The Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) yesterday said that the mask mandate would be lifted in phases, as it predicted that daily case counts could fall below 10,000 by December.
Case numbers have begun falling, but the pace of decline is slow, CECC head Victor Wang (王必勝) told a regular news conference.
If the trend continues, daily cases could drop below 10,000 by December, he added.
Photo courtesy of the Keelung City Government
Minister of Health and Welfare Hsueh Jui-yuan (薛瑞元) has said that once cases fall below that number, COVID-19 would be considered “like the flu.”
Asked whether the CECC would downgrade or reclassify COVID-19 as a non-notifiable disease after case numbers fall, Wang said it would depend on the overall state of the pandemic, as well as other key factors.
Citing an example of how the pandemic situation could change, Centers for Disease Control Deputy Director-General Philip Lo (羅一鈞), deputy head of the CECC’s medical response division, said that the Omicron variant XBB.1 had recently been discovered in Tokyo, with experts predicting it could lead to an eighth wave of infections.
The variant currently accounts for 60 percent of cases in Singapore, he said.
However, while it is more transmissible compared with other variants, there are 30 percent fewer hospitalizations from infection with XBB.1, as well as fewer cases of death or severe illness, he said.
“Despite that, it is important for people to protect themselves, as reinfection with the variant is more likely due to immune escape,” he said.
In terms of how the mask mandate would be eased, Wang said it would be done in stages and that health officials would look at how other countries have loosened their mask policies.
Citing an example of how the first stage might be implemented, he said that masks might only be mandatory when taking public transportation or when going to hospitals or long-term care facilities.
The CECC reported 34,602 new COVID-19 infections — down 7.1 percent week-on-week — including 46 imported cases.
It also reported 57 deaths who ranged in age from their 40s to their 90s, the CECC said, adding that all but one had underlying health issues, while 23 were not vaccinated against COVID-19.
The CECC also reported 47 new cases classified as severe and 100 as moderate.
Taiwan has recorded 7,626,103 COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, including 36,270 classified as imported, and 12,620 deaths from the disease.
Additional reporting by CNA
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday voiced dissatisfaction with the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans- Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), whose latest meeting, concluded earlier the same day, appeared not to address the country’s application. In a statement, MOFA said the CPTPP commission had "once again failed to fairly process Taiwan’s application," attributing the inaction to the bloc’s "succumbing to political pressure," without elaborating. Taiwan submitted its CPTPP application under the name "Separate Customs Territory of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu" on Sept. 22, 2021 -- less than a week after China
ALIGNED THINKING: Taiwan and Japan have a mutual interest in trade, culture and engineering, and can work together for stability, Cho Jung-tai said Taiwan and Japan are two like-minded countries willing to work together to form a “safety barrier” in the Indo-Pacific region, Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) yesterday said at the opening ceremony of the 35th Taiwan-Japan Modern Engineering and Technology Symposium in Taipei. Taiwan and Japan are close geographically and closer emotionally, he added. Citing the overflowing of a barrier lake in the Mataian River (馬太鞍溪) in September, Cho said the submersible water level sensors given by Japan during the disaster helped Taiwan monitor the lake’s water levels more accurately. Japan also provided a lot of vaccines early in the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic,
THE GOOD WORD: More than 100 colleges on both sides of the Pacific will work together to bring students to Taiwan so they can learn Mandarin where it is spoken A total of 102 universities from Taiwan and the US are collaborating in a push to promote Taiwan as the first-choice place to learn Mandarin, with seven Mandarin learning centers stood up in the US to train and support teachers, the Foundation for International Cooperation in Higher Education of Taiwan (FICHET) said. At the annual convention of the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages held over the weekend in New Orleans, Louisiana, a Taiwan Pavilion was jointly run by 17 representative teams from the FICHET, the Overseas Community Affairs Council, the Steering Committee for the Test of Proficiency-Huayu, the
A home-style restaurant opened by a Taiwanese woman in Quezon City in Metro Manila has been featured in the first-ever Michelin Guide honoring exceptional restaurants in the Philippines. The restaurant, Fong Wei Wu (豐味屋), was one of 74 eateries to receive a “Michelin Selected” honor in the guide, while one restaurant received two Michelin stars, eight received one star and 25 were awarded a “Bib Gourmand.” The guide, which was limited to restaurants in Metro Manila and Cebu, was published on Oct. 30. In an interview, Feng Wei Wu’s owner and chef, Linda, said that as a restaurateur in her 60s, receiving an