Activity map links three local virus cases with Wuhan visitors, Latest Singapore News - The New Paper
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Activity map links three local virus cases with Wuhan visitors

This article is more than 12 months old

When a Singaporean man living in Tampines, a woman who lived in Choa Chu Kang and a third Singaporean who went to Malaysia emerged as coronavirus cases, the authorities puzzled over how they could have contracted the infection.

They had no known links with existing cases.

Painstakingly, health and police officers interviewed each patient to draw up an activity map of what they had done and whom they had met.

Every minute of their 14 days before they felt ill had to be accounted for.

CHURCH

It was through this that officers uncovered that the trio had visited a church that two previous cases - a couple from Wuhan visiting family here - had gone to.

Mr Pream Raj, an assistant director in the Communicable Diseases Division of the Ministry of Health (MOH), and one of the leaders in the contact tracing effort, told The Straits Times: "The mapping is detailed, 24 hours, minute by minute, with no gaps."

If there are gaps, the team would call a patient to try and jog his memory. And if the patient is too sick, the team would approach his next of kin.

Details that officers want include where they had meals and with whom, the mode of transportation they used when travelling, whether they had done any marketing or even gone out for a walk.

All this information is then put into a system so that all the maps from all the patients can be cross-referenced. This is to see if there are any non-obvious overlaps, said Mr Raj.

Possible links are flagged, and further cross-checks made.

It was through this process that on Feb 8, the team was able to ascertain that a new possible cluster had formed, when the activity maps of the three Singaporeans and the Wuhan couple intersected at The Life Church and Missions Singapore at 146B Paya Lebar Road.

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