Experts from the National Steering Committee for COVID-19 Prevention
and Control check a quarantine centre in the northern mountainous
province of Lao Cai. (Photo: VNA)
Associate professor Tran Dac Phu, senior advisor to the Vietnam Emergency
Operations Centre, told Ha Noi Moi (New Hanoi) newspaper that the current risk
of infection was mainly due to a lack of strict control of entry and lax
quarantining.
Each ministry, branch and locality must continue to seriously implement pandemic
prevention and control measures, he said, adding that along with the strict
control and prevention of illegal entry, local authorities and police need to
closely monitor border areas, especially land borders.
Along calling on provincial and municipal health departments to strictly
implement COVID-19 pandemic prevention and control measures, Minister of Health
Nguyen Thanh Long urged the entire health sector to consider pandemic prevention
an immediate and long-term central task.
"To celebrate Tet in a healthy and safe manner, people should implement the
pandemic prevention and control measures set by the health sector. Border
provinces need to implement strong measures to prevent illegal entry, raise
vigilance and fight signs of neglect," he said.
There are only about 20 days until Tet, so more people are out and about
shopping. To ensure safety, Tran Van Chung, deputy director of the Hanoi
Department of Health, said that inspectors would focus on checking food
businesses’ COVID-19 prevention and control in supermarkets, restaurants,
shopping malls and markets. Those that fail to comply with pandemic preventive
measures would be penalised.
Chung told food producers and traders to increase hygiene and disinfection,
measure body temperatures, put antiseptic hand sanitiser in a convenient
location, guide customers to wear masks, wash hands with antiseptic and refuse
to serve customers who do not wear masks.
People working in customer contact positions should wear masks properly, limit
handshakes and keep a distance of about one metre when in contact with
customers. People should not enter service areas if they show signs of fever or
cough, difficulty breathing, fatigue or are in home quarantine following the
request of health authorities.
Nguyen Khac Hien, Director of the Hanoi Department of Health, said the number of
people travelling during Tet was very large, so at bus stations managers must
strengthen measures to fight the pandemic.
Officers, employees and passengers entering and leaving stations must conduct
sterilisation and wear masks to ensure safety. Bus stations must also arrange
security forces to closely monitor regulation implementation.
At medical examination and treatment establishments, it is necessary to review
the entire medical examination and treatment process and strictly comply with
the health ministry's pandemic prevention regulations.
“The simple but most effective ‘weapon’ to fight the pandemic is the people’s
awareness, for their family, for the community and the society," said Hien.
Source: VNA