The following comment inspired the blogmaster to expand the focus on data collection and discussion about the COVID 19 pandemic. Thanks to @Lyall@Amit

Blogmaster


David; re. your 4:41 am post;

You are correct but I have indeed considered that cohort of the population.

The reason that the US experts are beating the drum for testing, testing and more testing is to get a handle on what proportion of the general public has been compromised by the virus in any way and has left its signatures in body fluids including blood in the population. The virus is shed from the infected body as the disease is brought under control. When it is controlled it has been found that it takes around 7 days for all particles to be shed from the body. Infected persons are released back into the community when they test negative twice over a period of 2 days.

Barbados, like all of our island neighbours, did or does not have access to large numbers of tests and had to use what we had very sparingly. Thus, the only measure that we had for gauging the incidence of the virus in the population (and a very imperfect one, at that) might be by comparing the evidence of infection levels hinted at by a comparison of the graphs of the progress of the various Covid-19 outbreaks in our Islands.

Most of the world was in the same position as the Caribbean and used the data obtained by the minimal testing of infected people and their contacts and their contacts to produce the graphs we see on such sites as WHO and Worldometer etc. All these graphs give an imperfect picture and significant underestimation of infection levels in the county or country in which the tests are carried out, but, since they are carried out in the same way in each country they might provide some rationale for guesstimating the comparative levels of the infection in various groups of countries.

The data shows that, starting out at essentially the same levels, there was some divergence in relation to the rate of infection and therefore progress of the various outbreaks in various countries. The graphs for Barbados showed low and declining levels of infection from the beginning, peaking at the level of 13 positive cases per day and thereafter showing a slowly declining trend. The individuals who would have contributed to the declining trend would have been primarily from the contact testing but should also have included other individuals referred by Health professionals or who presented themselves to Government institutions because of concern that their symptoms might point to untimely death due to the dread Covid-19.

Amit, in an earlier post on this blog, reported on his initiative of graphing Covid-19 incidence over weekly periods throughout the epidemic, in several Caribbean Islands. If David thinks it is appropriate and Amit agrees I can post a subset of graphs clipped from his data for 6 Caribbean territories which I think could illustrate some of what I have presented above.


Covid 19

There was 1 more positive case announced today as well as 1 death. A slight uptick of the daily cases line is indicated in the graph by the blue line. The total cumulative number of positive cases from the tests carried out yesterday is 76 – Llyall Small

COVID 19

Attached is the updated C-19 graph for 2020-04-23. There were no additional positive cases from yesterday’s tests and therefore cumulative positive cases remain at 76 – Lyall Small

covid10

covid12

Two new positive cases were identified from yesterday’s tests. There are now 5 cases of contacts with a previously identified individual. The 5 cases are workers from a Government Institution. Tests are ongoing today (25 April 2020)Lyall Small

Covid11

Updated graph for 26 April 2020. No new +ve cases were found. Cumulative count is still 79 – Lyall Small

covid13

There was one additional +ve case identified today (27 April 2020) from the last tranche of NAB workers moving the cumulative total cases to 80. The graph is still essentially trending downwards – Lyallsmall

Covid-Cumulative 1
Graphing Covid-19 incidence in several Caribbean Islands – Source data: caribbeansignal.com

3,451 responses to “COVID 19 UPDATES”


  1. TheO,

    You are fighting a losing battle. These people have no intention of being rational.

    As to people being picked up at the airport, my good friend underwent the training needed to be an authorized transporter of passengers from the airport and was barred from picking up her daughter coming home from studying in the US.

    But a system will be breached at times depending on the vigilance of the personnel and the determination of those who wish to breach it.

    My friend was allowed no contact whatsoever with her daughter until she was released from quarantine. Her “big maguffy” father however, had to be sternly spoken to by the guards.

    I expected a few hiccups along the way but I never expected a super spreader event attended by prison officers and BDFers. Idiots!

    I am certain that we shall now do the necessary.

    If I were a worker at any of those hotels I would have taken pictures. Another reminder of how these business people operate. That is why I have never worked for them and neither will my son.

    Mia had better deal with them sternly.

    Time for us to get serious with these civilized Brits and their greedy enablers!

    Still, I am not afraid. It will be handled.


  2. ….One side of the B v D divide…??????

    Plse say who you are directing your comments at, since few people on BU identify publicly as B or D.


  3. The reason I asked about people transporting relatives from the Airport is because I saw a notice in the Press requesting people not to perform that activity, which leaves the impression that it may have been attempted or it may have been done. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link and the report in the Press about guests under quarantine mingling with other guests and hotel staff is problematic. Hotel management seems to believe the guest is always right perhaps it is time for other hotels to join Sandals on the list of facilities that are barred from receiving guests who are under quarantine.

    Everyone is tired of something or someone, but it does not give him/her permission to partake in an activity that is harmful to self, family or the broader community. The onus is on all of us to follow the rules that have been established in order to protect everyone as we are in the same boat.


  4. GUESS HE MUST BE PART OF THE OVERSEAS THROWASHADE CREW OR A FRAUDSTER

    Franklyn says prison officers distraught

    Opposition Senator Caswell Franklyn is accusing Government of not being fully transparent with the public regarding the state of things at Her Majesty’s Prisons Dodds, after officers there tested positive for the deadly COVID-19 virus.

    Franklyn, who is also a consultant with the Prison Officers’ Association, siad yesterday that for days some officers had been complaining of being ill. He added a number of officers were fearful of returning to work, contending that it was for this reason the Barbados Defence Force (BDF) had been called out to assist.

    He was speaking ahead of a national address last night by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, Minister of Health Jeffrey Bostic, Minister of Home Affairs Wilfred Abrahams and Chief Medical Officer Dr Kenneth George. It was revealed that 45 people tested positive, 32 of whom were prison officers and four BDF soldiers.

    Franklyn, who heads Unity Workers’ Union, said: “The prison officers realised that people were sick for some days at the prisons and one of the people who had tested positive now has a lot of people scared because he was coming to work while complaining of not feeling well. So a lot of them are quite distraught about the whole situation because a lot of them have serious underlying conditions and this makes them more prone to . . . the virus.” (AC)

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/01/02/franklyn-says-prison-officers-distraught/


  5. Unfortunately
    Human Behaviour are separate and apart from long term rules and regulations which restrict fun freedom and happiness
    Reason why jail is used as a punishment for crime
    A punishment that rubs hard against the norms of enjoying everyday life
    Govt cannot in reality confront such a reality within the general public without having a negative fall out


  6. Here’s the latest charts developed from information given on the Worldometer site. N.B. that the data shown for Barbados here does not include the info given at the Government’s press conference last night and that the new year’s day data, when corrected by GIS, should include an additional 50 or so cases derived mainly from the super spreader event and contact tracing therefrom. The situation is very alarming but the quick and urgent, wide-ranging action taken by government should bring active cases back down asap as has been the norm in the Caribbean countries being tracked. But we all have to do our part to ensure success

     

    Source: Lyall Small


  7. @Sargeant

    If the blogmaster recalls correctly there is designated transportation for those targeted to go to approved covid 19 sites to await results. Does the system work as intended the blogmaster cannot say. One suspects the message you read was a reinforcement given the heightened state we find ourselves,


  8. Sargeant,

    I was simply giving what information. I had. No problem with the question.

    My friend did finf that there was some confusion at the airport that needed to be rectified


  9. All staff of Chefette Six Roads are now in isolation and the branch is closed

    Meanwhile, Fame The Grooming Club, located in Holetown, St James, is also closed because a single staff member was on that bus crawl


  10. Total lockdown next until govt gets a handle on the problem
    Many households are being affected


  11. I noticed that a Jamaican newspaper has published a story concerning the Barbados government and Sandals.

    http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/barbados-apologises-to-sandals_211219


  12. That is news to me. Did that apology really happen?



  13. Nothing the president does should be taken on its face value. She is a politician head and tails above her contemporaries. There is always a hidden agenda.
    That is why the notion that the BDF should move in to the prisons is silly.

    Three warders employed by the Barbados Prison Service who were publicly asked to report to the Dodds Prison to be part of a mandatory testing regime are now seeking legal advice on how the matter was handled.

    During a national televised press conference on Friday, Minister of Home Affairs Wilfred Abrahams, had asked the three men to report to their boss, Superintendent of Prisons Lieutenant Colonel John Nurse, as a matter of urgency.

    Trade Unionist, Opposition Senator Caswell Franklin today claimed the men, Nigel Hall, Dave Best, and Paul Outram, were being targeted by prison authorities, but had done thing wrong.

    “There is more in the mortar than the pestle. All three are persons who have the Superintendent and the Government before the court for issues going on inside the prison. This was done to embarrass these people. These are not villains who are trying to evade the law and avoid being tested,” he claimed yesterday.

    During a zoom press conference called today by Franklyn to clear the air, the head of the Unity Workers Union revealed all three men went to the Winston Scott Polyclinic to have COVID-19 tests done even before Government revealed a Boxing Day bus crawl organised by prison warders and attended by many employees of the Prison Service had turned into the country’s first super spreader event.

    He said the men are in quarantine at a hotel, but feared for their personal safety. ….(Quote)

  14. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @Hants January 2, 2021 3:08 PM

    A must watch video especially for the double standard people in authority. COVID loves double standards.


  15. @ Critical Analyzer
    Exactly. The double standard is sickening. Perhaps the Blogmasters may finally get the point.

  16. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer


  17. At times like this we use the opinion of a legal maguffee.

    Can prisoners at Dodds sue the government for failure to protect them for Covid 19?


  18. Oh dear! “The Brandy and Poonanie Bus Crawl!”

    Sounds like an orgy.

    Also advertised, A “No Underwear and Lingerie Bus Crawl”.

    I remember hearing one of them advertising that, “We don’t want no boring girls on dis bus crawl!”

    I guessed that this meant they did not want girls who had respect for their bodies. Now I don’t have to guess. I know.

    So sorry for those who don’t know how to have real fun!


  19. Main takeaways from this afternoon’s press conference from Loop news:
    https://www.loopnewsbarbados.com/content/16-takeaways-covid-19-hmp-dodds-update-dr-jerome-walcott

    Chairman of the Cabinet COVID Sub-Committee Senator Dr Jerome Walcott has disclosed that in addition to the ‘superspreader’ event – Jason Griffith’s bus crawl, the country’s health officials are now monitoring two other smaller clusters.

    Delivering remarks at a press conference held today at Ilaro Court streamed via Zoom, Facebook, and YouTube, he said that Bajans need not panic at this time.

    Dr Walcott shared that:

    1) Over 1,000 tests have been conducted in relation to the HMP-Dodds

    2) Over 100 contact tracers are on the job and conducting interviews

    3) There are 161 confirmed positives in relation to tests surrounding the prison

    4) The call for attendees to Jason Gitten’s Bus Crawl was heeded. A large number of persons turned out in Warrens at the Eunice Gibson Polyclinic and those who could not be accommodated there were transported to Best-dos Santos Public Health Laboratory for testing.

    5) Available on island are some 50,000 to 60 000 swabs for testing.

    6) We have over 100,000 PCR test kits are on island and orders for more have been placed

    7) The Best-dos Santos Public Health Laboratory has additional staff

    8) There is no backlog of tests at this stage

    9) The Harrison Point Facility in St Lucy has a capacity of just over 200, with room for an additional 30 persons and beds. However, the government is looking at other places to accommodate persons who have tested positive including once again using The Blackman and Gollop Primary School.

    10) Prison has a Quarantine area for 100 places. For persons who test positive, there will be an isolation centre within the compound of HMP-Dodds.

    11) At the prison there is adequate space for over 1,100 persons

    12) The Medical facility at the prison can be outfitted for isolation for seriously ill persons

    13) Monitoring of quarantine hotels better

    14) Roll-out monitoring bracelets from Wednesday, January 6, 2021.

    15) Two other clusters being monitored:

    A) 7 cases from along the West Coast including a visitor

    B) 4 cases including a worker at a hotel.

    16) There are two other developments that might become clusters


  20. @Hal Austin January 2, 2021 5:54 AM “Here is a classic example of gross incompetence. Three prison officers wanted in connection with CoVid and they are making a public announcement as if they were wanted men. Why could they not just phone the men’s homes.”

    So you don’t think that the men’s homes had been phoned? You don’t think a police officer had passed around their homes already?


  21. There is blame to be shared by Bajans and the government to explain the predicament we find ourselves.


  22. The “No Underwear” Bus crawl: the lingerie edition is scheduled for January 23, not June 23.

    The ad encourages people to attend in their lingerie.

    P.S. Please note that I don’t plan to attend this one or the Brandy and Punanny one.


  23. GIS has not updated the Barbados cases information on Worldometer.


  24. @Lyall

    The CMO indicated it is a fluid situation?


  25. AT A GLANCE
    The following are some of the key points in the new Emergency Management (COVID-19) protocol (Special Curfew) directive 2021 outlined yesterday by Attorney General Dale Marshall for the period January 2 to January 14, 2021.
    •A daily curfew from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. Individuals cannot leave home unless they are members of an essential service or have an emergency.
    •During the curfew, the following businesses may remain open; – Fuel manufacturers, fuel storage facilities and fuel distributors and other manufacturing companies – Gasoline stations – Hotels, villas and other rental accommodation.
    •Places of religious worship only for funeral services which can only be attended by no more than ten mourners, one officiant and the funeral director and any necessary staff – Weddings which shall be attended only by the bride and bridegroom, two witnesses and the marriage officer. – The streaming or conduct of religious services at which only three persons including the officiant shall be present.
    • No person shall host or attend a party; a recreational or competitive sporting event; a banquet, ball, dance or reception.
    • A meeting of a fraternal society, private or social club or civic association or organisation.
    • The social event known as “a bus crawl”; or “a lime”; a karaoke event; a picnic; or a bus or other vehicular excursion.
    •A person may only visit a beach or a park for the purpose of exercise and in the case of a group of persons, such persons shall be from the same household and shall not exceed ten persons.
    •Any person who contravenes this Directive or fails to comply with any conditions specified by the COVID-19 Protocol Monitoring Unit is guilty of an offence and is liable on summary conviction to a fine of $50 000 or to imprisonment for a term of one year or to both.

    Source: Nation


  26. It is regrettable how we have reacted as a people to the outbreak of the virus in Barbados. Understandably citizens are upset and disappointed we have allowed a false sense of security to set in as demonstrated by our negligence observing COVID 19 health directives, That said the government was warned by people like Dr. Adrian Lorde et al that we needed to be vigilant based on observations; tweaking of the protocols as it related to self quarantine etc. There is blame to share. Let us rally and fix it. A culture of blame is toxic.


  27. Cuhdear Bajan January 2, 2021 9:06 PM #: “So you don’t think that the men’s homes had been phoned? You don’t think a police officer had passed around their homes already?”

    @ Cuhdear Bajan

    Obviously the man’s a nincompoop. Surely you should’ve realised by now there are some silly people whose mission is coming in this forum every day to find every and anything to nit pick and criticise.

    I have to agree with you. Supposed the prison officer’s colleagues, police, health officials or whosoever, were unsuccessful in their efforts to contact them urgently and the media was used as a last resort, hoping someone who knows the individuals, would contact them and pass on the message?


  28. @David,
    Your comments at 5.22 are at odds with reality. Prior to this great influx of tourists/foreigners there was no community spread within Barbados.

    How would you expect the Barbados public to react when their freedoms have been curtailed and they’re now at a higher risk of contacting Covid-19?

    What do you mean when you state we have to share the blame? The blame lies squarely with this government and their inability to resist the demands made by our hoteliers who are exclusively non-black.

    The government was advised to close their borders to the Brits and the Yanks; yet, they stubbornly kept the door open to these mischievous, indisciplined and racist people.

    We have a problem in this country which needs to be resolved and quickly. Collective action must be taken against our hoteliers who are endangering the lives of Barbadian citizens. They cannot be allowed to succeed in their desire to earn money at the expense of human life.


  29. Well.said TLSN

    David insist on holding umbrellas over Mia head whilst standing in the middle of a hurricane


  30. Two thoughts.
    Is a bus crawl treated like a bus excursion?

    Is a permit required for a bus crawl? If the answer is no, then we must find a way to monitor and control partying of this type. If the answer is yes, then the persons responsible for granting these permits need to be educated.

    From the cases seen so far, it is difficult to determine if there is a single policy for punishing those who break quarantine.

    If it appears that penalties can be affected by country of origin, skin color or other extraneous factors then it may be difficult to get a full commitment to the fight from all Barbadians.

    Let us patch gaps as they become apparent and try to develop a single/national policy for those who break quarantine.


  31. The revised covid protocols ban bus crawls for the foreseeable future. Do you know there were others (bust crawls/limes) publicised after this outbreak was known? And some here suggest Barbadians should not share blame because it suits a narrow agenda?


  32. David: January 2, 2021 10:58 PM

    You said above:
    @Lyall; The CMO indicated it is a fluid situation?

    It is evidently a very fluid situation; Today’s Sunday Nation reports that there were 194 positive cases in the last 48 hours and that investigations continue into at least 3 clusters, the largest of which is of 161 cases at HMP, Dodds. There would therefore appear to be around 33 cases in the 2 clusters now being worked on.

    Those numbers are huge for Barbados, so the Loop News report re. our bed capacities last night is instructive. Loop stated, inter alia, that the Harrison Point Facility in St Lucy has a capacity of just over 200, with room for an additional 30 persons and beds. The Prison has a Quarantine area of 100 places for persons who test positive and there will be an isolation centre within the compound of HMP-Dodds. At the prison there is adequate space for over 1,100 persons and the Medical facility at the prison can be outfitted for treatment (and isolation) of seriously ill persons. There was also some suggestion from the Press Conference yesterday that the cases at the Prison showed a much higher number of positive inmates than of prison staff.

    The authorities need as much help as they can get to resolve this situation quickly. They appear to be up to the job. Jamaica, Trinidad and Guyana and to some extent Grenada, are each showing positive signs of controlling their outbreaks. Barbados has quickly controlled earlier, albiet small, outbreaks.

    Its not yet the time to panic and start the blame game..


  33. I was always fearful that we could experience some difficulty at some stage. However, I am still convinced that the GoB had sound protocols for managing and controlling the presence of covid-19 on the island.

    Given this, I can only arrive at one conclusion … human behavior can wreck the best thought out of processes.

    Hearing of a bus crawl came as a complete surprise to me. I am doubtful if social distancing, mask wearing and sanitizing would be a part of the crawl experience.

    For those organizing the crawl, was it just greed that promoted the idea? For participants, boredom, ignorance, a desire for fun, carelessness, no thought or understanding of the consequences, …..?

    For those breaking quarantine, do you think of your fellowman and of the possible consequences of your actions? Are you just selfish or do you have too high an opinion of yourself? How many of us do you think your life is worth?

    I am convinced that the GoB have sound policies and models for the control of covid-19, but unfortunately their models do not factor in human behavior.


  34. I heard it reported that a prison officer contracted covid-19 whilst moonlighting at a foreigner’s house in St Peter’s. The foreigner was supposed to be in quarantine.

    The source of the community spread was probably via the Prison Officer. However it was the covid-19 foreigner who unwittingly brought this plague with him/her from their host country.


  35. Where did you hear, from an official source?


  36. I would strongly advise the government to close down the borders with immediate effect. There are some people on here who fail to understand that we now have community spread on the island.


  37. ………….. but unfortunately their models do not factor in human behavior…..(Quote)

    ??????????? Plse give us the model’s transmission projection and the social circumstances under which these projected transmissions occur.

    @TLSN

    Stop blaming the visitors. I will bet not a single tourist (not a returning national) was on any bus crawl. Further, am I right in assuming a bus crawl, as it states, is simply driving around the island, stopping, recharging, going to the loos, and behaving badly?
    Are most of the joyriders vehicle owners? If so, since the purpose of the crawl is not to travel, what then is the objective?


  38. This govt has a monster to wrestle to ground
    One which could have been avoided
    Port st. Charles a well known establishment gave a report of a visitor being tested positive for the virus
    Yet no one points finger at the many parties and fetes in those high society areas where the tourist frequent
    Why is it that in all matters socially or economically poor bajans are asked to tighten belts or be resolute to punishment


  39. @ Mariposa

    Port St Charles should be closed down and all imports and travellers come through the port or airport. Also, all visitors staying at Sandy Lane should enter the country through immigration and customs in person and have their passports stamped.
    At present it is said that Sandy Lane guests are met on the tarmac, their passports are carried to immigration by an flunkie and their luggage collected later.


  40. Let me repeat “I am not a fan of Mia and company, but I am a great fan of Barbados”.

    It is nice when you buy a hotdog that the condiments come in separate little packages, ketchup, mustard, relish and at times you may get some onions on the side from a vendor.

    Mia does not have the luck of a hotdog vendor. Problems do not come in separate little packages. Mia is wrestling with the Gordian knot. Untie it incorrectly and things fall apart.

    Shutdown the island to fight covid and soon there is an increase in the number of unemployed and a run on scarce resources as folks want their unemployment benefits. Hopefully, someone who has more knowledge of how the different issues are tied together can chime in.

    It would be easy for me to take a cheap shot at her, but now is not the time.


  41. ??????????? Plse give us the model’s transmission projection and the social circumstances under which these projected transmissions occur.

    Heavenly Father, I beg thee to take this cup away from me.

    You may have the last word.


  42. There is no Gordian knot. Lives come before livelihoods. The moment it was confirmed that a new variant of the CoVid virus was coming out of the UK all travel between the two countries should have been stopped.
    Cruise ships should have been banned since March, facial masks made mandatory, restaurants and night clubs closed and only essential shops allowed to trade.
    Mortgage holidays should have been imposed by law, families should have been given monthly interest-free loans and workers, private and public sector, allowed to work from home.
    All that followed by mass testing. The government’s arrogance rode on luck. Of course, no sensible person wants anyone to suffer from CoVid, far less die, but we have managed the plague worse than Boris Johnson and Donald Trump. It is not too late.


  43. Theo
    Observers like myself understood the hidden dangers that are associated with fighting the Virus
    Many times i made mention of human behaviour which is ver hard to control
    Reason why i was adamant in my criticism of govt opening its borders to hot spots
    Minds fluctuate and can be good and acceptable for periods of time
    However when stress level become unacceptable to the abnormalities all hell breaks out
    Govt took a risk without taking into a great level of concern to human behaviour and the COVID effect
    One hear tourist been venting on how much they pay per night at hotels and being confined to a prison like atmosphere

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