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

3,454 responses to “COVID 19 UPDATES”

  1. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer


  2. China laughs at US donation of 80 vaccines
    BEIJING – Striking a blow for China’s so-called vaccine diplomacy, state media have mocked the United States for calling attention to its donation of 80 vials of COVID-19 vaccines to Trinidad and Tobago.
    “Would this be selected for the Worst Public Relations Award of the Year?” the official Xinhua news agency said yesterday in an article on WeChat, which compiled more than ten mocking tweets by other social media users under a US embassy Twitter statement announcing the donation.
    Duelling for global influence, Beijing and Washington have both sought to garner goodwill by pledging to supply vaccines to desperate governments amid a global shortage.
    Though Washington recently announced expanded efforts, Beijing got a head start by donating domestically made vaccines to emerging countries.
    US president Joe Biden said last week that Washington will donate half a billion doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to the world’s poorest countries, on top of 80 million doses it has already pledged to donate by the end of June.
    On Monday, the US Embassy in Port of Spain said on Twitter that its donation to Trinidad and Tobago includes 80 vials of the Pfizer vaccine. Typically, a vial contains five or six doses.
    “We believe that every vaccine counts,” the embassy said.
    Chinese state media outlets including the Global Times and China Daily took delight at the sarcastic comments generated by the embassy tweet.
    “Little was given, but much was spoken on it,” Xinhua said.
    In May, China delivered 100 000 donated doses of Sinopharm’s vaccine to Trinidad and Tobago.


  3. I am booked to recieve a second dose of Astrazenica tomorrow. Now this.

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/astra-zeneca-second-shots-stop-1.6069838


  4. [caption id="attachment_72043" align="alignjustify" width="860"] The charts for the week ending Friday 18th June. Barbados has maintained its good performance of consistent improvements re. positivity, active cases and daily incidence of positive cases. Jamaica, Guyana, St Lucia and T&T are each showing improvements – Source: Lyall Small[/caption]


  5. I am getting a second dose of vaccine on Tuesday.Will take what is available.

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-pfizer-covid19-vaccine-delay-1.6072935


  6. Delta Variant and its adverse relationship with unvaccinated areas.

    http://a.msn.com/00/en-us/AALhNQb


  7. @ David,

    ” COVID-19 outbreak at Toronto hospital infects some who have received both vaccine doses ”

    https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/covid-19-outbreak-at-toronto-hospital-infects-some-who-have-received-both-vaccine-doses-1.5479528


  8. @Hants

    Being vaccinated is no guarantee. It is meant to reduce the possibility of serious illness.


  9. @Hants
    The Gov’t just relaxed restrictions on fully vaccinated Canadians and permanent residents ( with proof) entering Canada starting July 5th

    BTW I have received my two shots of Pfizer

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/fully-vaccinated-canadians-travel-july-1.6073480


  10. @ Sargeant glad you got your two shots.

    My first shot in April was Pfizer and will be geting Moderna as my second shot tomorrow.


  11. @ David,

    I did not expect a ” guarantee “.I just am hoping to reduce the risk of more serious illness than I already have.


  12. First shot was Pfizer and just got Moderna for second shot.


  13. Marshall defends act amendment
    THE GOVERNMENT’S top legal adviser has dismissed suggestions that Parliament could have met to debate protocols as the COVID-19 pandemic swept Barbados last year.
    In fact, said Attorney General Dale Marshall, Opposition Senator Caswell Franklyn, one of the claimants who has brought a constitutional challenge to Government’s emergency management protocols, refused to enter the Senate for fear of contracting the virus.
    His comments came as he spent an hour and a half on the witness stand yesterday, in the No. 12 Supreme Court, being grilled by Queen’s Counsel Hal Gollop.
    Listing the dates that Parliament had convened between March 20, last year and yesterday, Gollop argued there was “clear opportunity, adequate opportunity, if it was needed”, to convene Parliament within that time to debate the health protocols.
    Marshall responded that “hindsight is 20-20”.
    “At the time and at all stages during our management of the COVID issue, we could not be sure that all of Cabinet or all of Parliament would not have caught COVID,” the Attorney General told the court.
    “I believe that one of the claimants in this matter expressed his own view that he did not want to be in Parliament to catch COVID. So Parliament may not have met, but at the time we could not know whether we would be able to meet weekly, in six months or in three months.”
    He added that having reviewed the Emergency Management Act
    and the advice of the Solicitor General, he felt it necessary to supplement the existing legislation and this resulted in an amendment.
    Gollop then directed the Attorney General to the “wide and generous ambit” of the Emergency Powers Act, which referred to earthquakes, hurricanes, an outbreak of pestilence, war and other events, and asked
    him what “new intervening situation brought about by the COVID-19” would have prompted the amendment.
    “That is certainly a most comprehensive list found anywhere,” Attorney General Marshall replied. “However, given the sparsity of the statute, it was deemed necessary for it to go much further than just a bald statement, that these are the kinds of things that will trigger a state of emergency. The statute simply says that a state of emergency can be declared in certain specific circumstances.”
    As a result, Marshall said, a previous Barbados Labour Party administration had, in 2007, piloted the Emergency Management Act
    because it felt that “more was needed than just that empowering provision”.
    He said that Emergency Management Act also did not consider any health issue or pandemic.
    “Recognising that we would be managing the state of emergency under the vast provisions of the Emergency Management Act,
    we felt we needed to amend the Emergency Management Act
    to specifically allow for a pandemic,” he said, adding the older Emergency Powers Act lacked depth.
    The Attorney General went on to say he considered he had the authority to grant exemptions to those who were prevented from opening for business during the shutdown.
    “We granted exemptions all the time for many things. We granted exemptions to all kinds of businesses. We granted exemptions to people who made coffins,” he said.
    However, Marshall said he did not know “of any Benson minimart”.


    Source: Nation


  14. @Hants

    You are in good company.

    Merkel’s two vaccine doses
    BERLIN – German Chancellor Angela Merkel has received a dose of Moderna as her second shot of coronavirus vaccine, having had Oxford-AstraZeneca as her first, a government spokesman said.
    The 66-year-old leader was vaccinated a few days ago after getting a dose of AstraZeneca in April.
    Experts believe mixed dosing of COVID vaccines could be a good idea but it is too early to say for sure.
    After a slow start, Germany’s vaccination rollout accelerated in recent weeks.
    More than half of the country’s population has now received their first dose of a vaccine.
    In April, Merkel’s spokesman tweeted a photo of her vaccination certificate to show she had received the injection.
    One study in the UK found that adults were more likely to report mild and moderate side effects after mixing doses of the AstraZeneca and Pfizer COVID vaccines. (BBC)


  15. AstraZeneca ‘effective’
    LONDON – The AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine is effective against Delta and Kappa variants, which were first identified in India, the company said yesterday, citing a study.
    The study by the Oxford University investigated the ability of monoclonal antibodies in blood from recovered people and from those vaccinated to neutralise the Delta and Kappa variants, the statement said.
    (Reuters)


  16. Digital vaccination cards by month end
    by RACHELLE AGARD
    rachelleagard@nationnews.com
    BY MONTH END, Government will be looking to roll out the new digital vaccination cards says Minister of Health and Wellness, Jeffrey Bostic.
    “[The cards] will include a bar code and other security features and that is what you will be required to show when you go to those events. That will be rolled out this weekend because we have to facilitate our people who travel as well. It is required overseas and for the ease of travel. That is how we are doing it at the (Grantley Adams International) airport for persons coming in as well,” he revealed.
    However, Bostic made it clear Government had not decided on any fully vaccinated activities. He said it was left up to promoters and others hosting events to decide whether or not the event would be for fully vaccinated individuals or otherwise.
    “They can decide whatever they want to do, but we do not believe in having discriminatory events or discriminating against people. It is up to people what type of event they want to host. If you want to go to an event of that nature, the protocol as articulated in the press conference is if you’re not fully vaccinated then you require a PCR test, 48 hours at least before the event. Whether or not you are allowed into an event depends on the type of event. If it is a fully vaccinated event then it is a fully vaccinated event,” he said.
    Last week, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office with responsibility for Culture, John King made it clear these events would not be Crop Over branded, but noted Government understood how difficult it was for people to be locked down for a long time.
    When questioned about a possible reduction in the cost of PCR testing for those unable to be vaccinated because of medical conditions, personal or religious beliefs, but who wanted to attend such events, Bostic said that was a decision for the Cabinet Sub-Committee.
    While he acknowledged there were promoters who remained unsatisfied with the 150-member cap on events, the minister said he had to balance public safety versus allowing some activities to take place.
    “That is the balance we have to be able to strike and we have to be able to do things that we feel we can keep a handle on. If you have 150 people at the moment and something unfortunate happens, then that reduces the amount of contact tracing that has to be done. If we go for larger numbers, that will be beyond our control if something happens. Then the country suffers and there will be no more activities of that nature, so a little with content has to be great gain,” he cautioned.
    Bostic also warned promoters if they intended to “squeeze in two more people” that the COVID-19 Monitoring Unit would be out in their numbers keeping a watchful eye.
    “When we monitor and there are ways and means of doing things, we will know what is happening. If people contravene the orders, they will be closed down. It is that simple. At the moment we believe that the Monitoring Unit can oversee these activities, especially since persons still have to go through or apply to the Monitoring Unit to stage activities so they can plan the monitoring and response to activities. If necessary we will expand the resources, but I don’t anticipate that will be required at this point in time, at least not in the initial stages,” the minister said.

    Source: Nation


  17. @Hants

    Is this the attitude of people you know over there?


  18. @ David,

    Yes. It’s been a long time on since Canadians could travel. Some Bajan snowbirds missed their yearly vacation.


  19. Thanks Hants. Continue to observe the COVID 19 protocols. Continue to be safe.


  20. Bill
    Dill
    Fill
    Gill
    Hill


  21. What’s going on with Hill?


  22. [gallery type="slideshow" ids="72138,72139,72140" orderby="rand"]

     

    Attached are charts for week ending 25th June. The big news is that at the end of that week there were a few spikes that slightly blurred the successes of the past 6 months. However, there does not appear to be cause for any panic at this time as larger spikes have been contained previously. The watchword is now for everyone to be scrupulously compliant with the existing established protocols, especially masking up, and to take up the available vaccines asap. The active charts for the other Islands continues the trends observed over the past few weeks – Source: Lyall Small

    In an impassioned plea at yesterdays COVID 10 Press conference (26 June 2021) Dr. Corey Forde, infection specialist with lead responsibility in the battle against COVID 19 advised unvaccinated Barbadians to come forward and be vaccinated. Of interest is that he revealed a younger Barbadian with no underlying medical condition is being diagnosed with more frequency.

    The thrust of the recent update is a response to an understandable complacency being observed after weeks of recording negligible cases.

    Although the vast majority of people infected with COVID 19 do recover, the stress it exerts on a fragile economy, healthcare system and quality of life for some infected with the virus makes it an urgent requirement to comply public health protocol i.e. regular washing of hands, wearing masks, physical distancing etc. Ideally all Bajans are asked to be vaccinated against COVID 19 which is the best solution science guarantees.

    As the country opens up to receive more tourists, especially from the UK where the Delta variant is present, the most important form of defence against the virus is for Barbadians and residents on the island to take responsibility for what is required to effectively fight back the virus. If we do not, we will have to live with the consequences.


  23. The Ministry of Education Technological and Vocational Training has confirmed that a student from the Princess Margaret Secondary School and one from the Ann Hill School have tested positive for COVID-19.

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/06/27/update-on-positive-covid-tests-at-two-schools/

  24. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    New research shows injecting the vaccine into a blood vessel increases the risk of blood clots. Are our nurses and doctors administering the vaccine aspirating before injecting the vaccine into the arm muscle to ensure they are not hitting a blood vessel?


  25. Have we had reported cases of nurses not administering the vaccine properly.

  26. Critical Analyzer Avatar
    Critical Analyzer

    @David
    According to the video, the advice coming from WHO UK and various international health authorities seems to be no need to aspirate as the chances of hitting a blood vessel are low but there is a chance and no one will know unless the aspirate the injection site first.

    Does anyone know what our nurses were trained/told to do when administering this vaccine?


  27. Bajan doc: Beware Delta variant
    By Tony Best

    As new clusters of the coronavirus threaten to undermine a return of normalcy in many countries fighting the pandemic, a leading Barbadian infectious disease expert in the United States is urging local officials to take action that would protect people against surges of the Delta variant.
    Dr Wayne Greaves, a “distinguished scientist” in New Jersey, is urging officials to take “very seriously” the highly contagious variant, which was first detected in India but has spread around the globe like the proverbial wildfire. He said the variant should be approached with a sense of urgency and care because it was striking people of all ages – the elderly, middle aged, young adults and children.
    Be fully vaccinated
    Just as important, Greaves, a scientist at a large pharmaceutical conglomerate, wants Bajans to become “fully vaccinated” and not rely on half-way measures such as taking a single dose in cases which require two shots.
    “The biggest danger when it comes to the Delta variant is how infectious it is, how easily it can spread,” Greaves told the Sunday Sun in an interview from his home in New Jersey.
    “That is the greatest concern I have. A second concern is the vaccines and the antibodies that we have. Although they are generally effective, their effectiveness seems to become reduced somewhat” in the case of Delta variant.
    “While at the moment it doesn’t seem as though there are failures, we do know from data in Scotland and England that people who receive only one dose of the vaccine, the protection can be quite low, like 33 per cent in terms of protection, whereas once they have received both doses of the vaccine – Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca – the effectiveness rises to 88 per cent if the vaccines being injected are Pfizer or Moderna and 60 per cent for AstraZeneca,” Greaves said.
    “The bottom line is that for the Delta variant, you need to be fully vaccinated to be really protected. One dose is not enough and people who try not to show up for the second dose are putting themselves at risk.” Greaves, a former professor of medicine at Howard University in
    Washington D.C., said that although there wasn’t sufficient research results in children to reach a definitive conclusion about youngsters, parents should ensure, they too, were vaccinated.
    “I don’t know enough about children at the present time but I suspect that it (Delta) could be more infectious, more easily spread among children as we are seeing it in adults,” he added.
    Worldwide spread
    “What we know right now is that it is spreading all over the world. Right now, we know there are 96 countries in which it has been reported.
    In the Caribbean and Latin American region we know it has been reported in a number of countries where they have found the Delta variant. The Pan American Health Organisation (PAHO) has reported that Barbados, Puerto Rico, Martinique and St Maarten are places where they have identified the presence of the Delta variant.”
    The expert explained that the full extent of infections in those countries wasn’t clear, noting “we know that once it is there, that there is the potential for great spread.”
    Greaves pinpointed senior citizens as a group of special concern to the health care and scientific communities because the immune systems of the elderly were “not as strong or robust” as those in younger generations.
    “Even with the vaccines, the elderly may not get as good an antibody response as people who were younger,” said Greaves. “The antibody response is really very important in terms of protection, especially from the Delta variant.
    Older people could be potentially at greater risk than younger people.
    We don’t have a lot of data but this is based on what we know about the immune system as we get older. That explained why the elderly should be fully vaccinated.”
    The scientist was also worried about first responders, those involved in providing essential services to that group in the population.
    “People like police officers, security personnel and those involved in hurricane responses are of special interest and concern” who should be protected against the variant and the elements,” he said.
    “There is the potential risk of mixing together people who are vaccinated
    with persons who are not vaccinated. Heaven forbid you bring together some people who are infected with the Delta variant with others who are not infected.
    The Delta is so highly contagious that it spreads very easily. I would hope that countries in the region which are hurricane prone should give careful consideration to that concern when they are planning for an eventuality that may involve responding to a hurricane, a catastrophic event which forces people to come together in close proximity to each other and in groups. That is a serious concern.”

    Source: Nation


  28. Twelve new cases of the COVID-19 virus were discovered in Barbados.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/07/07/12-new-covid-cases/


  29. My apologies for being late in the submission of last week’s update which was primarily related to the effects of Hurricane Emily. Last week It seemed that the recent upticks in incidence were coming under control and that we might have been returning to a fairly steady state but this week’s data suggests that we are not yet there – Lyall Small

    See COVID 19 Updates page


  30. Here’s a write up on an alarming paper from Guelph, Canada, about new research on spread of Covid-19 from infected humans to pet cats and dogs. Older papers have suggested that there is a small incidence of spread in the other direction.

    https://www.livescience.com/pet-cats-dogs-catch-covid-19-from-owners.html?utm_source=notification


  31. First shot was Pfizer and got Moderna for second shot on April 22nd.

    I am now designated as fully vaccinated. I will continue to wear a mask when required and limit my ” socialization “.


  32. BAMP CONCERNED
    President says too many still vulnerable to Covid-19
    By Colville Mounsey
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com
    The jump in COVID-19 cases in recent days has the Barbados Association of Medical Practitioners (BAMP) concerned about too many Barbadians remaining vulnerable as the country eases restrictions.
    With 42 new cases in the last five days, president Dr Lynda Williams is warning that the number could rise as a result of people gathering in large numbers at supermarkets in preparation for Hurricane Elsa last week.
    “We must try to avoid scenes such as those in Hurricane Elsa where people were congregating in large numbers in business places and then potentially sheltering with relatives and friends. In scenarios like these, the pandemic impacts, including a potential for increase in transmission which would not be seen immediately but may affect case numbers a week or two later. So we must be vigilant at all times but more so in the coming days,” she said.
    Regular testing
    Williams also reiterated a call for regular testing for variants, saying Barbadians must be made aware of any threat of more infectious strains, such as the Delta variant.
    “Whenever there is a spike in cases, particularly among unvaccinated people, there are potentially more people who may become ill or hospitalised. We want to see regular updates on the overall picture. We should not simply focus on the numbers of a single day or the positivity rate for a single day. That doesn’t tell the full story.
    “We need to look at the cumulative number of cases in a week and the number of cases per 1 000 tests run. These numbers as well as our capacity for contact tracing, whether the case is local or imported, whether the cases are among the vaccinated or unvaccinated and the numbers hospitalised, will give us better information about what is happening, as well as regular reporting on the more transmissible variants.”
    She added: “We continue to ask whether or not we have the human capacity to do all of the contact tracing that we need to do. The other thing we have asked for is regular reports as it relates to variants.”
    Williams said Barbadians needed to return to the days of the strictest adherence to the COVID-19 protocols in order to safeguard themselves, noting that as restrictions are lifted, occasional spikes can be expected.
    “Whether or not we have new variants here, we still have to follow the public health guidelines and principles that have brought us this far . . . . Our concern is especially for the unvaccinated persons because the truth is in Barbados, we only have 25 per cent of the persons vaccinated.”
    On Thursday, Barbados recorded its 48th COVID-19-related death, with nine new infections.
    Chief Medical Officer Dr Kenneth George told the Saturday Sun yesterday that most of the cases were the result of local transmission.
    “We have had about four or five cases that were imported, but all of the others were local transmission. We have managed to link some of them but there are a number of cases that we have not been able to link,” said George, who disclosed that none of the local transmissions had been among the vaccinated population.
    In honour of Arthur
    While in office, the late Prime Minister Owen Arthur helped the University of the West Indies (UWI) Cave Hill Campus expand and triple its roll of students.
    Therefore, it was only fitting that a building be named to honour his legacy.
    UWI vice chancellor Professor Sir Hilary Beckles made that point yesterday during a ceremony in which the CARICOM Building at the campus was named the Owen Arthur CARICOM Research Complex.
    “He vested a significant amount of land for the future development of the campus. The policy paper which he wrote said all Government land within a mile of this campus is subject to vesting in the university. Thus the vesting began in different pieces of land, so under his tenure as Prime Minister the physical size of Cave Hill doubled.
    “The number of structures doubled, the student numbers tripled and the budget increased by 40 per cent. The Cave Hill Campus emerged in its modern manifestation out of his commitment and his vision,” Sir Hilary said.
    Arthur served as Prime Minister from 1994 to 2008 and later became a professor at Cave Hill. He died in July 2020.
    Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, widow Julie Arthur and daughters Sabrina and Leah attended.
    While thanking the university for honouring her father, Leah said: “This renaming ceremony is an event my father was thoroughly looking forward to. Any time he drove down UWI Hill he beamed when he talked about how his children, grandchildren and great-grands would be able to pass and remember him and his achievements. (TG)

    Source: Nation


  33. Bajans have to pay for quarantine stay

    By Antoinette Connell antoinetteconnell @nationnews.com
    Barbadians returning home are to pay for quarantine accommodation.
    One of the casualties of Hurricane Elsa was the Paragon quarantine facility in Christ Church, which was left unfit to house arriving travellers waiting out the required COVID-19 grace period after testing. Prior to the hurricane, patients there were moved out by authorities.
    Based on information from the Department of Emergency Management there were 2 372 reports of damage.
    Yesterday, Minister of Health Jeffrey Bostic confirmed the damage to the main quarantine facility, saying there would be no replacement, but rather arrivals would have to pay at the Government-approved locations.
    He did not address how long the facility, located near the airport in Christ Church, would be off the list of locations.
    The Paragon issue came
    to the fore when the Branch family, arriving from London on Friday and expecting to quarantine at Paragon, found themselves stranded for hours at Grantley Adams International Airport.
    That was after they were informed they had to pay for hotel quarantine and Rosemary Branch contacted the Sunday Sun from inside the airport about her plight and that of others, whom she said were threatened with being put on the next flight back out unless they found suitable accommodation.
    They were eventually moved to the Savannah Hotel on Friday night but encountered further problems, said Branch, as she was contacted by hotel personnel yesterday and told that authorities would pay for one night only.
    “They knew we couldn’t pay and forcibly removed us from the airport with security to put us in a room costing US$425 per night. How is that right?” she asked.
    She said the entire experience was frustrating and tiresome, having travelled long hours only to encounter the difficulty of an unexpected
    financial burden and an indifferent approach.
    She questioned why the information on Paragon or paying for quarantine was not publicised rather than people arriving to be shocked by the news.

    Source: Nation


  34. Lawyers have say on mandatory vaccination

    Stories by Stacey N. Russell There are strong legal grounds for governments in Barbados and other Caribbean countries to force people to take COVID-19 vaccines, but this must be tempered by legal tests of reasonableness and proportionality, as well as regard for social and industrial relations anxieties.
    In fact, dumping the idea of compulsory vaccination and focusing on achieving herd immunity by getting high percentages of populations immunised may be the best way of protecting citizens from the deadly virus.
    That opinion came from two lawyers on a power-packed panel that also included medical professionals, who shared mixed rationales for Caribbean citizens not being bluntly forced to take COVID-19 vaccines. They formed part of a virtual discussion on Thursday night when the Organisation of Commonwealth Caribbean Bar Associations and the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States Bar Association spoke on the topic Mandatory Vaccination: Legal, Justified Or Effective?
    Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of the West Indies, St Augustine, Professor Rose-Marie Belle Antoine, said: “I do believe that a compulsory requirement for the COVID-19 vaccine is justifiable in law, whether constitutionally or in the private sector. However, legitimacy in the law is not the only factor in making such a determination.”
    Industrial relations concerns
    The specialist in labour law, public law and law and legal systems said social and industrial relations concerns had to also be addressed.
    “So, it might be legally correct, but not desirable.”
    Jamaican human rights advocate and constitutional expert, Dr Lloyd Barnett, advocated for herd immunity that could still protect those who were against taking the jab.
    He agreed that public health objectives such as protecting society and stopping transmissions were achievable through vaccination because scientific evidence showed that 90 per cent of vaccinated people did not become infected a second time or transfer the virus to others, and “in any constitutional test those are factors which would be of critical importance.
    “But the universal compulsory vaccination, which is really the subject matter of this discourse is herd immunity. What is the percentage needed – that has not been scientifically established, but it’s certainly in the level of 75 or 80 per cent. That means that there are 20 per cent of persons who may not be vaccinated and yet herd immunity is achieved.
    “Should that therefore mean that universality is not the necessary answer if it is possible to obtain that percentage without compulsion? And that is something that we do not know yet,” said the founding member of the Regional and Judicial Legal Services Commission of the Caribbean Court of Justice.
    Antoine encouraged workers and unions not to see the limitation of rights as punitive, but as a protective measure for the greater good.
    “With COVID, I think it is timesensitive and a dynamic situation.
    Context matters in this whole question of proportionality . . . now with the high death rates and the recognition that alternative methods are, perhaps, not working.
    Proportionality principle
    “So, I also believe that the proportionality principle will encompass this medical risk question and the question of medical efficacy. If science shows that the vaccine is not going to be so effective, then limiting rights may not be justifiable,” she said.
    Antoine added that states could give citizens the “illusion of choice” by not forcing them to take the vaccine and stopping employers from making it mandatory through “soft law”.
    “For example, there is no law that says that you must take a yellow fever vaccine, but if you want to fly to many places in the world . . . then you can’t go anywhere without it. No one forces you to do it, but if you don’t, you can’t do what you want. And a similar situation is already happening with the COVID vaccine and the airlines,” she said.

    Source: Nation


  35. 40 new virus cases

    Forty people, 20 males and 20 females, were diagnosed with coronavirus (COVID-19) on Saturday, July 10, out of the 908 tests conducted by the Best-dos Santos Public Health Laboratory.

    The number of people in isolation is 60.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/07/11/40-new-virus-cases/


  36. Measures to be implemented from Tuesday, July 13
    Measures will be in place for two weeks.
    Daily curfew from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m.
    No social gatherings.
    Attendance at indoor events will be capped at 100.
    Funeral attendance, based on spacing, will be capped at 100 people.
    Summer camps delayed for the next two weeks.
    Full contact sports on hold.
    No spectators at events, including cricket.
    Dance clubs and studios on hold.
    75 per cent seating capacity on public transportation. No standing allowed.
    Those who can work from home should be allowed to do so.

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/07/11/bostic-hosts-covid-19-update-press-conference/


  37. In response to large COVID-19 spikes at a St Michael church and local business recently, Barbados’ Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Dr Kenneth George, is urging all local establishments to immediately re-evaluate their COVID-19 protocols.

    During a COVID-19 Update and Press Conference on Sunday, George said a church and local business registered 33 and 21 new COVID-19 cases respectively, over the last few days.

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/07/11/establishments-urged-to-immediately-re-evaluate-covid-19-protocols/


  38. Attached are two of the regular weekly charts showing the incidence and percentage positivity of the disease over the last 9 days. I expect to add a third chart on percentage of adult population vaccinated by next week. The news today was not good in that the Covid team announced that a new significant spike was now being processed from today. The charts indicate that such spikes, though alarming, are now becoming almost routine. The back story of the 2 charts here suggest that the various Covid19 teams will continue to do excellent work in contact tracing, monitoring and limiting spread and continuing the effective management of the spike. Source: Lyall Small

    See COVID 19 Updates Page


  39. Here we go again visitors bringing the variants into the country meanwhile the citizens are punished


  40. https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/07/11/approximately-200-people-in-quarantine-at-hotels-alvin-hart/

    “We have the individuals from the large establishment that Dr. George spoke about…. We have over 70 of those in quarantine.

    The latest spike involves a St. Michael church, two businesses and a St. George family.


  41. What is the definition of a visitor? Does the definition include Barbadians returning home from overseas?


  42. angela coxJuly 12, 2021 8:31 AM

    Here we go again visitors bringing the variants into the country

    Xxxxxxx

    DavidJuly 12, 2021 12:09 PM

    What is the definition of a visitor? Does the definition include Barbadians returning home from overseas

    According to CMO statement
    He said three person entered our borders by entry of Carribbean Airlines and were tested positive
    He did not specify nationality or rendered with a clarification country or orgin they came from
    With that in mind he left open an exposed area by which one can filled the gap
    Hence I said visitors
    Not my job to clarify with precision
    That was the job of the CMO


  43. @ David July 12, 2021 12:09 PM

    Remember, this is how she remains relevant to the blog.

    And, “Where is the value trying to debate a person being deliberately malicious?”

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