Patients waiting in stretchers outside hospital as Hong Kong struggles with Covid wave
Hospitals are overwhelmed by Covid as patients wait in an alleyway to be admitted, ITV News Asia Correspondent Debi Edward reports
Hong Kong is struggling to deal with a wave of Covid that has forced patients to lie in stretchers covered in blankets outside hospitals as the healthcare system struggles.
China’s leader Xi Jinping has said the local government’s “overriding task” was to control the situation as the city's "zero-Covid" strategy breaks down.
Hong Kong is facing its worst outbreak of the pandemic, topping 2,000 new Covid-19 cases each day this week.
The city government has already instituted strict rules banning gatherings of more than two households.
But health care facilities are beginning to overflow, and the city’s Caritas Medical Centre was forced on Wednesday to treat some patients in beds outside the building.
Others were waiting in tents, some appalled by the government’s response to the outbreak.
Patients have no choice but to lie outside the hospital
“The reason why our society has become chaotic like this today is all because of this policy," said Daisy Ho, a 70-year-old homemaker.
"The organisational skill of the government has made Hong Kong people feel so hopeless.”
President Xi directed Vice Premier Han Zheng to pass concerns on to Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam that Chinese Communist Party leaders have about the city’s ongoing outbreak, according to Wen Wei Po, a pro-Beijing news outlet.
China’s central government agencies and neighbouring Guangdong province will provide Hong Kong with resources to fight the outbreak, including rapid antigen tests, medical expertise and supplies, Mr Zheng said.
China has been able to control the virus within its borders by maintaining a strict “zero tolerance” policy that involves total lockdowns, extensive contact tracing and mass testing millions of people.
The strategy seeks to contain outbreaks as soon as they are detected.
Ms Lam has stuck to the strategy despite geographical and other differences between Hong Kong and other parts of China.
Last week, the entire upscale Discovery Bay neighbourhood in Hong Kong was ordered to undergo testing after authorities found traces of the virus in its sewage.
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Thousands of people in the city have tested positive for Covid-19 and are waiting to be admitted into hospitals or isolation facilities, said Dr Sara Ho, the chief manager for patient safety and risk management at the Hong Kong Hospital Authority.
“This situation is undesirable," she added. "Therefore, we are looking for ways with the government to set up more isolation facilities. We hope to shorten the patients’ waiting time.”
People who test positive are required to quarantine either in hospitals if they have serious symptoms or in government-run facilities for light or asymptomatic cases.
The record number of new cases, driven by the highly transmissible omicron variant, has led to the current overcrowding.
Yancey Yau, a construction worker, said the city’s hospital workers are facing heavy stress.
“They are working so hard. But the government is not doing what they should do,” Yau said.
“The hospital workers are just miserable. I hope more citizens will support them. I don’t have any hope for this government.”
By contrast, the city-state of Singapore, which is similarly sized to Hong Kong with a population of some 5.7 million compared to 7.5 million, undertook strict lockdown measures early in the pandemic but is now pursuing a “living with Covid” approach.
The number of new cases per capita in Singapore has skyrocketed with the arrival of omicron, with 1,911 new cases per million people reported on Monday, versus 66 per million in Hong Kong, according to Our World in Data.
But people testing positive who have no symptoms or only mild symptoms just need to self-quarantine at home, and even those who have more severe symptoms are told to see a physician for medical advice before going to the hospital.
Consequently, it is not suffering the stress on its health care system that Hong Kong is now experiencing.
Singapore also boasts one of the world’s highest vaccination rates, with 88% of its population fully vaccinated, compared to Hong Kong’s 64%.