East, Central Java urged to increase COVID-19 testing

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The COVID-19 Handling Task Force has urged East Java and Central Java provinces whose COVID-19 testing ratio is still below the national figure to boost testing efforts.

“East Java and Central Java are included in the group whose testing ratio is still below the national figure,” spokesperson for the task force, Wiku Adisasmito, said during a press conference that was accessed online from here on Thursday.

The testing ratio in East Java is 5 tests for every thousand people (5:1,000), while in Central Java, the number is still very low at two tests per thousand people, he informed.

Meanwhile, the national testing ratio is currently at 7 tests per thousand people, which is above the WHO standard of one test per thousand people, he said.

According to Adisasmito, the testing ratio of at least 22 provinces is below the national testing ratio. Therefore, the regional governments in the 22 provinces, especially East Java and Central Java, have been asked to scale up testing, he said.

“Do not let the reported data be smaller than the actual condition of cases and cause the determination of policies that are not in accordance with the real situation,” he stressed.

In the midst of the pandemic, testing is the single benchmark for determining the diagnosis of a disease, he said.

Testing can also help ensure safe public mobility because only by testing people can those who have contracted the virus be identified, he added.

He emphasized the need to strictly supervise the COVID-19 status of travelers using long-distance transportation, such as planes and ships, land transportation modes, and use PeduliLindungi application for screening travelers for short-distance activity and mobility.

The first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Indonesia in March 2020. According to data provided by the COVID-19 Handling Task Force, as of February 10, 2022, Indonesia has recorded 4,667,554 COVID-19 cases, 4,234,510 recoveries, and 144,858 deaths.

Source: Antara News

COVID patients can get free telemedicine services using test results

Jakarta (ANTARA) – COVID-19 patients undergoing self-isolation can use the result of their antigen rapid test to access free telemedicine services, director-general of health services at the Ministry of Health, Abdul Kadir, has informed.

“If (a patient tests) positive or reactive based on antigen (test), as long as it is reported through the Ministry of Health’s big data NAR (New All Record) system, the patient can access telemedicine services,” Kadir said at a virtual press conference, accessed from here on Thursday.

He then advised people to get tested at health facilities that are connected with the Ministry of Health’s NAR system.

According to Kadir, as long as the test result is reported to the NAR system, it can be verified. The patient will be notified via phone regarding the free access to telemedicine services, including medicines, he said.

Nonetheless, people who test positive for COVID-19 based on a rapid antigen test must undergo a rapid PCR test for more accurate results, he suggested.

“If the antigen (test) result is positive, we suggest taking a PCR test due to its gold standard (more accurate result),” he explained.

Even though COVID-19 cases in Java and Bali are spiking, the symptoms caused by the Omicron variant of COVID-19 are not as severe as the Delta variant, Kadir said.

However, he reminded people to remain alert because the Omicron variant can be dangerous for older adults, children, people with comorbidities, and unvaccinated people.

The first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Indonesia in March 2020. According to data provided by the COVID-19 Handling Task Force, as of February 10, 2022, Indonesia has recorded 4,667,554 COVID-19 cases, 4,234,510 recoveries, and 144,858 deaths.

The Ministry of Health detected the first Omicron infection in Indonesia on December 15, 2021. With the spread of the new variant, Indonesia has recorded a significant increase in COVID-19 cases.

Source: Antara News

Task force lauds press for disseminating COVID-19 information

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The COVID-19 Handling Task Force has lauded the press for consistently disseminating the latest information on the handling of COVID-19 to the public.

The press has been consistent in disseminating up-to-date and measured information, as well as raising public enthusiasm and optimism in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, spokesperson for the COVID-19 Handling Task Force, Wiku Adisasmito, said during a press conference that was accessed online from here on Thursday.

“Not a few of our friends from the media were also infected (by COVID-19) and even died while on duty. Thank you for your service,” he said referring to the commemoration of the National Press Day.

The press in Indonesia celebrates National Press Day every February 9. The eve of the day’s commemoration was held in Kendari, Southeast Sulawesi, on Tuesday.

The spread of hoaxes, misinformation, and disinformation still presents a challenge for the media in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has been going on for around two years, Adisasmito noted.

“The media can contribute more by taking quick action to deal with false news that has already spread among the community,” the spokesperson said.

He also asked the public to support healthy information circulation by not easily spreading information if they are unsure of its content or source.

“Let us strengthen collaboration in delivering information according to scientific and journalistic principles and ethics for the sake of equitable information dissemination to all parts of society,” he remarked.

The first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Indonesia in March 2020. According to the task force data, as of February 10, 2022, Indonesia has recorded a total of 4,667,554 COVID-19 cases, 4,234,510 recoveries, and 144,858 deaths.

Source: Antara News

Oxygen availability still sufficient amid COVID spike: task force

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The COVID-19 Handling Task Force has assured that oxygen availability is still sufficient amid the increasing number of COVID-19 cases in the country.

“Until now, the availability of oxygen in the form of concentrators and generators is still sufficient or can give service for more than 12 to 48 hours,” spokesperson for the COVID-19 Handling Task Force, Wiku Adisasmito, said at a press conference, which was accessed online from here on Thursday.

According to data provided by the task force, as of February 6, 2022, Jakarta has 1,541 oxygen concentrators and 2 oxygen generators, Banten has 389 oxygen concentrators and 4 oxygen generators, while West Java has 1,545 oxygen concentrators and 18 oxygen generators.

He affirmed that the availability of oxygen in other regions has been ensured as well, especially in regions with a relatively high increase in COVID-19 cases.

Adisasmito asserted that the government will continue coordinating with regional governments to carry out data collection to meet each health facility’s oxygen needs effectively.

Meanwhile, seven provinces have contributed the highest weekly COVID-19 cases—Jakarta, West Java, Banten, East Java, Bali, Central Java, and the Special Region of Yogyakarta (DIY), he said.

“Provinces in Java and Bali (islands) consistently dominate the number of national cases,” he informed.

According to the data compiled by the COVID-19 Handling Task Force on Thursday, Jakarta reported the most new cases with 11,090 people testing positive for COVID-19 in the province, followed by West Java province with 9,403 cases, Banten with 5,031 cases, East Java with 4,054 cases, and Central Java with 2,387 cases.

The first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Indonesia in March 2020. According to the task force data, as of February 10, 2022, Indonesia has recorded a total of 4,667,554 COVID-19 cases, 4,234,510 recoveries, and 144,858 deaths.

The Ministry of Health detected the first Omicron infection in Indonesia on December 15, 2021. With the spread of the new variant, Indonesia has recorded a significant increase in COVID-19 cases.

Source: Antara News

To Mask or Not to Mask?

Facing growing pressure from impatient state governors, the Biden administration acknowledged for the first time that it is developing plans to guide the country away from the pandemic’s emergency phase toward a more relaxed national response, including ending the federal recommendation for wearing masks in most indoor settings.

“We are internally discussing, of course, what it looks like to be in the phase of the fight against the COVID pandemic where it is not disrupting everyone’s daily lives,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Wednesday. “We recognize people are tired of the pandemic. They’re tired of wearing masks.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) currently recommends “universal indoor masking,” including in businesses and schools, “regardless of vaccination status and regardless of what states require.”

While some states follow the CDC guidance, pandemic health protocols have always varied by state with different requirements for masks, vaccines and testing.

Now more states are relaxing coronavirus health protocols, including New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Rhode Island and Washington. The rule changes, implemented by both Republican and Democratic governors, include lifting indoor mask requirements in certain settings, such as schools and businesses, as well as rescinding vaccine mandates.

Psaki insisted that while administration officials understand the need to be flexible, they are following the advice of medical experts who rely on scientific evidence.

“That doesn’t move at the speed of politics; it moves at the speed of data,” she said.

The CDC said it is working on new guidance.

“We are working on following the trends for the moment,” CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Wednesday.

Democrats joining Republicans

In the first two years of the pandemic, Democrats were more in favor of strict public health restrictions while Republicans largely rejected them.

But now, with vaccination rates higher than 70% in some states and polls showing public pandemic fatigue, Democratic governors and state officials are also relaxing measures to avoid a backlash.

“Public health is made up of two words. The health part we focus on a lot of science and the data, but we need to understand the public part as well,” Dr. Anand Parekh, chief medical adviser at the Bipartisan Policy Center, said to VOA.

Over the past week, an average of more than 227,000 new coronavirus cases has been reported each day in the United States, a decrease of 63% from the national pandemic peak of more than 806,000 cases in mid-January, according to data tracked by The New York Times. Hospitalizations are also declining significantly across the country.

“For the next few weeks, we should see a decrease in epidemic activity. All of the indicators seem to go down,” Alessandro Vespignani said to VOA. Vespignani is the director of the Network Science Institute at Northeastern University and leads a team of infectious-disease modelers who have been developing COVID-19 projections since the pandemic began.

Governors are seeing this trend, recognizing that their citizens are weary, and in the absence of CDC guidance, taking steps to relax restrictions.

“The CDC and the administration are trying to play catch-up to that reality,” Parekh said, underscoring that the federal response must focus not only on the moment but what it would look like a month from now.

“We see time and time again, federal agencies being late. We saw that with respect to omicron and testing just a couple of months ago,” he said.

Many public health experts are still advising caution.

The downward trend needs to be sustained over a period of several weeks and reduced even further before the nation can transition from pandemic to endemic response, said Dr. William Schaffner, professor of medicine in the Infectious Diseases Division at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.

“Endemic is where we kind of have a truce with the virus,” Schaffner said, and the strain on the health care system will be “substantially diminished.”

“At the moment I stand with the CDC,” Schaffner told VOA. “Let’s keep wearing our masks. Let’s allow the cases to really come down. Let’s do this for another month or two, to be absolutely sure, not only that we’re heading down but that we’ll stay down.”

Vespignani added, “We could see bumps in the road due to omicron-2, a mutated version of the omicron variant that has begun to circulate in some places.”

He said the easing of mitigations should be done in a way that makes sure we keep facilitating the quick decreasing trends in infections.

“It is more and more important to increase the number of vaccinated and boosted individuals,” he said. “This is the wall that we want to be as high as possible to protect us in case of any future wave of the pandemic.”

A recent Monmouth University poll found that 70% of Americans surveyed agree with the sentiment that “it’s time we accept that COVID is here to stay and we just need to get on with our lives.”

“Americans’ worries about COVID haven’t gone away. It seems more to be a realization that we are not going to get this virus under control in a way that we thought was possible just last year,” said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.

Just 52% supported face mask and distancing guidelines in their home state, down from a peak of 63% last September during the delta variant surge, the Monmouth poll found.

Countries changing restrictions

Some other countries are making similar moves. Spain and Italy – two European countries with high vaccination rates, declining infection numbers and lower hospitalization figures, are loosening measures this week to coexist with the coronavirus.

England, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic and several Nordic countries, including Denmark and Sweden, have also taken steps to end or relax their restrictions.

China, meanwhile, is maintaining its most stringent protocols. During the Winter Olympics, Beijing is keeping its “zero-COVID” policy of testing, mass lockdowns and strict social restrictions as authorities worry about the ability of the Chinese health care system to cope and adapt to new strains.

Besides China, India, Canada, Germany, Angola and Indonesia are some of the countries with the strictest government COVID policies, according to the Government Stringency Index put together by researchers at the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford.

Nine metrics are used to calculate this index – school closures, workplace closures, cancellation of public events, restrictions on public gatherings, closures of public transport, stay-at-home requirements, public information campaigns, restrictions on internal movements and international travel controls.

While some European leaders have said that COVID-19 should be treated as an endemic, like influenza, the World Health Organization says that’s premature.

“We are now starting to see a very worrying increase in deaths, in most regions of the world,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in remarks to media earlier this month.

“It’s premature for any country either to surrender, or to declare victory,” he said.

American public health experts said the debate in the U.S. to lift restrictions must take into account the steps being taken to prevent new variants.

“Only 10% of people in low-income countries around the world have been vaccinated,” Parekh said. “Until we can vaccinate the rest of the world, the threat of variants and the threat to the United States will still be there.”

Vanderbilt’s Schaffner said helping countries vaccinate their population is necessary not only for humanitarian reasons, but also self-interest.

“Those variants can come from abroad and be here in no time,” he said.

The U.S. remains the largest donor of vaccines. At least 414 million doses of vaccines have been shipped, about 34% of the 1.3 billion doses pledged by the administration.

Source: Voice of America

Aim to produce 240 mln Merah Putih doses per year: Biotis

Jakarta (ANTARA) – PT Biotis Pharmaceuticals Indonesia, which is producing the Merah Putih (Red-and-White) COVID-19 vaccine in collaboration with Airlangga University, is targeting to churn out 240 million vaccine doses per year.

“The production capacity is 240 million doses per year,” president director of PT Biotis Pharmaceuticals Indonesia, FX Sudirman, said at the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) office here on Thursday.

Currently, the Merah Putih vaccine is in its first phase of clinical trials with 90 participants, he said. After the results are obtained and the safety of the vaccine is determined, it will proceed to the second and third phase clinical trials, he added.

According to Sudirman, the third phase clinical trials will determine whether the vaccine can be used as a booster or only as a primary vaccine. Nevertheless, he said he was optimistic that the vaccine would be used both as a booster and primary vaccine.

“We estimate that there will be a lot of demand. Starting in August (2022), we will start releasing the product in bulk. Hopefully, we will get the emergency-use authorization (EUA) in July. Since this is a national collaboration, the timeline is being determined together,” he explained.

Meanwhile, head of the Merah Putih vaccine research team at Airlangga University, Fedik Abdul Rantam, said that the indigenous COVID-19 vaccine is suitable for all groups, from older adults to children, including those with comorbidities.

He expressed the hope that the Merah Putih vaccine would meet the vaccine needs of children aged 3–6 years.

Earlier, the Merah Putih vaccine developed by Airlangga University and PT Biotis Pharmaceuticals Indonesia received a halal certificate from the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) after going through a series of tests that were run by MUI’s Food and Drug Research Institute (LPPOM) and the National Agency of Drug and Food Control (BPOM).

Chairman of the MUI for Fatwa, Asrorun Niam, said the halal fatwa for the Merah Putih vaccine was set on February 7, 2022, during the Fatwa Commission’s plenary meeting after the receipt of results of research and testing from the ulema council’s LPPOM.

Source: Antara News

MotoGP riders’ selfies taken from quarantine bubble: task force

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The selfies posted online by several MotoGP riders in Mandalika, Lombok, were taken inside the quarantine bubble area, COVID-19 Task Force’s health handling head, Alexander Kaliaga Ginting, has informed.

“From what I know, they were in the quarantine bubble area. As long as the bubble is not ‘broken,’ they would stay in the bubble for five days,” Ginting told ANTARA over a telephonic call here on Thursday.

The locations seen in the riders’ selfies are around their hotel, which is inside the quarantine zone, Ginting said. “It seems like they were taking selfies in a beach near the hotel that conducts quarantine zone,” he added.

The quarantine bubble zone aims to prevent interactions between Mandalika MotoGP riders with locals to avoid possible COVID-19 transmission, he explained.

“It is a stick-in-together bubble. Inside, they have already been vaccinated, and have negative results of PCR test and good clinical exam,” he said.

According to Ginting, there are mobility restrictions on everyone in the travel bubble, meaning they can only stay in the specified quarantine zones, based on the COVID-19 Task Force’s Circular Letter No. 5 of 2022 on the health protocol for the Mandalika MotoGP bubble system during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The bubble system starts from the airport to the hotel, then the circuit to the hotel, (and) the (riders) are tested either with antigen rapid or PCR test every day,” he informed.

Earlier, the bubble system at the Pertamina Mandalika International Circuit drew mixed reactions from netizens.

Commenting on the pictures posted by the riders, some netizens expressed concern about the chances of interaction between the riders and locals that could lead to the spread of COVID-19.

Meanwhile, the Pertamina Grand Prix of Indonesia pre-season will be held on February 11–13, 2022.

Source: Antara News

PAL Indonesia, French Naval Group ink MoU on submarine building

Surabaya, East Java (ANTARA) – State-owned shipbuilder PT PAL Indonesia and French Naval Group signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on submarine building and research programs to fortify Indonesia’s maritime defense.

The cooperation was an important historical event for the two countries, as the French government had been serious in supporting efforts to improve Indonesia’s main defense equipment development capability, CEO of PT PAL Indonesia Kaharuddin Djenod noted on Thursday.

“And we, PT PAL Indonesia, are proud to be an important part of this historic moment,” Djenod noted in a press release.

As per Presidential Regulation No. 16 of 2017 on the Indonesian Maritime Policy, in a bid to make Indonesia a global maritime axis, it must become a maritime country that is sovereign, advanced, independent, strong, and capable of contributing positively to world security and peace.

“In this case, PAL, as a strategic maritime defense industry, supports the realization of these ideals through mastery of the maritime defense technology,” he affirmed.

The MoU was signed at the Ministry of Defense in Jakarta and witnessed by Minister of Defense Prabowo Subianto, the CEO and members of the PAL BoD, French Minister of Defense, Florence Parly, the CEO of the Naval Group, and several other stakeholders.

Prabowo affirmed that the research and development cooperation on submarines would lead to the purchase of two Scorpene submarines, with AIP technology and weapons.

As part of the transfer of technology, the Scorpene type submarine will be entirely built at PAL and will optimize the capabilities of PAL’s human resources with the assistance of the Naval Group.

The cooperation between PT PAL and the Naval Group is also part of a defense equipment modernization program being implemented by the Indonesian Ministry of Defense in an effort to strengthen the defense capabilities of the Indonesian Defense Forces (TNI) for the subsequent two decades by strengthening the defense fleet, especially the Navy (AL).

CEO of the Naval Group Pierre Eric Pommellet welcomed the Indonesian defense minister’s statement regarding cooperation in the submarine sector between PT PAL and the Naval Group.

“We have signed a memorandum of understanding for this purpose and look forward to working together on the submarine program to meet the needs of the Indonesian Navy as well as to strengthen the marine defense industry in Indonesia through PAL,” he emphasized.

Source: Antara News