22 new COVID-19 infections in Singapore, the lowest number in almost 6 months

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SINGAPORE: Singapore reported 22 new cases of COVID-19 at noon on Monday (7 September), the lowest daily figure in almost six months. The last minimum of 17 new cases on 16 March.

The newest take the national general to 57,044.

All new ones are asymptomatic and have been detected as a result of screening and surveillance, the Ministry of Health (MINSA) said.

Netpaintings infection is a 35-year-old paint pass bearer from Bangladesh.

The man, known as case 57170, detected after the regime tests on the payroll of personnel from the construction, marine and procedures living outdoors of the bedrooms, his case has not been linked lately.

There are also 3 imported boxes, all of which were put into execution when they arrived in Singapore.

An imported case is that of a 47-year-old man, a permanent resident of Singapore who returned to Singapore from India on 26 August; another case is that of a 47-year-old woman, who has recently been hired in Singapore and has arrived from the Philippines . 26 August.

The last case is that of a 32-year-old woman with a dependent’s pass who arrived from India on August 26.

The Ministry of Health said the total number of new ones in the network had decreased from an average of 3 consistent with last week’s day to an average of two consistent with last week’s day.

Meanwhile, the number of unrelated people on the network has increased from an average of one case consistent with last week’s day to an average of two consistent with last week’s day.

Of the 18 instances living in dormitories, the ministry of fitness said nine had been known as contacts from past instances and had already been quarantined to prevent further transmission.

The other nine cases were detected through surveillance tests, such as fortnightly regimen tests on bedroom living.

“This allows us to temporarily stumble upon cases, adding asymptomatic cases, so that we can temporarily isolate them to save you additional transmission by aggressively monitoring, tracking, and isolating nearby contacts,” the ministry said.

In addition to the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) check, the MINSA stated that it had also performed serological checks to determine whether or not some of these cases existed were infections.

The serological effects of six cases have yielded positive results so far, indicating likely previous infections.

The Ministry of Health said that 86% of new instances are imported or connected to known instances or groups, while the rest are pending contact. Other main points can be discovered in the department’s prestigious report.

Several new sites have been added to the list of public posts visited through COVID-19 instances on the network during their infectious period.

Popular grocery stores such as VivoCity, Lucky Plaza, Mustafa Center and AMK Hub are available. The construction and gardens of the Immigration and Checkpoint Authority (ICA) near the bay were also on the list.

SLEEP GROUPS CONTINUE TO GROW

More cases of COVID-19 have been connected to bedroom groups. The Ministry of Health said 3 new coronavirus infections are connected to Kian Teck’s dormitory group, which has a total of 1,181 cases shown.

Three more instances are connected to the Sungei Tengah Lodge cluster, bringing the total to 202 instances.

The Tuas View bedroom group reported a new total of 10 cases shown after two more infections were linked.

Two instances are also connected to the Westlite Toh Guan cluster, which has a total of 24 instances displayed.

75 PATIENTS DOWN

75 patients with COVID-19 were discharged from hospitals or network isolation facilities, and a total of 56,408 have fully recovered from the infection, the Ministry of Health said.

There are 51 cases still shown in the hospital, of which the maximum are solid or improving, none of the cases are in the extensive care unit.

A total of 558 patients are estranged and cared for in network facilities. These are other people who have mild symptoms or who are clinically fine, but still tested positive for COVID-19.

To date, 27 other people have died as a result of COVID-19 headaches.

13,000 WORKERS MISS COVID-19 TEST DEADLINE

Authorities said in a separate update Monday night that lately 13,000 employees cannot return to their paintings, as they have still undergone mandatory regime testing at COVID-19.

AccessCode’s prestige of these 13,000 employees will remain “red” and they will not be able to return to work, for the skill and protection of the rest of the staff. Your prestige will return to “green” once tests listed have passed through the regime.

As a component of the guards to ensure that they return to the paintings, the staff staying in the bedrooms, the construction, marine and procedural personnel, and the body of the staff who stop at the paint sites must undergo regime tests for COVID-19 every 14 days. . .

MORE COVID-19 GROUPS IN DORMES

On Sunday, new COVID-19 groups were met in 3 dormitories of migrant staff who had in the past been free of coronavirus, a network case connected to one of the groups.

The 3 new bands were: Cassia – Penjuru on 15 Penjuru Walk, CDPL Tuas Dormitory at 6 Tuas South Street 15 and Kranji Lodge I on 12 Kranji Road.

The community case, a 34-year-old Indian citizen, linked to the new CDPL Tuas bedroom group.

Staff in the construction, maritime and procedures sectors living outdoors in dormitories were detected as part of the Ministry of Health’s testing regime.

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