Singapore’s Experience in Managing the COVID-19 Pandemic: Key Lessons from the Ground

Author:

Koh Eugene TC1,Fong Kok Yong2,Chong Si Jack1,Koh Yvonne1,Tan Joshua WX1,Chua Raymond3,Dan Yock Young4,Heng Derrick5,Mak Kenneth6

Affiliation:

1. Crisis Strategy and Operations Group (CSOG), Ministry of Health, Singapore

2. Singapore Health Services (SingHealth), Ministry of Health, Singapore

3. Health Regulation Group, Ministry of Health, Singapore

4. Health Services Group, Ministry of Health, Singapore

5. Public Health Group, Ministry of Health, Singapore

6. Director-General of Health’s Office, Ministry of Health, Singapore

Abstract

Singapore managed the COVID-19 pandemic in the past three years and gleaned valuable lessons on patient management when the public healthcare system was inundated with COVID-19 patients. There were several initiatives, which included setting up of community treatment facilities to help hospitals manage in-patient loads that did not require acute monitoring, leveraging telemedicine, and developing heuristics to sort patients based on their clinical disposition to various care pathways and to effectively manage patients of different medical needs. These initiatives were implemented in the second year of the epidemic in 2021 and did not include the dormitory-based migrant workers and migrant workers in the construction, maritime and production sectors who were under the care of the Assurance, Care and Engagement Group (ACE) in the Ministry of Manpower that had its own set of treatment management measures. The different care pathways ensured that patients received appropriate levels of care and allowed healthcare facilities to focus on more acute cases. In 2022 alone, 23,159 patients were discharged from community treatment facilities against the background of 1.9 million COVID-19 patients. These initiatives would not be possible without the oversight of an advisory board comprising senior leadership from the healthcare clusters and the Ministry of Health to align clinical governance with medical policies, and prompt and immense support from medical specialist panels. The strong public-private partnership forged in the process was instrumental in the successful operation of community facilities and implementation of patient care protocols, coupled with harnessing information technology and leveraging on emerging data to refine care protocols.

Publisher

Academy of Medicine, Singapore

Subject

General Medicine

Reference11 articles.

1. Ministry of Health. COVID-19 Treatment Facilities (CTF) Clinical Governance Framework for Management of COVID-10 Patients. 8 July 2022. (unpublished)

2. Yau JWK, Lee MYK, Lim EQY, et al. Genesis, evolution and effectiveness of Singapore’s national sorting logic and home recovery policies in handling the COVID-19 Delta and Omicron waves. Lancet Reg Health West Pac 2023;35:100719.

3. Ministry of Health. COVID-19 Harmonised Healthcare Protocols. MOH Circular No. 111/2022.

4. Ministry of Health. Further Updates to COVID-19 Healthcare Protocols. MOH Circular No. 16/2022.

5. Ministry of Health. Further Streamlining of Healthcare Protocols for Paediatric Age Group (<12 Years Old). MOH Circular No. 36/2022.

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