COVID-19 is a sustained test of state capacity, and Southeast Asian countries are faring poorly, says a doctor.

 

Indonesia experiences oxygen supply shortage amid surge of COVID-19 cases, in Jakarta
FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective mask queues to refill oxygen tanks as Indonesia experiences an oxygen supply shortage amid a surge of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) cases, Jakarta, Indonesia, July 5, 2021. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan

 

KUALA LUMPUR: The second year of the COVID-19 pandemic has not been kind to Southeast Asian countries. The region is experiencing accelerated national-level tragedies played out in accelerated speed.

Few have any semblance of control. Brunei has had no community transmission since May 2020. Singapore has done comparatively more tests (2.2 tests per capita to Indonesia’s mere 0.04 per capita). And Vietnam has the region’s lowest mortality rate (0.71 per million – impressive given its population of 96 million).

Thailand had only 6,884 cases in 2020 but has seen 220,000 so far this year. Malaysia recorded 113,000 cases in 2020 but has had 592,000 cases since the beginning of the year – a number that is likely higher due to under-testing. Runaway infections in Indonesia have caused approximately 33,000 deaths over the first half of 2021.

This pandemic is a sustained test of state capacity, with many potential political or policy pitfalls. But there are many explanations for the diverging fates within Southeast Asia.

FACTORS FOR SUCCESSFUL COVID-19 MANAGEMENT

Countries that perform more tests (Singapore and Vietnam) appear to do better than those that do not (Indonesia or the Philippines).

Countries with strong central governments (Brunei, Singapore and Vietnam) also appear better able to marshal the whole-of-government and all-of-society approaches that are needed.

Although mass movements were cancelled in both 2020 and 2021, Indonesians still found ways around the ban and travelled to their hometowns for Eid Al-Fitr celebrations in May 2021. Thais still celebrated Songkran in April.

Both Indonesia and Thailand saw spikes approximately two weeks after. Pandemic fatigue and missing out on the biggest cultural holidays two years in a row was unacceptable for too many citizens.

 

Outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Bangkok
Authorities have banned for a second year the water fights that usually happen on the streets during Songkran. (Photo: Reuters)

 

 

Slow vaccination rates also seem to be contributing but are only part of the explanation. Slow vaccinations aren’t causing worse outcomes in Vietnam – which has by far the lowest number of cases per capita in Southeast Asia, despite only 2.4 per cent of Vietnamese receiving a vaccine.

This compares to 5.7 per cent in the Philippines, 7.9 per cent in Thailand and 8.4 per cent in Indonesia.

COVID-19 mutations are another potential explanation for the deterioration in 2021. Vietnam’s health minister has connected their recent surge to new, more infectious variants.

Yet the scale of the threat to Southeast Asia is difficult to quantify because the region does not have adequate genomic surveillance.

It is possible that the large waves of infections in 2021 are still due to the original version of SARS-CoV-2, given all Southeast Asian countries have strict restrictions on inbound international travel.

TURNING THE TIDE

Can Southeast Asia turn the tide in the second half of the year?

Strategies need to be better designed and involve solutions which should have already been familiar and logical – behavioural changes (masks and physical distancing), testing, tracing and isolation, and targeted short-term movement restrictions (instead of blunt prolonged national lockdowns).

Policy implementation must be evidence-based, well-financed and free from excessive red tape. Policies should integrate with private healthcare, as it forms 53 per cent of the sector in Southeast Asia.

Countries also need to vaccinate as fast as possible. Countries can build pop-up vaccination centres (as has been done in mosques in rural Indonesia), fight vaccine hesitancy (such as restaurant discounts and lucky draws seen in the Philippines), partner with the private sector (as Malaysia or Singapore have done), develop their own vaccines (as in Vietnam and Thailand), and offer free last-mile transport to vaccination centres.

Countries should also prepare the health, legal, regulatory and political infrastructure for matters surrounding vaccination, such as vaccine passports and antibody tests.

 

Malaysia hopsital covid-19
File photo of healthcare workers in Malaysia testing people for COVID-19. (Photo: Facebook/Noor Hisham Abdullah) 

 

 

Southeast Asian countries need to better collaborate and look beyond their own borders for solutions. A pooled vaccine procurement system could help and could be modelled off the Pan American Health Organization’s Revolving Fund.

Pooled procurement can reduce costs, improve equity and increase negotiating power with pharmaceuticals. Feeding into great power engagement in Southeast Asia, the involvement of the United States and China could be requested in the financing, technical and political set-up of such a fund.

Southeast Asia could also more actively participate in the global discourse on vaccine equity and global health governance reform.

Countries in the region could get more involved in the global effort to secure patent waivers and technology transfers for COVID-19-related medical goods. This would allow Indonesian, Malaysian and Singaporean factories to produce vaccines for regional use.

Badly hit Southeast Asian countries can recover in the second half of 2021 by better absorbing lessons from 2020 and other countries. Recovery will depend on understanding the science, exercising good judgment and through opposing hubris, petty politics and complacency.