Uruguay and Costa Rica are Latin America success stories in the fight against Covid-19

May 25, 2020 | 51 comments

A man and his daughter exercise on Montevideo’s “Rambla” promenade.

By Gabriela Vaz with Marco Sibaja

In Latin America, a region experiencing ever-increasing growth in the number of coronavirus infections and deaths, Uruguay and Costa Rica stand out as success stories.

Despite never declaring a general lockdown, Uruguay had recorded 769 cases and 22 deaths by Monday morning among a population of 3.4 million. In Costa Rica there have been just 951 cases and 10 deaths in a country of five million.

The numbers don’t lie, and the outbreak in Uruguay “is currently under control,” said epidemiologist Julio Vignolo, citing the country’s rapid response. The same day that Uruguay recorded its first four cases, March 13, the government declared a health emergency, shuttering schools and closing borders.

The government also encouraged voluntary isolation, which was widely adopted in a country with low population density. Intensive care units have spare beds and the health system has never come close to creaking, let alone collapsing.

On Thursday, President Luis Lacalle Pou announced schools will resume classes in June, saying “we are convinced that the risk is minimal.”

Uruguay’s reproduction number — the rate of infection — is 0.74, according to a model developed by engineer Andres Ferragut and mathematician Ernesto Mordecki, who are working with the government as advisors. Anything under 1.0 means the infection is under control. “In an ideal world” that means the virus will disappear from the country, Ferragut told AFP.

“It depends on a ton of things: the natural contagiousness of the virus but also societal behavior and the measures taken.”

On March 29 visits to cafes, theaters and shopping centers were down 75 percent, while visits to parks, beaches and public squares were down 79 percent, according to a report by Google Mobility. However, there are fears that with success comes complacency.

A women in homemade protective clothing walks her dog in Montevideo.

Those two figures had dropped to 36 and 53 percent respectively in Google Mobility’s latest report on May 9. “This is day to day. We need to be prudent, cautious,” said Vignolo. “Coronavirus has come to stay” and will be here “until there is a comprehensive solution.”

In Costa Rica, scientists and laboratories have been working on a range of solutions to tackle the outbreak, not least to reduce the country’s dependence on imported goods amid global scarcity.

Costa Rica’s success in warding off the novel coronavirus can be attributed to the involvement of all sectors of government, a quick response, and a strong health care system as well as the commitment of its citizens, said Maria Dolores Perez-Rosales, the World Health Organization representative in Costa Rica. “Therein lies the key, in broad strokes, to why Costa Rica is managing the pandemic in this way,” she said.

The country has done so well that it’s the first in the region to have restarted its football league, albeit behind closed doors. Costa Rican scientists have developed protective equipment, ventilators, capsules to transport infected patients and even specialized medication.

The arrival of the disease prompted a combined effort by the private and public sectors to work together “in order to achieve self-sufficiency in medical equipment,” Science and Technology Minister Adrian Salazar told AFP by video. Salazar says those efforts ensured that Costa Rica was sufficiently stocked with needed medical supplies.

While the mortality rate has been low, Costa Rica has still been preparing for the worst-case scenario, developing ventilator prototypes that are in the final stage of testing. It’s also made progress in testing and the production of swabs used to carry out the tests.

“The main goal is to be able to produce swabs locally given there’s scarcity on a global level … and if necessary, do widespread testing for COVID-19,” said Jose Pablo Carballo, a student at the University of Costa Rica involved in the development program.
___________________

Credit: Yahoo News

CuencaHighLife

Dani News

Google ad

The Cuenca Dispatch

Week of April 14

Trial of Carlos Pólit: First Week of Revelations Sheds Light on Corruption in Correista Regime.

Read more

Insecurity affects tourism in Manabí as nine cruise ships canceled their arrival in Manta.

Read more

Ecuador Gains Ground with Palm Heart, Secures 75% of the Global Market.

Read more

Thai Lotus News

Google ad

Quinta Maria News

Gran Colombia Suites News

Country living News

Fund Grace News