The Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, formerly one of the few places in the world untouched by coronavirus, has recorded its first Covid-19 case. This was contained in a report on the CNN verified twitter handle and states further that;
The Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, formerly one of the few places in the world untouched by coronavirus, has recorded its first Covid-19 case after a 23-year-old man who returned from traveling to the US tested positive while he was quarantining. https://t.co/h3GzgUOTw8
— CNN International (@cnni) November 11, 2020
This week, a 23-year-old man who’d returned from traveling to the US tested positive while he was quarantining. The man, who’d flown back to Vanuatu on November 4, was asymptomatic, Vanuatu’s health ministry said Tuesday.
“Physical distancing and personal protection measures were applied and maintained during the flight, throughout the arrival process, during transport to and during registration at the quarantine facility,” the ministry said in a news release.
The man will remain in isolation until health clearance is given, the ministry said.
Coronavirus has spread to 217 countries and territories, and there are over 51 million cases of Covid-19 worldwide. Over 1.3 million people have died from the virus since China reported its first case in late December 2019.
Vanuatu, a country of nearly 300,000, had avoided recording any Covid-19 cases. It likely avoided the virus because of its remote location — it’s over 1,000 miles from Australia, its largest neighbor — and because it’s made up of several smaller, unconnected islands.
Vanuatu considers the single case of Covid-19 a “border case” and will move to contain the spread of the virus. It won’t shut down schools or workplaces or impose restrictions on gatherings, but it will maintain hand washing stations throughout the country and encourage residents to follow hygiene measures.
The country’s next stage, if a cluster of cases are recorded, will include travel restrictions between islands and the use of masks for people with Covid-19 symptoms.
Source: CNN