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Highly contagious delta variant arrives with returning nationals - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Trinidad and Tobago confirmed its first two cases of the covid19 delta variant of concern on Wednesday. The variant was detected in two recently returned nationals who travelled from the US and Guyana.

In a release, the Health Ministry said the first patient is a recently returned national who travelled to Trinidad from the United States. The second came to Trinidad from Mexico (transiting through Panama and Guyana).

“As per existing quarantine protocols, the nationals provided negative PCR tests which were taken 72 hours prior to arrival. The nationals were immediately placed into state-supervised quarantine, as per the protocol for unvaccinated adults. As a result of the positive covid19 results from their seventh day swab, the persons were subsequently transferred and isolated in a state step-down facility on Wednesday.”

The ministry said the presence of the delta variant was confirmed via gene sequencing at the laboratory of the Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of the West Indies.

“As the public is aware, this laboratory has been testing covid19 positive samples from TT and other Caricom member states since September 2020.”

The Health Ministry reminded the public that on July 16, 2021, quarantine protocols had been updated for people entering the country.

“These protocols state that all returning adults, who are not fully vaccinated against covid19, should spend 14 days in a state-supervised quarantine facility. These entry protocols will continue to be implemented.”

Speaking at the ministry’s covid19 media briefing on Wednesday, hours before the announcement was made, Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh appealed to the public to get vaccinated before there was a crisis.

“I’m asking the public, don’t wait for the advent of some variant that you are now scared about, to then rush to the sites to be vaccinated. We have been talking about the inevitable discovery of the delta variant for over a month now. Get vaccinated.”

Deyalsingh said a month ago the Health Ministry held a meeting with Pan-American Health Organisation, the Caribbean Public Health Agency and the five Regional Health Authorities, to plan for the inevitable discovery of the delta variant in TT.

“We identified the various touch points, including the boosting of the Accident and Emergency response, and the boosting of the ICU response. Dr Richards was given a mandate by me directly to introduce our ICU capacity by 100 per cent in TT. We trained over 150 local nurses in ICU management last year, and we brought in 12 Cuban ICU nurses last year and 30 Cuban nurses this year. However, as we keep saying, a bed is not a bed, a bed needs people around it, and there may come a time, if the delta variant takes hold of the unvaccinated population and floods the hospital systems, no matter how much physical capacity you put there, there aren’t multiples of 100 per cent and 200 per cent of additional doctors and nurses and everything else. It doesn’t exist anywhere in the world, and you are seeing hospitals in countries near and far

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