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As of this Friday, Guyana is placed under reconfinement for seventeen days due to the “deterioration” of the health situation in this territory, the prefecture of Guyana announced Thursday. This confinement will extend for a little over two weeks, from Friday May 14 to Sunday May 30 inclusive, according to a press release from the prefecture. In this overseas territory of nearly 300,000 inhabitants, the incidence is “346 cases per 100,000 inhabitants” over seven rolling days, according to the latest data from the Regional Health Agency (ARS).
For Guyanese people, this will be semi-confinement: schools and nurseries will remain open, but bars, restaurants, cinemas, public swimming pools (except for schools) will have to close their doors. Travel will again be subject to certification. When it comes to outdoor walks, the 10 km rule, and no more than an hour, also applies, authorities said.
Unions demand school closures
Gatherings of more than six people are also prohibited and are in addition to the curfew already in force from Saturday evening to Monday morning. The teachers’ union Unsa Guyane reacted by press release to the announcements and demanded “the closure” of schools for the time of reconfinement, in this territory where half of the inhabitants are under 25 years old. “Let senior officials come up with real solutions rather than using education as a band-aid,” the union said. The prefect argued Wednesday evening that the contaminations would be “stronger” in the family circle.
Among “10-19 years”, “contaminations are on the rise” with an incidence of 379 / 100,000 last week, according to data from health authorities. A “19-year-old” patient was still in “intensive care” on Wednesday according to the ARS. “A new increase in contaminations, admissions to hospitalization and intensive care has begun” and the “trend” is “strongly upward” in this territory, where the South African and Brazilian variants circulate, noted the prefecture.
On Thursday, the intensive care beds were nearly 69% occupied (24/35). AFP has recorded 113 Covid deaths (including those cross-checked at home) since the first in Guyana, on April 20, 2020. In recent days, a “military resuscitation module” of “6 beds” as well as 35 professionals have arrived in support hospital teams.
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