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Indonesia’s coronavirus spike has health experts worried

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Health workers check the blood pressure of residents before vaccination in Banda Aceh, Indonesia on June 10.

A jump in coronavirus cases on Indonesia’s two most populous islands has health experts worried the worst could be yet to come, with few curbs on movement at a time when dangerous variants drive record fatalities elsewhere in Southeast Asia.

Case numbers have risen sharply in Java and Sumatra three weeks after holidays that followed the Islamic fasting month, when millions ventured across the archipelago, ignoring a temporary travel ban.

In Kudus, central Java, cases skyrocketed 7,594% since then, according to Wiku Adisasmito of Indonesia’s Covid-19 taskforce. Health care reinforcements have been brought in, but hospital capacity had hit 90%, local media reported.

    Defriman Djafri, an epidemiologist from Andalas University in Padang, said fatalities in West Sumatra in May were the highest on record.

      In Riau on Sumatra, daily cases more than doubled from early April to over 800 by mid-May, while the positivity rate was at 35.8% last week, said Wildan Asfan Hasibuan, an epidemiologist and provincial task force adviser.

        Beyond India, a growing number of Asian countries are being ravaged by fresh coronavirus waves

        Wildan attributed the spike to increased mobility and possible spread of coronavirus variants, which have driven big spikes in many countries.

        The impact of variants is hard to determine in Indonesia, which has limited genomic sequencing capacity.

          The country also has testing and tracing shortfalls, and its immunization drive has progressed slowly, with one in 18 people targeted for inoculations fully vaccinated so far.

          Recent studies have also indicated cases could be far higher than the nearly 1.9 million known infections, among Asia’s highest caseloads.

          Dicky Budiman, an epidemiologist from Australia’s Griffith University, said Indonesia should take variants more seriously — particularly the B.1.617.2 strain, first identified in India, which he said was in its early stage of spreading.

            “If we don’t change our strategy, we will face an explosion of cases in the community, mortality will increase,” he said.

            “It means sooner or later it will reach the more vulnerable … we will face an explosion of cases which we cannot contain or respond to in our health facilities.”

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