Why does Russia, population
146 million, have fewer coronavirus cases than Luxembourg?
By Mary Ilyushina, CNN
Moscow (CNN)Russian President Vladimir
Putin said this week his country managed to stop the mass spread of coronavirus -- and that
the situation was "under control," thanks to early and aggressive
measures to keep more people
from getting the disease.
Does Russia
have coronavirus under control? According to information released by Russian
officials, Putin's strategy seems to have worked. The number of confirmed
Russian coronavirus cases are surprisingly low, despite Russia sharing a lengthy
border with China and recording its first case back in January.
The numbers
are picking up, but Russia -- a country of 146 million people -- has fewer
confirmed cases than Luxembourg, with just 253 people infected. Luxembourg, by
contrast, has a population of just 628,000, according to the CIA
World Factbook, and by
Saturday had reported
670 coronavirus cases with
eight deaths.
Russia's
early response measures -- such as shutting down its 2,600-mile border with
China as early as January 30, and setting up quarantine zones -- may have
contributed to the delay of a full-blown outbreak, some experts say.
A strong
record on testing
"The director-general of WHO said 'test, test,
test,'" Dr. Melita Vujnovic, the World Health Organization's
representative in Russia, told CNN Thursday. "Well, Russia started that
literally at the end of January."
Vujnovic said Russia also took a broader set of
measures in addition to testing.
"Testing and identification of cases, tracing
contacts, isolation, these are all measures that WHO proposes and recommends,
and they were in place all the time," she said. "And the social
distancing is the second component that really also started relatively
early."
Rospotrebnadzor, Russia's state consumer watchdog,
said Saturday that it had run more than 156,000 coronavirus tests in total. By
comparison, according
to CDC figures, the United
States only picked up the pace in testing at the beginning of March, while
Russia says it has been testing en masse since early February, including in
airports, focusing on travelers from Iran, China, and South Korea.
That's not to say there were no holes in Russia's
defenses. Russia didn't start testing those arriving from Italy or other badly
affected EU countries immediately, limiting its controls for arrivals from
Europe to taking temperatures and imposing two-week quarantines. The majority
of the coronavirus cases reported in Russia were brought from Italy, according
to health officials.
Distrust
among the population
Still, Russia contends with widespread public
skepticism, a legacy of its Soviet past. On social media, Russians have raised
questions referring to their country's poor track record of transparency, such
as the coverup around the Chernobyl nuclear catastrophe in 1986 and the
country's botched response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. Authorities have moved swiftly to counter what
they see as misinformation. In early March, Russia's Federal Security Service
and internet watchdog moved to take down a viral post claiming the real number
of coronavirus cases was 20,000 and that the Russian government was covering it
up. Facebook and Instagram users in Russia then started to see coronavirus
awareness alerts linking to Rospotrebnadzor's official website.
News reports
of shortages in protective equipment have also fueled skepticism. And some
experts have raised doubts about the reliability of Russia's testing system,
which depends on a single laboratory. A report by PCR. News, a media outlet for
medics and healthcare professionals, pointed out that the only approved
coronavirus testing system, produced by Vector in Novosibirsk, has a lower
sensitivity than other virus tests, raising concerns about false negatives.
David Berov,
the first confirmed coronavirus patient in Moscow wrote on Instagram that his second test showed a negative result, while the first and third tested positive
for coronavirus.
"The virus was confirmed in my third test, it was not seen in my blood but was in my
saliva," Berov wrote on March 5. "As I was told, they could barely
see it so that's why they were in doubt for so long."
Vector did
not respond to a request for comment. The Russian branch of the WHO, however,
told CNN it received the specifications for the Vector test kits and the laboratory had been placed on the list of approved institutions used to confirm
the coronavirus.
Cover-up
allegations rebutted by Kremlin and the WHO
Anastasia
Vasilyeva, a doctor for Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny and leader of
the Alliance of Doctors union made headlines with a series of videos in which
she claims the authorities are covering up real coronavirus numbers by using
pneumonia and acute respiratory infection as a diagnosis.
"You see
they said the first coronavirus patient that died, that the cause of death was
thrombosis," Vasilyeva told CNN. "That's obvious, nobody dies from
coronavirus itself, they die from the complications, so it's very easy to
manipulate this."
Moscow health
officials denied the accusation and said they were testing pneumonia patients
for coronavirus. The WHO's Dr. Vujnovic also was skeptical about Vasilyeva's
claim.
"If
there was a hidden, unrecognized burden somewhere it would be seen in these
[pneumonia] reports," she said. "So I do not believe this is
happening, which does not say that you might not see an increase of cases in
the next period, because we have seen that in many countries."
Putin himself
addressed the concerns about the statistics Wednesday, saying the government
might not have the full picture but is not covering up the numbers.
"Here is
the thing: the authorities may not possess the full information, because of people
a) sometimes do not report it, b) they themselves don't know that they are
sick, and the latent period is very long," he said in a televised meeting.
"But everything that is issued ... by the Ministry of Health is all
objective information."
This week the
numbers have surged, with Russia adding 30 to 50 cases every day and the count
will most likely continue its upward trajectory as Russia expands its testing.
Nevertheless, the local representative for the WHO says Russia is still doing
relatively well, as the country tracks cases with epidemiological links to
travel or family transmission. On Saturday morning, Rospotrebnadzor released a
figure potentially more concerning than the number of confirmed cases -- 36,540
people are being monitored for possible coronavirus.
Meanwhile,
the government moved to impose more sweeping measures, canceling public events
and closing Russia's borders to foreigners, with some exceptions. But politics, as usual, continues under Putin: the President has signed a decree scheduling a
nationwide referendum on constitutional amendments that could see him stay in
power till 2036 on April 22. The authorities have vowed to monitor coronavirus
developments but so far have not changed the date.
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