MANILA, Philippines — President Rodrigo Duterte expanded the Philippines' travel ban on China and its special administrative regions on Sunday, the same day that the first death in the Philippines from the 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-
nCoV) was announced.
The ban came more than a week after Wuhan City, the epicenter of the epidemic in China, implemented a lockdown.
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Health reform advocate Anthony
Leachon, former
Philhealth independent director, said the travel ban was "too late" as the virus has entered the Philippines.
Leachon said even the World Health Organization (WHO) have been too lax on the travel advisory.
"In fact, when on January 23 when China self-lockdown, that was actually the hint for the government and the entire world
and WHO
to actually declare a public health emergency of international concern,"
Leachon told ANC's "Headstart
" Monday.
Citing epidemiologic studies,
Leachon said the only effective way to reduce the epidemic is a total travel ban.
Only 'extensive' travel restrictions have meaningful effect
De La Salle University political science professor
Ador Torneo, meanwhile, said extent and timing are important factors in the effectivity of travel restrictions in containing pandemics.
Citing a WHO systematic titled "Effectiveness of travel restrictions in the rapid containment of human influenza", Torneo noted that the mode of travel, geography, proximity, screening, quarantine and other factors matter.
The WHO systematic review published September 2014 noted that overall travel restrictions only had limited effectiveness in preventing influenza spread.
"Only extensive travel restrictions—i.e. over 90%—had any meaningful effect on reducing the magnitude of epidemics," the WHO paper read.
"In isolation, travel restrictions might delay the spread and peak of pandemics by a few weeks or months but we found no evidence that they would contain influenza within a defined geographical area," it added.
Noting that implementing travel bans are effective, the WHO study found that such restrictions have an appeal to policy-makers as they "
demonstrate that a tangible attempt is being made to prevent the ingress of a novel virus or prevent onward spread."
Combination of interventions more effective
The study, however, concluded that a combination of interventions would be more effective than isolated ones.
"Travel restrictions per se would not
be sufficient to achieve containment in a given geographical area, and their contribution to any policy of rapid containment is likely to be limited," it said.
Another study on the spread of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic found that fluctuations of human mobility patterns dampened the effect of travel restrictions and mitigation.
In a journal article titled "Human Mobility Networks, Travel Restrictions, and the Global Spread of 2009 H1N1 Pandemic", researchers observed that the decline in air travel to and from Mexico at the time has too little impact on the international spread of the disease.
"Stricter regimes of travel reduction would have led to delays on the order of two weeks even in the optimistic case of early intervention. It is unlikely that given the ever-increasing mobility of people travel
restrictions could be used effectively in a future pandemic event," the journal article read.
A study on the impact of travel restrictions on the 2014 West African Ebola epidemic noted that while travel bans postponed the spread of the virus to other continents, it also posed logistical constraints on the management of the epidemic.
The restrictions would have caused major shortages on food, energy and essential resources if not offset by massive humanitarian operations, according to a study titled "Assessing the impact of travel restrictions on international spread of the 2014 West African Ebola epidemic."
"This study
indicates that travel bans are only delaying the further international spread of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa for a limited time, at the risk of compromising connectivity to the region, mobilisation of resources to the affected area and sustained response operations, all actions of critical value for the immediate local control of EVD and for preventing its further geographical spread," it read.
Going back to the 2019-
nCoV threat, DLSU professor Torneo said the Philippines could have significantly slowed down and had more time to set up defenses if the government
was able to reduce the entry of tourists before confirmed cases.
Aside from factors mentioned in several studies on the effectivity of travel restrictions on containing pandemics, Torneo said policy
objective is also important.
"Governments with more modest goals such as calming the public and delaying or slowing down the spread of infections while it sets up systems or waits for more information or a cure are less likely to
be disappointed compared to governments that believe they can contain or isolate it," Torneo told
Philstar.com