Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa .

Thus referring that “nobody expected” that “Brexit” would be “possible”, the President of the Republic told the students that Europeans are used to considering “normal” to live in “democracy, to have freedom of the press, and political parties”.

 

Regions

Madeira Situation Report 2nd June 2021

By Daniel Fernandes

Covid-19 update

There were 37 new Covid-19 cases, 73 recoveries and no deaths from Covid-19 in Madeira since the previous Madeira Situation Report.

On Saturday, there were 12 new Covid-19 cases (from 1 passenger who had arrived from France and 11 cases of local transmission) and 25 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital remained 8, 2 of whom were intensive care.

On Sunday, there were 15 new Covid-19 cases (from 1 passenger who had arrived from the Czech Republic and 14 cases of local transmission) and 16 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital increased to 9, 2 of whom were in intensive care.

On Monday, there was 1 new Covid-19 case of local transmission and 16 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital decreased to 7, 2 of whom were in intensive care.

And on Tuesday, there were 9 new Covid-19 cases (from 1 passenger who had arrived from South Africa, 3 passengers who had arrived from Northern Portugal and 5 cases of local transmission) and 16 recoveries. The number of patients in hospital remained 7, 1 of whom was in intensive care.

There were 171 active cases on Tuesday, of which 11 had been imported while the other 160 cases had been a result of local transmission. As of Tuesday, there had been 9,470 cases, 9,227 recoveries and 72 deaths.

On Tuesday, there were 13 patients in isolation in a dedicated hotel, 151 patients in isolation in their own accommodation and 7 patients in hospital, 1 of whom in intensive care.

On the same day, there were 50 suspected cases under epidemiological investigation and analysis, which were all linked to patients who tested positive for Covid-19, to calls made to the SRS24 helpline, to referrals by SESARAM (Madeira Regional Health Service) and to airport screening.

There were 19,389 travellers under monitoring by the health authorities. Monitoring is being carried out through the ‘MadeiraSafe’ app. There were also 569 people, who had contact with positive cases, being monitored by the health authorities of several Madeira municipalities and of Porto Santo.

As for Covid-19 testing on passengers who had arrived at Funchal and Porto Santo airports, 216,446 samples had been collected until Tuesday (at 15h30). By Tuesday, 445,131 samples from RT-PCR tests had been processed and 58,461 antigen rapid tests had been carried out in the Autonomous Region of Madeira.

The SRS 24 helpline (Regional Health Service – 800 24 24 20) received 503 calls from Friday to Tuesday. Overall, it has received 51,194 calls.

The Covid-19 mental health helpline (Linha de Acompanhamento Psicológico da Direção Regional de Saúde – 291 212 399 – available every day from 09h00 to 21h00), which was set up to provide emotional and mental support to anyone in Madeira received 15 calls from Friday to Tuesday. Overall, it has received 3,592 calls.

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/29/12-novos-casos-de-Covid-19-25-recuperados-96-suspeitos/

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/30/15-novos-casos-de-Covid-19-16-recuperados-43-suspeitos/

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/31/hoje-surgiu-apenas-um-novo-caso-de-Covid-19/

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/06/01/9-novos-casos-de-Covid-19-16-recuperados-50-suspeitos/

 

Covid-19 vaccination update.

As of May 30th, 144,578 Covid-19 vaccine doses (93,879 1st doses & 50,699 2nd doses) had been administered in the Autonomous Region of Madeira since the start of the vaccination campaign on December 31st. This means 37% of the Region’s population has been administered the 1st vaccine dose while 20% have been fully vaccinated.

A total of 12,406 vaccine doses (3,436 1st doses & 8,970 2nd doses) were administered in the previous week. The plan for this week is to continue inoculations of both 1st and 2nd doses throughout the Region.

Pedro Ramos, Madeira’s Health and Civil Protection Secretary, said the Region is expected to have administered 150,000 vaccine doses in the next few days, of which 100,000 will be 1st doses.

He announced that pregnant women who are at a certain stage of their pregnancies are already being inoculated as long as they have medical approval.

He also revealed that among the 50,000 fully vaccinated people in the Region, 315 were infected with Covid-19. Nevertheless, he assured that they remained asymptomatic and had not required hospitalisation. He said these figures highlighted the efficiency of vaccination and were a reminder that vaccination does not provide full immunity against Covid-19.

The Madeira Regional Government would like vaccination of youngsters aged 12-15 to be complete before the start of the next school year. They will be administered the Pfizer vaccine as soon as the Directorate-General of Health (Direção-Geral da Saúde) gives approval to vaccination of this age group.

A shipment of 35,100 Pfizer Covid-19 vaccines arrived in Funchal on Monday morning. And 5,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine had been due to arrive in the Region on Tuesday. Administration of the single-dose vaccines will start today on about 1,500 hospital patients who had been selected by SESARAM (Madeira Health Service).

https://www.jm-madeira.pt/regiao/ver/130504/Administradas_mais_de_144_mil_vacinas_contra_a_COVID-19_na_RAM

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/31/madeira-com-mais-35-100-vacinas/

https://www.jm-madeira.pt/regiao/ver/130483/Vacinas_da_Johnson_and_Johnson_chegam_hoje_a_Regiao_

https://observador.pt/2021/05/30/Covid-19-governo-da-madeira-pretende-vacinar-jovens-antes-de-inicio-ano-letivo/

https://www.jm-madeira.pt/regiao/ver/130271/Madeira_ja_tem_50000_pessoas_com_vacinacao_completa

 

CR7 Museum reopened.

CR7 Museum reopened on Monday after being closed for a year. Visitors to this popular museum can learn about Cristiano Ronaldo’s career, the most important moments during his career, the best goals he scored and look at a number of trophies he has won throughout his career.

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/05/31/museu-cr7-reabre-depois-de-quase-um-ano-encerrado/

 

Increase in the number of Binter flights to the Canary Islands.

The reopening of the Funchal-Tenerife route in July means that Binter will increase the number of flights between Funchal and the Canary Islands. The airline already has flights between Funchal and Gran Canaria on Thursdays and on Sundays.

From July 10th, Binter will have flights between Funchal and Tenerife on Tuesdays and on Saturdays. On Tuesdays, the flight from Tenerife North – Ciudad de La Laguna Airport will depart at 15h40 and land in Funchal at 17h00. The flight from Funchal will depart at 13h30 and land in Tenerife at 14h50. On Saturdays, the flight from Tenerife will depart at 14h40 and land in Funchal at 16h00. The flight from Funchal will depart at 12h30 and land in Tenerife at 13h50.

Bookings can be made on Binter’s website (www.binter.pt), by phone (291 290 129) or through a travel agency.

https://funchalnoticias.net/2021/06/01/binter-vai-aumentar-ligacoes-entre-a-madeira-e-as-canarias/

 

Algarve Situation Report Wednesday 2nd June 2021

COVID-19: Unilabs and HPA Saúde Group inaugurate laboratory in Faro.

Unilabs Portugal and the HPA Saúde Group, with the collaboration of the Faro City Council, inaugurated, on Monday, May 31, a new Molecular Biology Laboratory.

The new structure, integrated in the «Summer Safe Algarve» operation, will allow to expand the response capacity in quantity and response time to Covid-19 tests, especially at the level of the standard PCR tests.

The Molecular Biology Laboratory will have the capacity to carry out more than 15,000 tests per day and represents an investment of 1.5 million euros, with the creation of 100 jobs in the laboratory and in the testing network to be set up on the ground, throughout the Algarve region.

With the increase in tourism expected for the summer months in the Algarve, and the mandatory testing to enter Portugal and return to the countries of origin, Unilabs, in partnership with the HPA Saúde Group, will thus strengthen the capacity testing facilities in the region, allowing for a quicker response, without the need to transport samples outside the district.

The screening centre is located at Rua Engenheiro Nuno Abecassis, in Faro, parallel to the Decathlon chain store in Faro.

Hand in hand with the installation of this centre, a network of specific locations and routes programmed in hotel units will be created, in order to expand the ease and convenience in accessing these health services.

 

Covid-19: Rolling Loud Portugal Festival that would take place in Portimão is postponed again to 2022.

The North American festival Rolling Loud, which was due to open in July in Europe with an event in Portimão, has been postponed to 2022 because of the pandemic situation, the organization announced today.

“While we see that the world is opening up again and we are encouraged by many positive indicators about European travel, stays and events, we feel that the rescheduling of the festival is the best in the name of the safety of all our fans traveling to Portugal, to the festival “, reads a statement shared on social networks.

The first edition of Rolling Loud Portugal should have already taken place in Portimão in the summer of 2020, next to Praia da Rocha, but it was postponed to July this year, but it is now rescheduled, due to the pandemic, for the days from 06 to 08 July 2022.

The festival, made mainly of hip hop, had on the poster names like Travis Scott, A $ AP Rocky, Future, Wiz Khalifa, A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Chief Keef, City Girls, Dababy, Gucci Mane, Gunna and Meek Mill.

The organization does not give names for 2022, saying only that it is working “in the biggest hip hop line-up that Europe has ever seen”.

According to the organization, the tickets already purchased are valid for 2022, but a refund will also be possible.

Calling itself the largest hip-hop festival in the world, Rolling Loud only admits those over 18 years of age.

 

One dead and one injured in a vehicle crash into a ravine in Silves.

The falling of an off-road vehicle into a ravine in the area of ​​São Bom Homem, in the municipality of Silves, today caused a death and a person slightly injured a source from Civil Protection told Lusa.

According to the District Relief Operations Centre (CDOS) in Faro, the accident that occurred in the middle of the afternoon on Monday resulted in the death of a 62-year-old man and injuries to a 57-year-old woman, both of German nationality.

“The causes of the accident are being investigated” said the source.

In the rescue operations of the victims, 25 members of the firefighters from Silves, from the National Institute for Medical Emergency (INEM) and from the National Republican Guard, from the Municipal Civil Protection of Silves, were involved, supported by an INEM helicopter.

 

Azores

Azores Situation Report Wednesday 2nd June 2021

From our colleague in the Azores 

 

Azores Fare.

Passengers, resident in the Azores can travel back and forth between the islands of the archipelago, starting today, for the maximum price of 60 euros.

Reservations related to the so-called ‘Azores Fare’ can be made through the sales channels of SATA Air Azores, which makes inter-island trips, and travel agencies.

Passengers who have already purchased a ticket with the normal resident fare for inter-island travel starting today (and who have not yet started their travels), may request a refund of the differential for the Azores Fare.

 

Azores Bathing Season 

The bathing season started yesterday, Tuesday 1st June in the Azores. There are 32 zones, and a manual on the use of these spaces is being finalized in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, which does not provide for fines, but warns users of their responsibility.

82 bathing waters are available for the public to use this year, six of which are for the first time.

 

Covid-19 

29th May. 

18 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all in São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, resulting from 2,197 tests carried out in reference laboratories in the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 10 cases (five in Rabo de Peixe, two in Ribeirinha, two in Lomba de São Pedro and one in Pico da Pedra). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada there were three new cases (one in Capelas, one in Santa Clara and one in Fenais da Luz), in the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case in São Miguel and in the municipality of Lagoa there are four new cases, in Cabouco.

Tthere were a total of 19 recoveries. With the recovery of the only positive case on the island of São Jorge, it has no positive cases.

30th May. 

32 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all in São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, resulting from 2,340 tests carried out in reference laboratories in the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 20 cases (14 in Rabo de Peixe, two in Ribeirinha, two in Matriz, one in Conceição and one in Porto Formoso). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada there were 11 new cases: three in Arrifes, three in Fenais da Luz, two in Capelas, two in São José and one in Fajã de Baixo. In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case, in São Pedro.

There was a total of 21 recoveries

31st May. 

23 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores in, all on the island of São Miguel, in the context of community transmission, following 945 tests carried out in the reference laboratories of the Region.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registered 11 cases (three in Rabo de Peixe, six in Ribeirinha, one in Matriz and one in Porto Formoso). There were 11 new cases in the municipality of Ponta Delgada (two in Arrifes, two in Capelas, two in Relva, one in São Sebastião, one in São Pedro, one in Santa Clara, one in Fajã de Baixo and one in Fenais da Luz). In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo, there was a new case in Ponta Garça.

There has been a total of 21 recoveries.

1st June. 

19 new positive cases of Covid-19 were diagnosed in the Azores, all on the island of São Miguel, following 2,312 tests carried out in the reference laboratories of the Region and two in independent laboratories. One case concerns a traveller, non-resident, who tested positive upon arrival. All the other cases refer to the community transmission.

The municipality of Ribeira Grande registers 10 cases (four in Rabo de Peixe, two in Ribeirinha, two in Matriz, one in Maia and one in Lomba da Maia). In the municipality of Ponta Delgada, there are six new cases (three in São Vincente Ferreira, one in Santo António, one in Fenais da Luz and one in Covoada). In the municipality of Vila Franca do Campo there was a new case in Ponta Garça and in the municipality of Nordeste, there was also a new case in Vila do Nordeste.

There have been a total of 31 recoveries.

As of today, there are 13 patients hospitalised, all in the Divino Espírito Santo Hospital in Ponta Delgada, with three of them in intensive care.

The archipelago currently has 277 active positive cases, all on the island of São Miguel.

There are no active local transmission chains and 203 have been extinguished so far. There are 1,396 people under active surveillance.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, 5,578 positive cases of Covid-19 have been diagnosed in the Azores and 5,138 people recovered from the disease.

There were 33 deaths, 79 people who left the archipelago and 51 cases with history of previous cure. Up to now, 506,949 tests have been carried out in the archipelago for SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes Covid-19 disease.

From December 31st, 2020 until May 28th, 126,130 doses of Covid-19 vaccine were administered in the Azores, corresponding to 79,832 people aged 16 years or more who received the first dose, and 46,298 people who received both doses, under the Regional Vaccination Plan.

 

Overseas Situation Report Monday 31st May 2021

 

By Mike Evans

As we start another week of the State of Calamity in Portugal, this report is looking at what other countries around the world have done or are doing to combat the pandemic. Some may surprise you and some may make you smile but whatever the outcome it has certainly been a strange year.

We start first in Europe and highlight France. France has been one of the hardest hit of all European countries, with over 5.6 million reported cases and just under 110,000 deaths. Whilst the country has seen a 30% drop in cases over the past week, they are still in a lockdown scenario. Nowhere more so than Paris, where residents can go outside for exercise but only within 10 km (6 miles) of their homes. People are not allowed to travel to other parts of the country without proof of a valid reason, such as a death in the family, or business that cannot be done remotely.

Cafes, restaurants, museums, theatres and ski resorts have been closed across France since October 30, with no date set for reopening. A nationwide curfew has kept people home from 6 pm until 6 am every night since mid-January. Masks are required on public transportation, and on top of that, France’s National Academy of Medicine has urged people to keep quiet! – no talking, no phone calls – to reduce the spread of germs on public transport and whenever social distancing is not possible. Officials specified that this is “not an obligation” but a “recommendation.”

During France’s first lockdown in March 2020, the rules were even more stringent. People had to download and fill out a form each time they needed to leave the house. Police would check the forms to make sure the person had a legitimate reason to be outside and issued fines up to $150 (approximately 220 Euros) for violations. At that time, people could only exercise within a 2 km radius (about 1.2 miles) of their homes and recreational cycling was banned.

In Abu Dhabi, where they have seen a steady rise in cases since the start of 2021, they hoped that the curve would even out. However, in the past month the number of cases has risen amid fears of a third wave of infections. Since September 2020, most passengers arriving in Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates, have been required to wear a tracking wristband during the mandatory 10-day home quarantine. All travellers also have to undergo thermal screening and Covid-19 testing at the airport. “Self-isolation must take place at home and people are required to wear a medically approved wristband for the duration. The wristband is provided by the authorities at Abu Dhabi Airport after travellers clear immigration,” Etihad Airways announced this in the guidelines posted on its website.

Those under the age of 18, over 60, suffering from a chronic disease or holding a diplomatic passport are exempt from having to wear the wristband.

Meanwhile in Singapore; At the start of the pandemic, Singapore started requiring people to carry a special digital device or use an app to help authorities track any contacts with coronavirus cases. It is mandatory for entering shopping malls and public places.

Authorities initially said the contact tracing system’s data was encrypted, stored locally, and only used if individuals tested positive for Covid-19. But last month, officials said the data had been used in a criminal investigation, raising questions over privacy and surveillance.

Additionally, travellers entering Singapore from most countries are required to serve a 14-day quarantine at a government-designated facility – at the traveller’s expense.

The quarantine is strictly monitored by the government and the facilities are randomly assigned. One woman said she spent her entire quarantine in a 5-star hotel, while others recounted their experience holed up in rooms without windows and filled with cockroaches.

Last month, a Singapore Court sentenced a British man to two weeks in jail after he sneaked out of his hotel room to meet his then fiancée during quarantine. He was also fined $752.56 (approximately 620 Euros) for leaving his room three times, according to Reuters.

Similar quarantine requirements are also in place for most visitors traveling to Kuwait, Hong Kong and Australia.

In Mexico, a number of states took steps to ban the sale and marketing of junk food and sugary drinks to minors in September, out of concern that health conditions such as diabetes and obesity were putting people at higher risk from the coronavirus. The law applies to stores and school vending machines.

Many grocery stores, especially those in Mexico City, have instituted rules allowing only one family member at a time into their stores to reduce crowding and potential exposure to the virus. Almost 224,000 people have now died as a result of the pandemic and the country has recorded over 2.4 million cases.

South Africa was home to one of the world’s most stringent lockdowns. At the start of the pandemic, South Africa introduced a total ban on alcohol sales, which lasted until June 1 2020. The ban was brought back in July but reversed a second time a month later. A third ban was put in place in December, which has now been lifted.

“Reckless behaviour due to alcohol intoxication has contributed to increased transmission. Alcohol-related accidents and violence are putting pressure on our hospital emergency units,” President, Cyril Ramaphosa, said in a nationwide address in July 2020.

South Africa also imposed an unprecedented ban on cigarette sales, to help prevent respiratory problems associated with Covid-19. The ban lasted for over three months.

In March 2020, South Africa sealed its borders, barring international visitors from coming into the country and leaving many South Africans stranded abroad. The travel ban was lifted in October, but following a “massive increase” in Covid-19 cases driven by a highly contagious variant discovered there last year, Ramaphosa announced in January that 20 land borders would close until February 15.

As with many of the actions taken when the virus was in full flow, many have now been able to relax the conditions for its citizens.

We can only hope that with newfound freedoms, the population doesn’t take it to mean everything is how it was and we see the virus take hold again.

Until the next time, Stay Safe.

Total Cases Worldwide – 171,040,562

Total Deaths Worldwide – 3,556,957

Total Recovered Worldwide – 153,154,740

Total Active Cases Worldwide – 14,328,865 (9.1% of the total cases)

Total Closed Cases Worldwide – 156,711,697

Information and resources:

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/covid-pandemic-mitigation-restrictions-world/

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/weekly-trends/#countries