Posted on 11/07/2020 6:52:58 PM PST by SeekAndFind
In 2020, most countries in the world locked down their societies with the goal of controlling the Covid-19 pandemic. There were some outliers. Sweden, Belarus, Tanzania, and some US states deployed little in the way of nonpharmaceutical interventions.
Another fascinating outlier often cited as a case in which a government handled the pandemic the correct way was Taiwan. Indeed, Taiwan presents an anomaly in the mitigation and overall handling of the Covid-19 pandemic.
In terms of stringency, Taiwan ranks among the lowest in the world, with fewer controls than Sweden and far lower than the U.S.
The government did test at the border and introduce some minor controls but nowhere near that of most counties. In general, Taiwan rejected lockdown in favor of maintaining social and economic functioning.
Source: Oxford University (stringency index) and Lancet
How did Taiwan fare in terms of cases? Taiwan has seen 573 cases, which is remarkably low for a country with a population of close to 24 million and a population density of 1,739 people per square mile.
Source: Worldometer
In terms of death, the numbers are even more striking. Throughout the entire pandemic, Taiwan experienced only 7 deaths. Of the deaths, the individuals were in their 40s to 80s, the majority with preexisting health conditions.
Source: Worldometer
To put this in perspective, in a stringent terrority with similar demographics, LA Countys population is 10 million and population density is 2,500 per square mile meaning slightly denser but less populated but by contrast, it has had 309,000 cases and 7,000 deaths.
A paper from the Lancet aims to answer this question by providing a few explanations. The authors main claim is that Taiwans rapid mobilization is ascribed to pre-Covid medical institutions, which include the Taiwan CDC, established in 1990, and the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC). In addition, Taiwans outbreak of SARS in 2003 allowed them to create plans for managing a similar disease later on.
For example, a 2005 study of SARS in Taiwan already discussed preparation measures in the case of a new outbreak, explaining that focus must be directed towards the older and immunocompromised populations and hospitals should be managed vigilantly.
Drawing on previous experience, Taiwan created a culture in which masks are worn widely and implemented advanced contact tracing technologies and early screening of international travelers. However, masks were not worn by all citizens and were rather valued for its protection from air pollution. The Lancet authors attribute these strategies to Taiwans low cases and deaths.
But here is a puzzle. Usually when public health intellectuals speak of a good handling of a pandemic, they express the need for widespread testing. That is followed by an exhortation to track and isolate. Again, Taiwan did some of this at the border. Taiwan did have a wide availability of tests unlike the US and did have an open testing approach so that anyone could get tested, symptomatic or not.
Even then, Taiwan had one of the lowest scores on tests per thousand of any country in the world. Only one person in 100,000 undertook a Covid-19 test.
The government maintained open communication and transparency with its citizens. For example, the Taiwan CDC produced daily reports on the state of coronavirus in the country. Taiwans reports are not politicized attempts to generate hysteria (as in places like the US and other European countries), but are straightforward and concentrated on the actual numbers.
This same strategy was also at work in places that did not impose lockdowns, including South Dakota and Sweden. Although one could argue that top-down approaches to information are flawed, there is something to be said for a country that values transparency because it allows for the public to have greater trust in the information provided to them.
As former Taiwanese Vice President Chen has stated:
I would like to point out a critical element of the Taiwan Model: transparency. From the very beginning of the pandemic, the Taiwanese government has spared no effort in ensuring that the general public has open access to COVID-19 information.
Another explanation for Taiwans proactive approach is that it possesses first-hand information on coronavirus management from its SARS-CoV-1 experience in 2003, which has informed its response and mitigation plans. The fact that Taiwan has dealt with another coronavirus outbreak previously has allowed it to alleviate devastating effects in later years.
Taiwanese health authorities shared information with other countries. Former VP Chen explained why this was crucial, given the Taiwanese SARS experience in 2003:
International cooperation is the only way to fight a global outbreak .We are more than happy to share our knowledge, experience, and expertise with the international community. Taiwan can help, and Taiwan is helping.
Nevertheless, other countries and NGOs fail to recognize Taiwans unique knowledge and thus do not consider it in the competing market of information that could ultimately inform policy decisions. Perhaps one of the reasons for this issue is that the WHO refuses to acknowledge Taiwans independence from China, thus excluding the country from participating in discussions surrounding the pandemic. This stubbornness prevents the dissemination of useful information that could protect people from illness and economic affliction, thus only serving to create harm.
We are still left with a mystery. Taiwan did not lock down. It did not widely test. And yet it had the lowest death rate per million of any populous country in the world. It experienced 0.3 deaths per million and ranks 189th in the world.
What, then, is the explanation? As much as public health authorities in the West want to consider policy as a decisive factor in the success or failure of pandemic response, the Taiwanese case might have nothing at all to do with the public policy response.
The real explanation deals with innate immunities from other vaccines or virus exposures. For example, a study found SARS-CoV-1 reactive T cells in patients who were infected with SARS 17 years ago. Even though about 680 people in Taiwan were infected with SARS in 2003, the study shows a possibility that enduring T cells could influence the effect SARS-CoV-2 has on people with certain preexisting immunities. A different study found that there were strong differences in mortalities between Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and Western countries, suggesting that genetic factors may also play a role in these disparities.
Although the extent of Taiwans governmental overstep and tracking could be viewed as constituting an infringement on individual rights and privacy, its lighter hand to Covid-19 management has proven wise. The country has seen extremely low cases and more importantly low death rates.
Its economic performance is projected to fare better than other countries. Taiwan is expected to experience a 0% growth rate in 2020 GDP neither losing nor gaining in wealth while US GDP is expected to contract by 3.5% in 2020.
The Lancet article draws on a significant conclusion regarding Taiwan, While some aspects of the Taiwan approach might not be acceptable in other jurisdictions, the potential social and economic benefits of avoiding lockdown might alleviate some objections.
This statement gets at the heart of Taiwans strategy: although the government may have overstepped relative to what was necessary, it was able to minimize costs by not shutting down or preventing all people from carrying on a normal life.
There are undoubtedly other reasons accounting for Taiwans success, such as its low poverty levels. Still, Taiwan presents an important case study that warrants further investigation. In 2003, Taiwan faced one of the highest SARS infection rates in the world. Now, the Covid-19 infection rate in Taiwan is one of the lowest despite the country not locking down.
The Taiwanese case reveals something extraordinary about pandemic response. As much as public-health authorities imagine that the trajectory of a new virus can be influenced or even controlled by policies and responses, the current and past experiences of coronavirus illustrate a different point. The severity of a new virus might have far more to do with endogenous factors within a population rather than the political response.
According to the lockdown narrative, Taiwan did almost everything wrong but generated what might in fact be the best results in terms of public health of any country in the world.
Sucks that all of these healthy Taiwanese will be killed when China invaded on January 21st.
Yep, our deaths are just broken eggs for their omelets.
bttt
I have trouble breathing in a mask.
“...an utter lack of crackpot views about masks...”
Another anus passes gas.
COVID or not.
And there, as in Japan and South Korea, COVID death rates as a fraction of the population are much less than not the US, and indeed almost any Western country.
Maybe theres something about Americans,
Another crackpot remains impervious to evidence.
Paradoxically, Hawaii adopted pretty much the same extreme measures for visitors and is now fighting a surge which I predicted would occur.
Clearly the problem is less about policy and more about biology.
My state just renewed a lockdown for 2 weeks, and it won’t accomplish a damned thing.
Good article post 1
Thanks
Didn’t Taiwan get on this far earlier than others. Think I read on FR that they blew whistle on the WHO/chicom coverup of when wuhan started
Body fat?
I only got past the first couple paragraphs before I was thinking genetic propensity
And then I thought of how few cases China is reporting...
Now I wonder if a virus can be developed to attack certain genotypes?
It is partly because Taiwan does not have a population which is obese and also pre-diabetic or diabetic.
Dr Lozano, the Cuban doctor who exposed the efforts of the Texas Board of Pharmacy to prevent filling of HCQ prescriptions, and who is a Trump supporter, referred to cv19 as primarily an American disease due to the above.
Masking imposes no real cost on the overwhelming majority of people, and a significant percentage of people who claim problems are whiners. (Perhaps many American whiners are fat; this is a very small problem in East Asia. Go to Worldometer if you arent familiar with the data on COVID there versus in the West..) In East Asia they accept masks without whining, but we dont
This is surely a part a little, a lot I cant say, but a part of why our COVID issues are worse than in East Asia.
An absolutely empty argument. This is difficult to achieve; way to go.
What you say about weight is correct, but you’re full of caca on masks. They don’t do anything except make unhealthy people even more susceptible to illness.
“You dont need a lockdown if you can stop the virus getting in in the first place”
Yes. There’s no mystery. Taiwan is an island nation with one major international airport.
They knew about the Wuhan virus in January and cut off all travel from China. They allowed entry in to Taiwan only after two week quarantine in China and then two week quarantine in Taiwan. All entrants to Taiwan were screened for virus and temperature.
All travel from other countries was stopped and the same stringent screening measures were out in place.
Cases in Taiwan were few enough for contact tracing and quarantine which was enforced.
They indeed shut off foreign travel (not just from China, although thats a big part of the travel to Taiwan) very quickly. All arrivals must quarantine for 2 weeks, and all foreigners from countries judged to have dropped the ball on COVID control (including the US) must be tested at the airport. In addition, Taiwan hasnt screwed up contact tracing as we have.
Yes, Taiwan has done a spectacular job limiting the spread of COVID-19. Far better than we have. But they have done it by relying on their citizens to do things that Americans are unwilling to do. If you say the benefits of Taiwan-style measures do not justify the costs in terms of liberty thats an argument I must take seriously. But anyone who says that Taiwans rate has nothing to do with their taking epidemic control seriously is delusional.
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