Ukraine has entered “a serious wave” of the
coronavirus pandemic, Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal told a June 25 cabinet
meeting, the same day that COVID-19 cases caused surged to their latest daily
record. “The occupancy of hospitals has significantly increased. There are
regions where it exceeds 50%. Unfortunately, this is an exceptionally negative
signal. This means that we have entered a serious illness phase of the
coronavirus,” said Shmyhal, as reported by the pravda.com.ua news site. He
added, “We can state that the situation has significantly worsened. Ukrainian
doctors and epidemiologists are telling us about one main reason people stopped
upholding restrictions. And local governments, in order not to lose political
points, continues to weaken restrictions that remained at the local level.”
The way to save the country and economy from decline,
while refraining from a return to a severe quarantine/lockdown, is to uphold
the restrictions of the adaptive model, Shmyhal said. These are wearing masks,
frequently using disinfectants and maintaining social distancing. Meanwhile,
the government is preparing its second wave of hospitals to accept the larger
number of patients, he said.
Citizens using mass public transport continue to
violate preventive measures such as wearing masks and maintaining social
distance, a representative of the Internal Affairs Ministry told the president
during his daily coronavirus meeting. Meanwhile, fines on enterprises and
eateries have tripled in the last three days while a total of UAH 5 mln in
fines has been imposed, the official said, as reported by the president’s
office website. “If we don’t stop this growth, we will have the peak of
infections right in the middle of summer. It will be bad for everyone. Then no
one will be happy about the quarantine’s relaxation,” Zelensky said.
Cases of the COVID-19 disease caused by the
coronavirus surged to 1,109 on June 25, which is the latest daily record,
Health Minister Maksym Stepanov reported at this daily briefing this morning. An
estimated 19 patients died, while 541 recovered. COVID-19 cases reached a new
record of 113 in the city of Kyiv, though one death was reported. The current
fatality rate of the virus in Ukraine is 2.6%, compared to 3.1% on Apr. 8 and
2.4% on Apr. 3.
“This is all thanks to the work of our medical
workers, and thanks to the work of leading experts, who set the treatment
standards. At the same time, our healthcare system has a certain limit. And
when 200-205 people are hospitalized every day, that fills the beds and we can
reach a situation when these beds run out. And the single prevention for this
not to happen is to use Health Ministry recommendations,” Stepanov said.
Zenon Zawada: Shmyhal’s
comments yesterday confirm our suspicion that the government is doing
everything it can to avoid reimposing a severe quarantine/lockdown out of
political concerns, especially ahead of the October local elections. Though he
shifted blame on local governments for relaxing restrictions to score political
points, it’s the central government that allowed for that to happen when
adopting the adaptive quarantine model. This would account for recent
inconsistent policies, in which the city of Kyiv decided to allow the reopening
of cultural events and theatres, at the same time that its infection rate
didn’t meet Health Ministry thresholds for relaxing restrictions.
We expect the central government to do everything
possible to avoid a return to a severe quarantine/lockdown. For it to be
imposed, we believe the critical criterion will be hospital occupancy. If that
figure exceeds the 50% threshold per hospital in enough regions (at least 10,
for example), causing enough public outrage that currently doesn’t exist, the
cabinet could decide to act next week. Ultimately, the political losses of not
reimposing a severe quarantine will have to exceed the losses of reimposing
one. That’s not the case just yet.