![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() įrom 3 September 2020 to, the country recorded no new COVID-19 related deaths. Along with that, Vietnam started its mass COVID-19 vaccination campaign on the next day. On 7 March 2021, the situation in northern provinces appears to have been largely brought under control when number of new cases fell to single digits. This is one of the most serious outbreak due to slow tracing process, mismanagement in quarantine facilities and people starting to ignore lockdown rules after long period of restrictions. But after half a month the number of cases still showed no signs of stopping, so on 15 February, entire province of Hải Dương was locked down for 15 days while Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City stopped all entertainment activities. Initially, the government only quarantine the areas directly related to the infected people to limit the economic impact. Most of these are related to a single Hải Dương migrant worker, who was diagnosed with the UK coronavirus variant by Japanese authorities after arriving in Osaka on 17 January. The third wave of infection began on 28 January 2021, when Vietnam recorded an additional 84 community transmission cases within a single day in Hải Dương and Quảng Ninh provinces. Sporadic community infections continue during November and December, causing public scare and heightened measures. After two months, by using the same strategies that have been used in the first outbreak, Vietnam has successfully contained the disease for the second time and has resumed almost all economic activities, including international commercial flights. Hundreds of cases across the country with epidemiological factors related to Da Nang were furthermore detected, and the first death was also recorded on 31 July. On 28 July, the Da Nang authorities immediately locked down the city for 15 days. The country entered second wave of infection when the Ministry of Health announced the 416th case in Da Nang, which was the first case with an unknown source of infection in 99 days. Vietnam began loosening restrictions in May, including resuming domestic travel across the country. The drastic epidemic control measures had positive results and the country did not confirm any cases of local transmission from mid-April to the end of July. On the same day, former Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuân Phúc announced the nationwide outbreak of COVID-19. From 1 April, Vietnam implemented a 15 days nationwide lockdown. Īfter 21 March 2020, Vietnam suspended entry for all foreigners from midnight of 22 March, and introduced concentrated isolation for 14 days in all cases of entry for Vietnamese citizens. ![]() In March and April 2020, the number of cases increased rapidly due to the large number of people coming from European countries and the appearance of clusters such as Bạch Mai Hospital, Ha Loi Commune in Hanoi and Buddha Bar in Ho Chi Minh City. On the afternoon of 20 March, the Ministry of Health announced 2 new COVID-19 patients, the 86th and 87th, who were two female nurses at Bạch Mai Hospital with no history of contact with any COVID-19 patients. When the pandemic spreads across the globe, the coronavirus cases in the country also surged, and on the evening of 6 March, the Hanoi Department of Health confirmed the first case in the capital, a 26-year-old woman who had travelled to Europe. March 2020–2021: sporadic outbreaks and strict measures This is like "an exercises" for the Vietnamese medical system in order to prepare and study the new virus. For the first 16 cases of the disease, the medical staff had to treat different types of patients, including infants, the elderly and people with underlying conditions. Having known cases early is one of the main reasons why Vietnam was successful in fighting the virus. The Vietnamese government immediately locked down Bình Xuyên District until 4 March 2020 to prevent the disease from spreading all over the country, the first large-scale lockdown outside China. The first cluster also appeared in Son Loi Commune, Bình Xuyên District, Vĩnh Phúc after a few workers returned from a training trip in Wuhan and infected other people in close contact with them. The son was believed to have contracted the virus from his father, who had earlier flown from Wuhan on 13 January, when they met in Nha Trang on 17 January. The first two confirmed cases in Vietnam, a Chinese man, born in 1954 and his son, were admitted to Cho Ray Hospital, Ho Chi Minh City, on 22 January 2020. Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues. ![]()
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