The U.S. Embassy in San Jose and the U.S. State Department have coordinated with United Airlines to offer an additional commercial flight from Juan Santamaria Airport (SJO) in San Jose, Costa Rica to Houston, Texas (IAH) on Thursday, April 30.
The flight will depart SJO at 12:00 pm and arrive at IAH at 4:46 pm. This flight is open to public booking; you are encouraged to book ASAP as seats are limited. There may also be a few seats remaining on the United flight from SJO to IAH on Monday, April 27. Please visit www.united.com for further information regarding availability.
Payment and booking will be done directly with United Airlines. The cost of the flight will be based on the passenger’s final destination. This price is set by United Airlines. Passengers can purchase a one-way ticket or round trip.
Passengers wishing to book connecting flights from Houston to other destinations in the United States or beyond should do so independently through United or other airlines. The U.S. Embassy is not able to assist with arranging onward travel from Houston. Policies regarding luggage allowances and seating arrangements will be managed by United Airlines.
For additional questions regarding this flight or airline requirements, please contact the airline.
Passengers traveling with pets and Emotion Support or Service Animals will need to consult with United regarding additional fees and space availability. United Airlines does not allow pets to travel as cargo. Proper documentation and veterinary certificates will be required. Find more details when making your booking or by visiting this link.
For more information on requirements for pets to enter the United States, please click on this link.
Health regulations for boarding these flights will be managed according to Costa Rican Ministry of Health guidelines. At this time that includes medical personnel monitoring passenger lines for people with COVID 19 symptoms, and asking passengers with symptoms to self-identify.
Health regulations for arrival at Houston’s IAH airport are managed by the airport and Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) under guidance from CDC and state health officials.
All passengers will be subject to Costa Rica immigration and customs laws and Airline policies. The U.S. Embassy is not able to intervene if people are stopped for violations or do not meet airline regulations.
U.S. Citizens must have valid passports to enter the United States. If you do not have a valid U.S. passport, please email ACSsanjose@state.gov immediately to apply for an Emergency Passport.
Foreign national passengers must possess an official travel document from their country of nationality and permission to approach a United States port of entry such as a legal permanent resident card, U.S. visa, or Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) pre-approval. For more information on U.S. entry follow this link: https://www.cbp.gov/travel.
For information on requesting an emergency visa application appointment call 4000-1976, or visit: www.ustraveldocs.com/cr/cr-niv-expeditedappointment.asp. Note that foreign nationals seeking visas must qualify for a nonimmigrant visa under applicable laws, and that per U.S. Presidential Proclamation, most foreign nationals who have been in areas of highest COVID-19 incidence within the past 14 days must be refused embarkation to the United States. See complete details at www.ustraveldocs.com/cr.
The U.S. Embassy in San Jose will continue to monitor traffic and travel restrictions associated with COVID-19 preventative measures. Please be sure you are enrolled in the Safe Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) at https://travel.state.gov/content/travel.html to receive the latest updates. You can also find updated information on the U.S. Embassy website at https://cr.usembassy.gov/.
Please be aware that foreigners will not be allowed to enter Costa Rica until after current border restrictions are lifted. People with residency status who depart Costa Rica at this time will not be allowed to re-enter Costa Rica using their residency status until the emergency period is lifted by the Government of Costa Rica.
You can email any additional questions you may have to ACSSANJOSE@state.gov. We will respond to your email as quickly as possible.
The foregoing is provided by the U.S. Embassy in San Jose. Visit the alert page here.
Daniel Salas, the Minister of Health, on Wednesday, alone at the briefing from Casa Presidencial, had a mellower demeanor that in days before, leaving behind the scoldings to which we had accustomed to, rating taking the time to congratulate most Costa Ricans for staying at home.
Minister of Health Daniel Salas congratulated those Ticos who are paying attention by staying at home. Photo: Rafael Pacheco / GN
Salas thanked the many who have followed the recommendations of social distancing and hygiene by constantly washing their hands, as well as cleaning the surfaces they touch and following the protocols when coughing and sneezing, as all of this has allowed the country to maintain the number of positive cases manageable.
“Many understand that it is a delicate moment and that is why they should not go out to public places unless it is essential to do so. I also congratulate those who have complied with the health orders, that population that shows a level of understanding because it is a challenging country that depends of all,” Salas said.
The minister also stressed that when we get out of this health emergency our lives will not be the same again, since we will have to get used to a new way of living and in which regular hand washing will be key.
This Wednesday, April 22, 12 new cases of COVID-19 were announced for a total of 681 infected people, since the first infected was released on March 6.
In addition, a total of 180 people have recovered. The number of active cases dropping to 495.
The number of patients in hospitals is 11, of which 8 are in intensive care.
Dance instructor Morgan Jenkins makes a video in Los Angeles, California in front of a mural during the coronavirus pandemic on April 3, 2020. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
We know that not everyone who comes into contact with the novel coronavirus ends up getting sick. But just how many people out there have the virus and are feeling fine — and are perhaps unknowingly spreading it to others?
People stand on their balconies in an apartment building in New Jersey overlooking the Hudson River and New York City during the coronavirus pandemic on March 30, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar
New data suggests it could be a lot.
For example, 60 percent of personnel aboard the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt who tested positive for the coronavirus appeared healthy at the time, Reuters reported. Other data — from Iceland and elsewhere — have uncovered similar patterns.
With testing capacity still limited, most governments continue to focus on people who are showing symptoms of Covid-19 so that they can be isolated. This is important for slowing the virus’s spread. But it also means that globally, we have lagged in finding people who are carrying the virus but aren’t currently sick — and might be spreading it.
(The early evidence that seemingly healthy people can still infect others with the coronavirus is one of the main reasons behind the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommendation that everyone wear a mask in public: so that people who don’t know they have the virus don’t accidentally infect others with it.)
So the big question everyone — including infectious disease experts — has is: How big of a role are these “silent spreaders” playing in this pandemic? It’s certainly significant.
People who feel fine are spreading the coronavirus
People were most infectious right before they started to show symptoms
Throughout the pandemic, public health officials have focused on the advice that people who have symptoms of Covid-19 should self-isolate. This is crucial, to be sure. But it is also becoming “increasingly clear that there are people who are either asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic who can transmit” the virus, Carlos del Rio, chair of the Department of Global Health at Emory University, told Vox.
In fact, people can start transmitting the virus 24 to 48 hours before they start showing symptoms, he said in a briefing for the Infectious Disease Society of America.
This timing detail is no small matter. And new research on presymptomatic transmission in people who did eventually experience symptoms underscores why.
A study in Nature Medicine of 94 confirmed Covid-19 patients found that people were most infectious right before they started to show symptoms. The researchers obtained data about people who had gotten Covid-19 as well as those who had been around them before and after they got sick. Based on this, they estimated that 44 percent of people who caught the virus from the study’s participants had gotten it from people who felt healthy at the time.
They also found that someone who is mildly sick could have been just as contagious as someone with more severe symptoms. Maybe they aren’t coughing as much as someone feeling more seriously ill, but the virus can still spread through talking, sneezing, and coughing.
And what about people who are carrying the virus but don’t ever get sick — the true asymptomatic carriers? Can they spread it, too?
We simply don’t know yet. Hopefully, further studies will figure this out, because it could lead to more informed decisions about how to eventually end the pandemic.
How many people are carrying the coronavirus and don’t know it?
A new study out of Iceland, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, offers important insight about how prevalent asymptomatic carriers may be. Iceland has tested 6 percent of the entire island nation’s population — the most testing per capita of any country so far.
Part of the study tested those ill with Covid-19 symptoms, but another part involved testing a substantial sample of the general population feeling well — or at least with no greater symptoms than a mild common cold. Of those who tested positive for the virus, 43 percent were asymptomatic. So it’s possible that, at least in Iceland at that point in time, almost half of the people who had coronavirus didn’t know it.
Dance instructor Morgan Jenkins makes a video in Los Angeles, California in front of a mural during the coronavirus pandemic on April 3, 2020. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
This percentage likely varies from place to place, depending on the timing and severity of the current outbreak.
For example, two New York City hospitals recently tested more than 99 percent of women who delivered babies in their wards over the course of two weeks. Of the 215 women, about 2 percent had Covid-19 symptoms (all of them tested positive for the virus). And about 14 percent of the symptom-free women also tested positive. This means that about 88 percent of people who had the virus in this group had no symptoms at the time of testing.
So one in eight women admitted to the labor and delivery wards — who seemed healthy — nevertheless was carrying the virus.
Although these studies looked at specific populations at specific points in time, they can provide a general idea of what might be going on elsewhere.
How many people catch the coronavirus and never get sick at all?
We know that people who get Covid-19 start feeling sick anywhere from two to 14 days after they first catch the virus. But there also seems to be a subset of people who test positive for it but never develop any symptoms.
This isn’t that unusual. Other viruses often have many people carrying them who don’t get sick. For example, a study in the UK found that about 77 percent of people who had had the current flu strain never got sick (some studies have pointed to lower rates, which also shows how little we know even about common illnesses).
For the norovirus, a common stomach bug, about a third of people who get it don’t become ill — but can still transmit it to others.
And that number is even higher for other viruses, like polio, which only causes illness in some 5 to 10 percent of infections — but the asymptomatic carriers can still spread it to others, who might get the full-blown disease.
For SARS-CoV-2, the World Health Organization cited the statistic that about 75 percent of people who seem asymptomatic when they test positive for the virus eventually go on to develop symptoms of Covid-19. And a series of recent reports have backed that up.
One study, which examined a nursing home in Washington state early on in the coronavirus outbreak, found that more than half of residents who tested positive (57 percent) had no signs of the illness. One week later, however, more than three-quarters of them had developed symptoms.
The mean time for them to have started feeling sick was just three days after they had gotten tested. This shows just how narrow of a window one-shot testing can be.
Another study, which looked at passengers on the Diamond Princess cruise ship, also tried to account for this timing issue. Initial data showed that of the 634 people on board who tested positive for the coronavirus, slightly more than half were asymptomatic at the time. But researchers were able to follow up with these people (after many did eventually get sick) and, based on that data, estimated that the actual rate of asymptomatic infections was about 18 percent.
And 18 percent is still a large number, especially when expanded to a broader population during an outbreak. That’s roughly one in five people. And based on the WHO numbers, it is one in four.
Researchers still don’t know if — and how much — these truly asymptomatic carriers might be contributing to the spread of the virus. But with such large numbers, answering that question (and taking precautionary actions in the meantime) will be essential to understanding how to most effectively slow down this pandemic.
Identifying silent spreaders is essential
Given that roughly three-quarters of people who don’t show symptoms at the time of testing will probably get ill (and that those people are perhaps most infectious just before they start feeling sick) and given that we still don’t know how much asymptomatic individuals are infecting others, limiting the spread of the virus by seemingly healthy people is crucial.
That is one of the reasons large-scale testing is so powerful. For example, in the Iceland study, public health officials were able to identify about 525 people — in a country of just 364,000 — who were carrying the virus but appeared healthy otherwise (that would be the equivalent of finding about 473,000 asymptomatic or presymptomatic carriers in a small sampling in the US, population-wise).
This information allowed Icelandic officials to take action. After positive test results, people were required to self-isolate until they tested negative — “and all contacts of these participants were [also] required to self-quarantine for 2 weeks,” the authors noted. This sort of broad testing and targeted isolation strategy could help curb the spread of the virus and allow more people to continue with less severe social distancing restrictions.
We’ll need more widespread antibody testing to better understand what’s going on
The trouble with so many of these numbers is that they are snapshots in time. And detailed follow-up, like what happened in the Diamond Princess study, is resource-intensive.
This is one of the reasons testing for the presence of the coronavirus is not — and cannot — give us a clear picture of its true prevalence. Just as it might catch someone before the onset of their symptoms, it might miss someone who has already fought the virus off, whether they knew it or not.
That’s why more widespread antibody testing to see if someone has had the virus in the past will be key in determining the actual proportion of the population that has had the virus. (Most current testing is a different method that looks for the presence of the virus during an active infection.)
With that number, experts will also be able to start modeling how many asymptomatic people are contributing to the overall spread of the virus. This will be “critically important” for ascertaining if they “may be sustaining viral transmission,” del Rio said.
(But this will need to be done thoughtfully. There has been substantial debate over, for example, a recent estimate, based on antibody testing, that the prevalence of the virus in Santa Clara County, California, might be 50-85 times higher than the number of rapid test-confirmed cases.)
Better understanding the true number of asymptomatic carriers and their potential to infect others could impact everything from public health guidelines to how soon we can begin to safely resume more normal activities.
The National Institutes of Health is launching a large-scale study to look at this now. It is enrolling up to 10,000 volunteers from anywhere in the US to be tested for antibodies to the coronavirus.
“These crucial data will help us measure the impact of our public health efforts now and guide our Covid-19 response moving forward,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a statement. You can learn more about enrolling here.
In the meantime, all of these mounting data support continued social distancing practices, mask-wearing, and other preventative measures for everyone — no matter how healthy they feel.
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In Mexico, one of the countries with the most cases, the markets continue to be one of the places with the largest influx of people and it is not easy to achieve physical distance from each other. Photography: EL UNIVERSAL Agency / Juan Boites / RDB.
The lifting of measures is starting to be seen in different countries, but not always with the best results.
In Mexico, one of the countries with the most cases in Latin America, the markets continue to be one of the places with the largest influx of people and it is not easy to achieve physical distance from each other. Photography: EL UNIVERSAL Agency / Juan Boites / RDB.
Singapore lifted its quarantine and opened borders. This Wednesday, Singapore health authorities reported that only this Tuesday there have been more infected than in all February and March, the vast majority coming from abroad.
In Wuhan, China, after lifting the measures, saw more cases emerge.
Therefore, trying to return to normal without causing new infections is a difficult balance to achieve.
“We have science and evidence in one hand; in the other, reality and what happens in practice, the consequences that are experienced in the daily lives of the population. There is no way to have zero risk, but we must learn to balance that risk so that it is as low as possible, ” said the World Health Organization (WHO) top emergencies expert Dr. Mike Ryan.
On opening up global travel too quickly, Ryan warned it would require “careful risk management”.
Costa Rica is studying how to achieve that balance to avoid abrupt resurgences.
At the Wednesday coronavirus briefing, the Minister of Health, Daniel Salas, indicated that it is something that he and a group of specialists analyze every day.
“We are walking through an eggshell floor, very fragile, because the majority of the population, due to the short time of the presence of the virus in Costa Rica, has not been exposed. So we may have an increase in cases because the majority have not been infected and there may be new transmission chains. That is why we must continue to comply with the measures, even if it becomes a tedious matter, and make ourselves aware that there is still a long way to go and that we must get used to a dynamic of social functioning and adequacy, where we all must enter to play in that dynamic,” he said.
This is one of the WHO’s biggest concerns.
Military personnel walk among cubicles being prepared as part of a medical station at the New York Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, during the coronavirus pandemic, on April 3, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
“Some countries that had experienced casualties are re-registering spikes in cases. We cannot be mistaken: This virus will be with us for a long time,” emphasized Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO).
“Most countries are still in the early stages of their epidemics and some that were affected early in the pandemic are starting to see a resurgence in cases,” Tedros told Geneva journalists in a virtual briefing.
María Van Kerkhove, technical leader of that organism in matters of covid-19 complemented: “if we are seeing the resurgence of cases it is because there is still a lot of population susceptible to becoming ill”.
Six rules for a new normal
“Getting out of quarantine does not imply that we can live as before, it will be a new normal.” That phrase is constantly repeated by health authorities, epidemiologists and scientists, but it is not so easy to make people see it.
1. The transmission of the virus must be controlled. Community transmission should not be at active levels, and if you have case clusters, these should be in isolation, to ensure that they do not have the possibility of transmitting it outside your home.
2. The health system and public health authorities must have capabilities to identify, isolate, test, trace contacts, and quarantine them. “To be clear, the WHO recommendation is to find and test each of the suspected individuals, not everyone in the population,” emphasized Ghebreyesus.
3. That the risks of outbreaks are minimized in highly vulnerable sites. These include nursing homes, mental hospitals, and mental health clinics and the most populous places of residence.
4. That preventive measures be established in all work sites. Physical distance, not only between desks or workstations but also in the way in which co-workers coexist and interact. Workplaces should also have hand washing facilities and hygiene protocols.
5. That the risks of importing cases can be managed. This relates to travel, not only between countries but also between cities in the same country. As long as this cannot be guaranteed, it is not recommended to soften the measures.
6. That communities have a voice and be taken into account in the transition. Populations must be empowered, know the information, have a voice, and be heard. This does not mean that everything that the population indicates will be done, since each decision must be based on science, but it must be guaranteed that the people know the information and their voice can be heard.
Returning to this new normal will include an emphasis on three things:
TESTING, both for COVID-19 and, especially, antibody tests to assess immunity
TRACING of contacts of those who are COVID-19-positive, followed by quarantine of those contacts, and
TREATMENTS for COVID-19 while we await vaccine development. These treatments include both drugs and plasma treatments from recovered patients.
In addition, it is likely that in public settings, temperature-testing will occur (upon entering a restaurant, or other activities), a mask will be required, and some degree of physical distancing implemented.
We will probably continue to wash our hands a lot and be aware of keeping surfaces in our personal space disinfected.
The numbers guide decisions. The most important number is how many people have been infected with COVID-19 and have recovered or continue to be infected.
There is little doubt that the coming months will be challenging. We will need as much resilience as possible and continue to be aware of the world around.
At least 400 people were laid off by the Intercontinental Hotel, located in Escazú, across from the Multiplaza shopping center, as a result of the crisis experienced by the global pandemic due to COVID-19.
The Q was able to obtain a copy of the letter given to employees this past Friday, April 17, which reads:
“As you are aware, the spread of the COVID-19 disease has generated major economic damages both nationally and globally, which have a direct impact on labor relations. By virtue of the foregoing, and as a consequence of the national emergency declaration, the company has suffered a drastic reduction in its income, which makes it unsustainable to keep all personnel under the same conditions.
“Therefore we hereby inform you that we have decided to dispense with your services with employer responsibility in accordance with the provisions of article # 85 subsection d) of the Labor Code, starting today April 17 of this year.”
The hotel, owned by Grupo Roble of El Salvador, indicated in the letter that in order to receive their severance payment the now former employee must return their uniform, badge and identification card, Micros card (restaurant waiters and captains) and provide a photocopy of the cedula.
The severance payment is scheduled for April 30, 2020, according to the document.
The hotel has retained some 30 employees in key areas of administration and maintenance.
The employees, who had been sent home last month, without pay, were called in on Friday to be given their notice.
The hotel general manager, Ricardo Menéndez Méndez, nor Human Resources manager Mónica Jiménez Ramírez, replied to calls or emails for more details of the massive lay off.
In Costa Rica, in addition to the Intercontinental Hotel, Grupo Roble real estate holdings includes the Roble Corporate Center, Multiplaza Escazu, Centro Corporativo Plaza Roble, and Escazú Corporate Center.
Grupo Roble
Grupo Roble is a division of the Grupo Poma, a family-owned company in El Salvador, founded in 1919, and currently headed by Ricardo Poma. Some of Grupo Poma’s business activities include automobile dealerships, real estate development and construction, industrial manufacturing and hotels, as well as investments in telecommunications and a variety of nonprofit organizations that carry out social projects.
The Grupo Roble division is a construction subsidiary that builds and manages shopping centers, residential housing and office space. Some of this division’s accomplishments include building more than 50,000 homes and 19 shopping malls in Central America.
Real Hotels and Resorts – The group has nineteen InterContinental, Marriott International and Choice Hotels in Central America, Colombia, the Caribbean and Miami, Florida, United States.
Grupo Autofacil – Operates in El Salvador, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras and Panama. Grupo Autofacil is the financial division of Grupo Poma. Most focused to give financial solutions for people who wants to buy a car but they also offer other related products.
Grupo Solaire – The group has companies creating architectural solutions for the construction industry: insulated roofing systems, window hardware and aluminum and glass products. Grupo Solaire manufactures windows and aluminum products at four factories in El Salvador.
Excel Automotriz – Operates in El Salvador since 1919 and also in Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama. Grupo Poma represents some of the leading companies in the automotive market, such as Toyota, BMW, Mitsubishi, Chevrolet, Ford and KIA. Excel Automotriz is the biggest automotive distribution company in Central America.
In the second phase of the project, the cameras will use facial recognition to identify the user based on their national ID
The Panama metro (subway) began installing thermal cameras at its stations to detect users with possible COVID-19 infection, at a time when the country has the highest number of detected cases of the new coronavirus in Central America.
The thermal cameras detect is a user has a high temperature, alerting police and health officials, who then confirm or discard a fever, one of the symptoms of the new coronavirus
This project consists of cameras with infrared sensors at the entrance of the stations, in the area of the access turnstiles, to detect people with high temperatures, who may be suspicions of contagion, Panama subway officials reported Tuesday.
COVID-19 “is going to change the way to mobilize, function and operate mass transportation,” the director of the Panama Metro, Héctor Ortega, told the press.
In this first phase, thermal cameras will be installed in 12 of the 30 stations (14 of Line 1 and 16 of Line 2) that connect Panama City and its surroundings, then extend the camera system to the rest of the stations.
In a second phase, the Panamanian subway intends to install facial recognition cameras that will be linked to a cedula (national identity card), which would allow locating the home of people who register a high temperature.
To users who are detected with a high temperature will have an identification protocol applied by police and health authorities.
In the second phase of the project, the cameras will use facial recognition to identify the user based on the national ID system
Once the user is detained, they will undergo a second test to see if they have fever, one of the symptoms of the new coronavirus, and if positive, they will be isolated from the rest of the users.
The objective is to put this system into operation once the current quarantine is lifted – without a defined term yet – to contain the virus.
As at this morning, April 22, Panama reported 4,821 confirmed infections and 141 deaths., the highest in both in Central America although the Panamanian government assures that it is due to the greater number of testing it performs.
The two lines of the Panama metro – one of them underground – had a flow of 9.2 million passengers in January 2020, although it has decreased to 5.6 million in March due to the mandatory quarantine and the reduction of services.
The first flight with part of the medical supplies donated by the Chinese government to Costa Rica for the medical attention to the COVID-19 emergency will arrive in the country this Sunday at 6:16 am.
Image for illustrative purposes
The president of the Costa Rican Social Security Fund, Román Macaya, confirmed that this will be the first of three flights contracted to transport the equipment: the other two will arrive on Monday at 6:16 am and at 10 pm.
Macaya explained that the contract to get the medical supplies to the country was given to DHL logistics and the flights operated by Aeromexico will leave China on Saturday and a stopover on Sunday in Mexico and then arrive in the country.
The cost for the air transport and related is US$ 1.2 million dollars.
The Chinese donation includes 100,000 disposable gowns, 10,000 N-95 masks, 100,000 medical surgical masks, 110,000 safety glasses, 100,000 gloves and 100,000 disposable boots.
Macaya explained that the contract with DHL was the best of the eight offers received, taking into account variants such as dates, capacity and volume of cargo, route and of course low cost. The CCSS president added that some of the other proposals were up two times the DHL offer.
This investment is part of the CCSS resupply efforts at a time when international markets are suffering from excess demand and low supply due to the global coronavirus pandemic.
The San Ramón Criminal Courts sentenced Miguel Martínez Martínez to 58 years in prison, after being found guilty of rape, sexual abuse, and dissemination of pornography to the detriment of his 8-year-old stepdaughter.
However, the court adjusted the sentence to 42 years in prison, since in Costa Rica a prison sentence cannot exceed 50 years.
“The Prosecutor General’s Office was able to verify that the man took advantage of moments alone with the girl, who was between eight and nine years old, to sexually abuse and rape her. In addition, it was proven that Martínez was exhibiting pornographic material to the offended from a cell phone,” said the Public Ministry.
It was not until February 2019 when the minor told her mother what was happening and immediately filed the complaint, which led to the immediate arrest of the now-sentenced man.
The events occurred between 2017 and 2018 in the Piedades Sur community in San Ramón de Alajuela, where Martínez lived with the victim.
He is currently under six months in preventive detention while the sentence is firmed up.
With Major League Baseball on hold until early July due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Rawlings in Costa Rica announced the lay off of 190 people at its plant in Turrialba.
Baseballs to the Major Leagues are made by Rawlings in Costa Rica.
Tuesday morning, the employees were notified that the baseball ball factory was terminating their contracts.
This decision comes after Major League Baseball (MLB) did not start in the United States due to the pandemic, according to Alejandro Cotter, manager of Rawlings in Costa Rica.
“I appreciate the efforts Rawlings has made in Turrialba to postpone this decision as much as possible and to keep other jobs for the Turrialba area. I hope that after the pandemic sports activity returns and the company can re-employ these people who today had to dismiss with pain,” said Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC) legislator, Laura Guido Pérez, who is from Turrialba.
MLB baseballs — which are produced by Rawlings in Costa Rica, at its plant located 1 km south of the center of Turrialba.
Updated. Costa Rica’s Constitutional Court resolved with merit the habeas corpus petition by a young Costa Rican woman, whose caregiver, a Canadian national, was being denied entry into the country due to the restrictive border measures interposed during the national emergency
With the court decision, the Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (DGME) – immigration service – despite that only Costa Rican citizens and residents are allowed entry, must allow the entry of the Canadian.
According to the appeal, María del Milagro Gamboa requested that her caregiver – a patient assistant – be allowed to enter the country with her despite the restriction.
María del Milagro Gamboa is stranded in Mexico in the midst of the COVID-19 emergency and her opportunities to return to Costa Rica are limited. She suffers from a strange disease that affects her central nervous system and limits her motor abilities.
As explained by the affected person, who is in Mexico, in order to travel on the plane back to Costa Rica, she requires the assistance of her caregiver, who is also her romantic partner.
This young woman from San Carlos suffers from a strange disease that affects her central nervous system and limits her motor skills.
María had traveled to Mexico to receive special treatment. To return to Costa Rica, she requires assistance to travel, but Costa Rica immigration authorities denied her boyfriend and caregiver a humanitarian visa to authorize his entry into the country.
Last Friday, a group of Costa Ricans stranded in Mexico returned to the country, but this couple could not take the flight.
Within the appeal, the young woman also requested that her assistant be granted a special visa; however, the Constitutional Chamber rejected the request.
Likewise, Constitutional Court Chief Justice Fernando Castillo was emphatic that to guarantee the entry of the two people, they must undergo testing for the covid-19 virus in addition to complying with the respective health order, the mandatory 14-day quarantine on their arrival.
“It is important to clarify that both people must submit to the sanitary requirements established by the sanitary authorities in order to prevent any spread of Covid-19 in the national territory,” he explained.
Costa Rican immigration and the Ministry of Foreign relations are not commenting on the case publicly.
Construction of the US$25 million dollar bridge over the Sixaola river that will link Panama and Costa Rica resumed Monday after Panama’s health ministry gave the green light to conclude the 260-meter structure that was supposed to be completed this month.
The bridge is reportedly the only ongoing infrastructure project in Panama at the moment.
The Panama public works ministry (MOP) and the United Nations Office for Project Services (Unops), which is involved in the supervision of the bridge, held negotiations to persuade the health ministry to allow the continuation of works, MOP said in a statement, adding that the binational bridge is a “strategic project” for the government.
The special permit only allows consortium Binacional Sixaola, formed by Mexican companies Constructora Meco de Costa Rica and Cal & Mayor y Asociados y Mexpresa, to carry out construction works in Panama, while all other projects remain indefinitely suspended due to a decree signed on March 24 by President Laurentino Cortizo.
The project reported 72% overall progress in February, 40% on the Panama side and 85% on the Costa Rican side.
The government of Guatemala decided to extend the travel restrictions until April 27, but related the vehicular restrictions to only between 6 pm and 4 am the following day.
Supermarkets, grocery stores and corner stores will be able to adjust to the new restricted hours, that is, from 4 am to 6 pm, as long as they ensure that their workers are in their residences before 6 pm, President Alejandro Giammattei reported on a national television.
An Agexport report explains that “… The conditions of restriction of movement outside the department of your home are changed, resulting in the following:
– The inhabitants of the Departments of Guatemala, Chimaltenango, Sacatepéquez and El Progreso, will not be able to move outside the department of their residence. Exceptions are made for persons who work in departments other than their home for an activity without the option of closure or who can operate, which are contained in numbers 8 and 9 of this press release.
– The inhabitants of the rest of the country’s departments will be able to circulate and move outside their department of residence, but will not be able to enter the departments of Guatemala, Chimaltenango, Sacatepéquez and El Progreso.”
Guatemala measures to contain contagion of the coronavirus include mandatory social distancing and use of face masks.
As of April 22, Guatemala reports 316 confirmed cases of the covid-19 and 8 deaths.
Panama authorities announced the extension of the suspension of international commercial air passenger transport until 23 May.
The measure was announced by Resolution 053-DG-DJ-AAC, published in the edition of the Gaceta Official Digital on April 20, 2020, stating effective at 11:59 pm, April 22, all international flights are suspended for 30 calendar days. See full document.
Article 2 of the official document states that “… The measure is applicable to international flights of Commercial Passenger Aviation and General Passenger Aviation.
Exceptions to this measure are humanitarian flights and those necessary to transport products, medical-hospital equipment, medicines, vaccines and any other public health supplies required to deal with the Coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19).”
As of April 22, Panama reports 4,821 confirmed cases and 141 deceased from the covid-19.
The number of covid-19 infections in the country increased Tuesday, April 21, to 669 people, seven more than those registered Monday, when there were 662.
According to the information given by the Minister of Health, Daniel Salas, among the sick there are 349 men and 320 women, whose ages range from 1 year to 87 years.
By age, those affected are divided into 635 adults (33 are seniors) and 34 minors. By nationality, there are 611 Costa Ricans and 58 foreigners.
Eleven people remain hospitalized, six of whom are in intensive care, with ages ranging from 44 to 75.
Finally, the number of deaths in the country remains at six. They are all men, aged between 45 and 87 years.
Faced with questions about whether it is possible to lift sanitary restrictions, Salas said on Tuesday that it will be done gradually, but with the warning that the pandemic has not passed us.
“This is like chess (…), we have done things well. The country has managed not to have an exponential curve so far, but I insist that we are on a very fragile path.”
“We are going to gradually open up, observing the behavior in the curve (…)”, state the minister without giving more detail.
“We know that in Costa Rica we have done well. But if we neglect ourselves, that step in which there are not enough respirators we have not overcome,” insisted the minister.
“The ‘stay home’ is still valid. We have to be brave, disciplined, it is not an issue that has passed,” added Salas, who indicated that we need to be careful for the coming several months.
In this regard, Román Macaya, executive president of the Costa Rican Social Security Fund (CCSS), insisted that we cannot let your guard down despite the small increase in new cases.
“New outbreaks can occur if we don’t take care of ourselves,” Macaya said at a press conference.
Analysts explain what happened this Monday in the oil markets, which left the WTI- benchmark for the country – at a negative price, on what is bieng called the worst day in the history of crude oil and what it will mean for Costa Rica.
Panic seized the oil markets on Monday. The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude, the benchmark for Costa Rica, closed at US$-37.63 dollars for delivery in May, a negative price record without precedent in this market, hit by the excessive supply of crude oil in the world as a consequence of the collapse of the demand.
Behind this historical behavior of the price of oil is the lack of certainty about when the pandemic will end and the ravages that the health crisis is causing in the world economy, which has semi-paralyzed the main economic activities in the world and therefore boiled oil consumption. and its derivatives.
Industries are requiring less oil to burn and air and sea markets are paralyzed, following the decision of most countries to block their air, land and sea borders to fight the spread of the virus, leaving millions of planes grounded and ships, weighing down the oil market.
In addition, compulsory quarantines in several countries of the world and a call to stay at home by most others, has left millions of vehicles parked and industries of all kinds have slowed down or even stopped.
The situation has worsened because the storage capacity of crude oil in the United States and the rest of the world is about to reach its limit, which caused the holders of oil contracts with maturity today (April 21), on Monday to search desperately how to get rid of their acquisitions, even paying other buyers to take the barrels of crude.
If they could find buyers for their contracts, they would have to physically receive the barrels and find where to store the product, something that is almost impossible due to the storage situation in the world.
Hence, the price of crude oil on Monday went from US$18.27 a barrel last Friday to US$-37.67 at the end of the day on the US stock markets on Monday, which meant a collapse of US$55.94 a barrel, more than 300% in the day.
And although it is expected that, today, Tuesday the future prices of a barrel of oil will recover, because that is when the contracts corresponding to June begin to be negotiated, analysts explain that what happened this Monday is a difficult and uncertain omen that awaits the world economy in the coming months.
“The most valuable thing is the storage space, whoever has the storage space takes that oil (they are looking for how to sell the oil and contract holders that expire in May) and they still pay you to take it. This is cheaper than having it stored somewhere or on a ship,” explain experts.
Suppliers operate in the oil market, those who purchase futures contracts for crude oil (without receiving them physically in barrels) to trade and obtain financial returns, and those who actually buy the raw material to process it, among others.
In the WTI market, according to Insidefutures.com, a site specialized in futures contracts for raw materials, one contract is equivalent to 1,000 barrels of crude oil, which is what the holders of contracts of this type should receive as a minimum if they do not manage to get rid of their inventories acquired for May this Monday, which expires today, Tuesday.
The increase in the sales volume of these contracts caused an unprecedented market crash, although the contracts for June were already trading at more than US$20. What happened this Monday is a fact not seen since the creation of the future oil market in 1983.
The impact on Costa Rica
So what will it mean for Costa Rica that the price of oil has fallen into negative territory? What should consumers expect? What consequence will it have for the Costa Rica economy? What should the government do?
Specialists warn that what is being seen right now (in the international crude oil markets) is more of what is coming in the future for Costa Rica, not so much on the oil side, but on the side of economic growth. That it is happening and that has never happened is simply a reflection of how the demand for oil in the world is diminishing and it is diminishing precisely because of the global recession that almost all the countries of the world are entering and therefore it is showing us where the world is going in economic terms and where we are going to go as well, that is, we are heading towards the deepening of the recession.
The indication is that although a depressed crude oil price benefits Costa Rica, as a net importer, because it lowers the oil import bill, this will be a partial benefit, because the damage that is coming from the global recession will be much greater than any benefit that can be obtained from the reduction of the price of oil.
In more enlightened terms, a global economy in a deep recession implies less movement of remittances, less demand and prices of export products, fewer possibilities of attracting foreign investment, the damages of which cannot be entirely offset by a less expensive oil bill for Costa Rica for a depressed international price of crude oil, which is apparently positive for the country for the short term.
But also the fall in the price of crude oil, the most commercialized raw material in the world, also reflects the downward movement of other products in demand in international markets, some of which are exported from Costa Rica.
Population will not benefit
Although the forecasts are for oil prices are that will continue down in the coming months, as storage sites are expected to reach their limit in the middle of this year, it is doubtful that this benefit will be fully transferred to the pocketbooks of Costa Ricans.
Based on the past, looking forward, as oil prices in international markets decrease, in Costa Rica fuel prices will remain high, at least higher than what they should be if it were not for the lousy institutional management of the Refinadora Costarricense de Petroleo (RECOPE).
Guaranteeing that the market mechanisms operate in the domestic markets for the benefit of the population, is not a mandate that the state agency understands, letting fuel prices at the pumps fall as they should be.
But what most interesting, and not in a good way, is that the business sector is not pressing the government to reduce prices, as the rules of the market economy mandate.
This should be a great time to take advantage of almost “free” oil to bring relief to many small and medium-sized companies that, due to high production costs and falling sales, have been forced to lay off personnel to face the effects of the pandemic.
If fuel prices fell according to the fall in international prices consumer prices would be cheaper.
The government should prioritize lowering fuel prices.
OPINION – Rico’s Digest – On Monday, vendors of contracts for crude oil were paying buyers to get it off their hands. After fumes settled Monday, the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude, a benchmark for Costa Rica, closed at US$-37.63 dollars for delivery in May.
This is like pulling up to a gasoline station and it paying you to fill your gas tank.
What does all this mean? Beats me, I am still trying to wrap my head around all of this. My economics teacher thought me to buy low sell high.
What does all this mean in Costa Rica? Not much, for we can be assured that the people who run Refinadora Costarricense de Petróleo (RECOPE) had the same teacher, buy low, sell high, with an added bonus, pilfer as much as you.
In light of yesterday, which really is not a factor, I proffer we will see higher gasoline prices very soon. Very soon.
The reason (excuse) for this is not important. What is important is to keep the prices high which translates into more money for the government and Recope, or both, to pilfer.
Despite having “refinery” in its name, the RECOPE is a net importer, that is, it does not import and refine, rather it imports finished fuels, stores, wastes money doing all sort of things, stores, sells it, (gasoline stations need to have their own truck to haul the stuff off from the plants), wastes some more money and keeps on going.
Then the central government has its hands in the process, placing a tax on every liter of fuel pumped by the pisteros Ino self serve in Costa Rica) into your tank.
The tax is almost one half of the final price of each liter pumped, allowing for a set gross profit for the seller, the gasoline stations, who have no control over the price to the consumer and only control over profits is to reduce operating costs and sell more volume.
From the RECOPE website, the breakdown of the ¢580 current consumer price of a liter of super gasoline, is ¢225 for RECOPE, ¢261 for taxes to the central government and ¢63 for the retailer. See here the breakdown for all fuels.
What incentive do RECOPE and central government have to reflect an international drop in prices at the pumps in Costa Rica? But they are sure quick to increase the international prices increase.
One of the methods to take advantage of the current international oil market conditions and reduce fuel prices, the highest in the region, is to change the model of price calculation and fixing.
But don’t expect that any time soon.
According to the data from Centralamericandata.com, Costa Rica leads with $3.87 per US gallon of regular gasoline in Central Amerca as of March 24, Nicaragua follows with Nicaragua $3.28, Honduras $3.27, Guatemala $2.93, El Salvador $2.54 and Panama, $2.81.
The process
The import of finished fuels is handled by the Refinadora Costarricense de Petróleo (Recope). On its website, the state agency explains how the formula to determine the price of a liter of gasoline sold to the consumer:
International price (colonized) + Tax + RECOPE Operating Margin + Freight + Service Station Margin + Subsidies and royalties.
Current fuel prices in Costa Rica from Recope website
Every second Friday of the month, taking into account international prices of the last 15 days, Recope submits a pricing proposal to the Autoridad Reguladora de Servicios Publicos (ARESEP), another government agency.
From Recope website
To set the price, the Aresep following a formula made up of 16 variables, defined since 2015. Its responsibility, in addition to applying said formula, is to check that the data provided by Recope to support the changes fulfill their requirements to corroborate that they are reliable and attached to the technique.
The price is defined using this formula:
From the Aresep website
One of the components is the dollar exchange rate. The problem is that the current dollar exchange is used, and the cost of the international purchase of fuels, where Recope buys expensive and not related to the average of international prices.
The Aresep decision is typically within 2 weeks, the prices at the pumps take effect within a week (up to 5 working days) of publication in the official government newsletter, La Gaceta.
The process takes about a month at best, which as we have seen in recent weeks, a lot can change in international markets in that time.
The Ministry of Health (Minsa) confirmed Monday a new case of covid-19 in the country, that of a 58-year-old man. The patient in a “delicate” state, but “stable.
Supporters of the Sandinista Front and members of the Ministry of Health make house-to-house visits in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.Foto: EFE
To date, 10 cases of the new coronavirus have been reported in the country, 2 of these have died and seven have recovered.
Of that number, seven have been “imported”, and “non-imported” cases and one was classified as “contact with other nationalities”.
Currently, there is only one active case of covid-19, the latest.
The first death from the coronavirus occurred on March 26, six days after the diagnosis was confirmed. As detailed, the health of this patient was complicated by pre-existing chronic diseases.
The second death occurred on Saturday, April 18, a 64-year-old man who entered a private hospital on April 7, but wa not publicly confirmed as positive for covid-19 until the 10th.
“(The patient) presented an acute and unexpected complication that, along with other chronic conditions that he already had, led to his death,” said the general secretary of the Minsa, Carlos Sáenz.
However, the doctor who cared for the patient explained told Confidencial.com.ni that the man had complications from bacterial pneumonia, which was added to “covid-19 viral pneumonia, which led to septic shock and kidney failure.”
So his death was not “unexpected” as the Minsa said.
In Nicaragua, the government has handled information about the coronavirus with secrecy. They have not reported how many covid-19 tests have been performed to confirm or rule out the virus. And although the Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI) donated 26,000 rapid tests, the Minsa ruled that only 50 tests will be applied daily at the national level.
However, several experts and epidemiologists have urged the Ortega Government to expand the sampling to find out the true dimension of the virus in Nicaragua.
“With10,000 tests a week, in a matter of two or three weeks, the true dimension of the covid-19 in Nicaragua could be known with rigor. The use of diagnostic kits for mass sampling could give statistical significance to country data, making it a powerful tool for multiple reasons,” explains scientist Jorge Huete.
Guatemalan domestic personnel are more vulnerable to the COVID-19 economic and social impact than other workers due to their livelihood and labor conditions.
Domestic workers without unemployment guarantees are economically unprotected during the Guatemalan labor crisis due to the virus.
According to the Union of Domestic, Maquila and Related Workers’ (Sitradom) president, Floridalma Contreras, domestic workforces are predominately women who are under no legal employment ways. From the 550 members of the union, the majority are illiterate and migrants from San Marcos, Quiché Huehuetenango, and Izabal departments.
Since the coronavirus outbreak, many of them adopted “doors inside” work modality, staying at the patron housing to comply with their working time and the curfew. Employers impose this working mode, most of the cases. “Many are paid less than the minimum wage because employers argue that they provide them with shelter and food”, Contreras affirmed.
Because of these schedules, many of the domestic workers cannot properly rest, don´t have a leave day or are prevented from going home, all of that without overtime pay. Sitradom leader said that the domestic workers workload has increased. Housekeepers and employers demand more cleaning processes, a daily cycle task.
“Women are being tremendously affected by the social impact of the COVID-19 which exacerbates gender inequalities. We need a response to the crisis that takes into account the needs of women.”
In addition to these circumstances, the domestic worker has to go into public crowded spaces to shop for the family. They comply with this assignment without basic prevention supplies, like masks or anti-bacterial gel.
Las mujeres están siendo tremendamente afectadas por el impacto social de la pandemia del #covid19 que exacerba las desigualdades de género. Necesitamos una respuesta a la crisis que tenga en cuenta las necesidades de las mujeres. pic.twitter.com/4twJNR4c5K
On the other hand, many housing employers ceased services under contagious risk arguments. Domestic workers without unemployment guarantees are economically unprotected during the Guatemalan labor crisis due to the virus.
According to the latest National Employment and Income Survey, in 2016, there are more than 250,000 domestic workers in Guatemala. Men make up just four percent of the sector. According to the study, most of them work as drivers, janitors or gardeners.
Brazil is the most affected country by the pandemic, as they have reported a significant spike in their cases.
Latin America, with population of more than 653 million, has more than 100,000 people infected with the new coronavirus, and almost 5,000 deaths, with Brazil being the country most affected by the pandemic.
Brazil is the most affected country by the pandemic, as they have reported a significant spike in their cases.
Topping the list is Brazil, with a population of almost 210 million, it has 40,814 confirmed infections and 2,588 deaths (April 21). Despite the high number of deaths and infections, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro announced Friday his intention to reopen trade and borders.
The second most affected country in the region is Peru, with 116,325 positive cases of COVID-19 and 445 deaths (April 21) from the disease.
Peru is followed by Chile, a country with 18 million inhabitants that registered 10,507 diagnosed cases and 139 deaths on April 21.
“Apoyemos a aquellos que están trabajando sin descanso para salvar millones de vidas”.
Ecuador is another of the nations hardest hit by the pandemic, with 10,128 infections and 507 deaths (April 21).
Mexico reported 8,772 infections and 712 deaths (April 21).
In Central America, Panama, is the hardest hit, with the number of cases reported 4,658 and the number of deaths related to Covid-19 to 136 (April 21).
Cuba has been at the frontline of the fight against the pandemic, sending doctors and nurses to 21 nations across the world
Argentina’s government confirmed that a contingent of 202 Cuban doctors will arrive in that country to help local health professionals with the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Cuba has been at the frontline of the fight against the pandemic, sending doctors and nurses to 21 nations across the world
“The idea is for them to contribute and join medical resources. They won’t be at the front line,” Argentina’s Minister of Health Gines Gonzalez said, adding that the Cuban specialists won’t be making important decisions but will be treating patients and helping where needed.
The minister explained that the objective is to preserve the most experienced professionals from fronting high exposure to infected patients. “Currently there are between 650,000 and 670,000 doctors. 70% come from the university, that’s why you have to take great care of them,” he added.
The need to explain the measure comes as right-wing opposition groups have criticized the decision, despite the need to join forces against the global pandemic. As of Monday, Argentina reported 2,941 confirmed cases and over 135 deaths.
The Cuban medical brigade is expected to arrive in May when the infection rate will likely hit its peak in Argentina.
Since the outbreak began, Cuba has been at the frontline of the fight against the pandemic, sending doctors and nurses to 21 nations across the world, which include Jamaica, Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada, Haiti, Suriname, Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, St. Lucia, Dominica, St. Kitts and Nevis, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Italy, Andorra, Togo, St. Thomas and Prince, Angola, Qatar, and Honduras.
With the social distancing, many relationships that were just starting had to be put on pause, like the unfaithful.
Since most people cannot leave their home, communication with lovers becomes a challenge, so potential get-togethers, how short they may be, are pure gold for unfaithful husbands and wives (and boyfriends and girlfriends).
According to Gleeden, the first discreet (extra-marital) dating site made by women, revealed that its users are more active than ever in terms of virtual cheating, 160% more connections and new users than usual were registered from the first week of stay at home.
Gleeden says that its more than 6.5 million users worldwide (most in France) spend more time on the social network, which makes it easier for them to be unfaithful. The average connection time also increased from 2 hours to three.
But of course, the unfaithful have also shown more fear when using the platform, since their connections are shorter (although more frequent) and the panic button that is used to hide everything from a possible discovery, is used now more than ever, just like the “shake to exit” function.
The survey also revealed that users are concerned about what could happen to their marriages during the stay at home, as they believe that the problems could increase due to the change in the way they live together.
However, they admitted that being with their partner on a daily basis does not prevent them from maintaining communication with their lovers, since 67% miss their lover during stay at home.
These are the most used moments to send messages, sextext or call lovers:
Walking the dog
Grocery store visit
Any quick outing
70% write from their room at home
30% from the bathroom
Typical contact with a lover is at night or at wake up time
Gleeden’s features as a discreet dating app seem designed for a stay at home fling. The platform is available for desktop computers, laptops, tablets and smartphones. With the ‘Discreet Icon’ option, you can replace the official app icon of an apple with a more anonymous design so it blends in with other apps on the screen.
You can upload sensitive photos to a private album, to which you can grant or revoke access to other members. Sense someone’s about to come in? Press ESC on your keyboard to immediately disconnect from Gleeden and redirect to a website of your choice. Or just shake your phone to exit pronto.
Either way, don’t say we recommended that you try this at home.
The cases of people infected with COVID-19 in Costa Rica, this Monday, April 20, reached 662, just two new cases compared to Sunday.
This has been the lowest number since the first cases were reported on March 6, 2020, and has been the trend in the last week, in which between six and seven new cases were reported per day.
However, the Health Minister, Daniel Salas, asked Costa Ricans not to lower their guard in, as we are not yet out of the woods yet.
The cases are broken down as follows: 630 adults (32 of whom are seniors) and 32 children. In total 13 people remain in hospital, 8 of them in Intensive Care.
The total recovered are 124 in total; the number of active cases has dropped to 532, a number that has seen a downward trend for the past week.
The canton with the greatest number of cases is San Jose (87), followed by Alajuela (74), Desamparadors (39), Santa Ana (39) and San Carlos (29), rounding out the top 5. For a map click here.
Unfortunately, Monday morning the sixth death from the coronavirus was reported, that of the first case of a confirmed Costa Rican in the country. The victim is the 54-year-old doctor from Alajuela.
He would have been infected in Panama in early March, where he traveled to bring back a relative arriving from Cuba, who apparently also had been infected. The doctor had underlying conditions and though he had been cleared of the covid-19 virus.
The Minister of Health, Dr. Daniel Salas, explained the infection led to his death.
“The vast majority have not been exposed to the virus and that puts us in great vulnerability, we are walking on an eggshell. We have to get used to a new standard, we have not overcome this. We still can’t go back to normal,” Salas explained.
The Minister warned that if we suddenly relax the handwashing and social distancing measures, we could trigger more cases.
In addition, Minister Salas announced the continuing of the closure of borders to foreigners was until May 15, during which time only Costa Rican nationals and residents (who have not left the country after March 23) are permitted entry and subject to a 14-day mandatory quarantine.
UPDATE (6:02 pm) Following up on the penalties and any moratorium. Our email(s) to Migración have gone unanswered and nothing posted on their website, it was pointed by a reader to the Facebook post of April 17 by the DGME explaining the penalties.
The note says that the collection of the fine for overstay is postponed, an executive decree will be published soon. Once it is published, we will provide an update.
– – -Start of original article —
It’s April 21, 2020, and without a moratorium, the penalties for overstaying in Costa Rica goes into effect. The fine is US$100 per each month they overstay in Costa Rica, based on the Ley General de Migración y Extranjería 8764, article 33.
Tourists with expired extry stamps, temporary residents or special category visa holders with an expired DIMEX and foreign nationals who have been notified of a rejected immigration status but have not yet filed an appeal, among others, will now face penalties.
The immigration law established the fine was issued in 2012. The fine became effective that year, however, each year up the last year (2019) issued a moratorium on the enforcement of the fine.
The national emergency
The national emergency due to the new coronavirus complicates things somewhat. Tourists who entered Costa Rica after December 17, 2019, are automatically allowed to remain until May 17, 2020, and thus the fines do not apply to them.
The notice on the immigration website:
AUTHORIZED LEGAL PERMANENCE UNDER THE TOURISM SUBCATGEGORY: The period of legal permanence authorized for foreign persons under the migratory subcategory of Tourism who enter the country after December 17 (2019), is extended until May 17, 2020. It applies from March 17, 2020. The extension is carried out automatically, it is not necessary to appear to request it.
(PERMANENCIA LEGAL AUTORIZADA BAJO SUBCATGEGORÍA TURISMO: El plazo de permanencia legal autorizado a las personas extranjeras bajo la subcategoría migratoria de Turismo que ingresaran al país después del 17 de diciembre, se prorroga hasta el día 17 de mayo 2020. Rige a partir del 17 de marzo 2020. La prorroga se realiza de forma automática, no requiere presentarse a solicitarla.)
On Monday, April 20, the Minister of Health announced that the partial border closure would be extended to May 15, 2020. The border closure prohibits foreigners not legal residents, that is only Costa Rican citizens and legal residents (who have not left the country after March 23) will be permitted entry.
The immigration website has not been updated for any extension or moratorium and our email has yet to be answered.
From the above notice, it would be expected that tourists entering the country after December 17, 2019, would have the fine waived due to the covid-19. However, tourists who remained in the country post-March 18 – the border closing – may have to pay.
As to temporary residents whose DIMEX (immigration document) has expired and not renewed, leaving the country after March 24 would lose their ability to re-enter could have a case for having any fine waived.
Past the national emergency
Past the national emergency and in the clear absence of any moratorium, the fine will be applied.
Not paying the fine, either not being able to or unwilling, the immigration service can ban reentry for a period of time three times as long as the overstayed period.
For example, if a tourist or temporary resident whose DIMEX has expired and not renewed overstays three months, the fine would be US$300 or they are not allowed into the country for nine months.
When entering the country, you must pay attention to the entry stamp. Most importantly the legal stay for tourists is up to a maximum of 90 days, or less, depending on the country or origin and the immigration official at the time of entry.
Ojo (important), 90 days is not three months. You need to count the days, allowing for months that 31 days and February. For example, entering the country on June 15 means the 90-day stay would expire on September 13.
If you are a tourist, be prepared to pay the fine if you overstay (or be prohibited from reentering). You can avoid the fine by contacting immigration and requesting an extension to your stay.
Another option (during post-covid-19) is doing what is referred to as a visa or border run, leaving the country typically through the northern (Nicaragua) or southern (Panama) borders and re-entering There is no immigration requirement to stay out of the country for a min of 72 hours, you can literally cross the border to the other side and come right back in.
If you are a resident, avoid any possible issues by renewing on time.
To know the amount you should pay when leaving the country, as a fine for your irregular stay in the country, you can enter the following link. http://201.201.187.139/multas/default.aspx
Arrivals hall at the Juan Santamaria International airport in San Jose
Costa Rica Health authorities announced this Monday that the closure of the border to foreigners will continue until May 15.
The arrivals hall at the Juan Santamaria International airport in San Jose
The measure introduced mid-March was initially until April 12, then extended to Apr 30, and now for 15 more days.
Up to that date, only Costa Rican nationals and foreigners with permanent or temporary residency in the country are permitted entry, subject to a 14-day stay at home order.
All other foreigners will be denied entry.
The measure is applied at all borders, air, land, and sea.
Michael Soto, Minister of Security, announced earlier this month that exceptions for “humanitarian cases” may be made, but must be approved by the immigration service, the Health and Security ministries.
Costa Ricans and legal residents who violate the Health order after arriving in the country will be subject to fines ranging from ¢450,000 to ¢2.2 million colones and possible criminal charges.
Warning for residents
Foreigners who hold temporary or permanent residents who left Costa Rica before 11:59 pm on March 23 will be allowed entry; those who left the country after will be denied re-re-entry, and if caught re-entering illegally will have their residency status revoked.
The Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (DGME) – immigration service – has announced that tourists and others who overstay their visas due to the coronavirus crisis will not be fined when they next try to exit Costa Rica.
Foreigners who entered Costa Rica on a tourist visa after December 17, 2019, can legally remain in Costa Rica until May 17, 2020, without lapsing into an irregular (illegal) immigration status.
For clarity, foreigners who entered Costa Rica prior to 11:59 pm on March 18 will be able to stay their full period based on their entry stamp. For example, a North American who entered on March 17, with a max 90 day, will be able to stay in the country until June 15.
On April 21, 2020, the DGME will begin to collect the fine from non-residents who overstay their period of authorized stay to be in the country. This fine has in the past been postponed.
The fine is (US $ 100), for each month (or part of) of irregular stay in the country or, failing that, they will be prohibited from entering for a term equivalent to three times the time of their irregular stay.
Exempt are minors, refugees, asylees, stateless persons, disabled adults and cross-border workers.
Non-residents are foreigners who, without intending to reside in the country, were granted authorization by the DGME for entry and extension for certain periods. This applies also to residents whose DIMEX, residency card, is expired.
Reactions
Reaction on social networks was quick, within minutes of the announcement, many commented, saying the extension is certain to hurt an already hard-hit tourist industry by creating uncertainty.
“No one will think of committing to vacation plans”.
Others suggest the re-opening of borders be gradual, starting with the Liberia airport (LIR) in Guanacaste, a major tourist destination and a province with the second least (2%) of all confirmed cases.
The suggestion is that tourists arriving in Liberia would have limited travel within Costa Rica, to only areas outside the Greater Metropolitan Area (GAM) – San Jose and Central Valley.
That would allow tourists to visit a major part of Costa Rica, beaches and national parks (currently closed) along the Pacific coast, and areas in Arenal and San Carlos, among others.
“Be smart and save the economy”
“How can they set a date when so many people are not abiding by the stay at home allowing the virus to stay alive.”
“Don’t open too soon. Planes aren’t flying anyway.”
“Few tourists are coming while people are still dying at such a high rate. this is a good move by CR.”
The regional hospitals and remote medical centers and clinics of the Costa Rican Social Security Fund (CCSS) will soon begin to test for the virus that causes the covid-19. However, the test they will use is different from the one already used in other public hospitals in the metropolitan area and in the Instituto Costarricense de Investigación y Enseñanza en Nutrición y Salud (Inciensa) – Costa Rican Institute for Research and Teaching in Nutrition and Health.
Both tests work with Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology, which allows high reliability; but in regional hospitals, a test called GeneXpert will be used, which allows faster results, without the need for analysis by a molecular biology laboratory.
GeneXpert technology produced by the California-based firm Cepheid, can process nose swab samples in a mere 45 minutes.
This modality is more convenient for remote medical centers that do not have a molecular biology laboratory and only in case of doubt, the sample needs to be sent to be corroborated by a conventional PCR test.
Last Sunday, Mario Ruiz Cubillo, medical manager of the CCSS, announced at a press conference that this Monday, GenXpert equipment will begin to be distributed to regional hospitals and medical centers to increase the country’s diagnostic capacity.
“We are doing everything possible to make the tests of a high level of reliability,” said Ruiz.
He added: “even centers such as the CAIS de Cañas, or the Monseñor Sanabria Hospital (Puntarenas), the San Carlos Hospital, the Valverde Vega Hospital (San Ramón) will be able to carry out these tests and this will allow us to have better care for possible patients and treat them if necessary ”.
GeneXpert technology is not new, what is new is its application for the detection of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes covid-19. Previously, it has been used to detect tuberculosis.
PCR remains key
The CCSS already has the first reagents for the GeneXpert tests, but their use is intended for regions outside the Greater Metropolitan Area (GAM).
The differences between conventional tests and faster tests are part of the reasons.
“The GeneXpert uses disposable cartridges. It is an integrated principle of PCR. All chemicals come inside the cartridge. In conventional PCR there are three kits: extraction, reverse transcription and amplification, they are all needed to be able to do the test. The GeneXpert has them all in a single cartridge,” explained bioinformatics and genetics specialist Allan Orozco.
“I find them very good for rural areas where you have nothing. It works anywhere; in the middle of the jungle, you put it under a tree and with a battery it works. Standard PCR doesn’t like the jungle, only formal clinical laboratories,” he added.
However, due to its high demand worldwide, large quantities is difficult to obtain and stock in the country.
“The problem is the following: these tests do not work without cartridges and the company is sending very few to the country; about 600 or 700 per week. There is a voracious demand in international markets,” Orozco explained.
Another vital difference is that, unlike standard tests that determine in a matter of hours whether the virus is present or not, GeneXpert tests can give three possible results: 1- positive, 2- probably positive, and 3-negative .
If this rapid test yields a likely positive conclusion, conventional PCR should be run to determine the definitive answer. In that case, the final diagnosis can be issued by the Inciensa or some molecular biology laboratory of a CCSS hospital.
Ruiz, indicated that this test will be applied to those who qualify as a suspicious case.
“The test is done on patients who meet established diagnostic criteria to be candidates for it,” said the medical manager.
Among those criteria are: having respiratory symptoms that are not explained by any other cause, or loss or decrease in the sense of smell or changes in taste, or people whose treating doctor sees that the test should be performed.
Amazon announced this morning it needs to fill 2,000 new jobs in Costa Rica, such as customer service agents, analysts, accounting and finance, software developers, content strategists, and fraud prevention professionals.
According to a statement from the company, released this morning, Monday, April 20, those interested can apply at amazon.jobs.
According to that Amazon report, the goal is to strengthen the world-class service that Amazon provides to its customers in Europe, North America, and South America in languages such as English, Spanish, German, Portuguese, French and Italian.
These are permanent and temporary jobs, as well as opportunities to work from home, with a variety of hours and locations.
“Since we opened our first customer service center in 2008, we have hired more than 9,000 employees,” said Alejandro Filloy, director of customer service for Latin America in the statement.
“Our team – he continued – is getting bigger and stands out for the exceptional talent we have found in Costa Rica. The new partners will allow us to enhance our ability to continue helping clients around the world.”
Friday before Semana Santa, in the hours before the strict measures to minimize the spread of the new coronavirus during the holiday period, thousands crowded the country’s supermarkets, Walmart and Pricesmart, for example, buying rice, beans, canned ‘tuna’ and huge amounts of toilet paper.
Eduardo Rojas is a ‘prepper’ with extensive knowledge in mountaineering. From his business La Casa del montañista, in Guadalupe, he talks about the current pandemic and how he prepares in the event that things get out of control. Photo: John Durán / LN
Meanwhile at home, watching the news and witnessing such unprecedented crowds were the Tico preppers, who without saying a word and with a beer in hand settled very quietly on their living room sofar, watching the news.
When the first case of the covid-19 appeared in Costa Rica and the population was asked to stay home, the preppers did not need to go out. They had zero fear, since everything they needed to subsist for a long time had already been in their homes for months, or perhaps years.
“We have everything. The crowds we saw, when this coronavirus thing started, are part of the first wave of a possible system crash. People feel fear and, since they are not prepared, they leave their house desperately looking to get supplies, because in these countries there is no culture to store, everything is bought daily,” Eduardo Rojas, who proudly proclaims himself a prepper, told La Nacion.
The preppers, for those who do not know the term, are those people who take maximum precautions to survive in situations of extreme emergency or even the “inevitable end of the world”.
Along these lines, the collapse of society due to an economic crisis, a war world or a deadly pandemic, are part of the events for which they prepare with strict discipline.
That is why, in the midst of the world emergency due to the new coronavirus, the Costa Rican preppers, in Spanish “sacan pecho” – adopting an attitude of pride or defiance, as well acting decisively and courageously in a difficult situation.
Ricardo Calvo and Andres Acuña are ‘preppers’. On a farm, located in the Cerro de la Muerte, these men bet on a sustainable refuge to survive an economic and social disaster. Weapons, to defend against looting and other unforeseen events, are part of their arsenal. Photo: Pablo Montiel / LN
Unknown to them, family and even friends have called them insane, but now they have noticed how the perception towards their unique practices has changed. A lot.
“These days they don’t call us crazy anymore,” says Ricardo Calvo, a long-standing national prepper, who has his survival refuge in a wooded site in the Cerro de la Muerte.
Rojas, for his part, has never been bothered for being considered the “crazy sheep” of the family. After all, he knows that whenever his loved ones need something, they turn to him and that, in the midst of the current pandemic, they have begun to see him with different eyes.
“It is wavering, in the middle of any emergency, they always resort to me. It has always been like this. That in the middle of a family piñata a boy gets a scrape playing with others, they always come to me because they know that I always have band-aids, special knives or items to control any unexpected situation. Then we stop being the strange ones”, comments this Josefino smiling, very proud of his extensive knowledge in survivalism and his great expertise as a paramedic and mountaineer.
The only bad thing is that his relatives may love him very much and show him more appreciation than normal in these troubled times, but Rojas is forceful in one thing: “if there were to be a global collapse, very few could go with me. Siblings and even parents, who do not adopt the system, can unfortunately be left out. This may sound selfish, but it is not, it is realistic, because a large number of people would be impossible to handle.”
Alexánder Sánchez, in preparing his report, said that after listening to this sincere confession, inevitable questions arise: in the time of the covid-19, will it be necessary at any time to take such radical actions? How do preppers analyze the current pandemic? Will we be at risk of collapse worldwide? What do preppers really fear?
Their responses will surprise you.
How ‘preppers’ see it
Ricardo Calvo, a 48-year-old naturalist guide, is undoubtedly one of the best-known preppers in the country. His farm, located near kilometer 70 of theInter-American Sur (ruta 2), is his refuge in the event that an apocalyptic event threatens his life and that of his loved ones.
The sign says it all: “preppers shop” or “preppers” store. Eduardo Rojas, as he knows them very well, specializes in such unique clients. Photo: John Durán / LN
On his property Calvo stores water, all kinds of grains, generates energy autonomously and designed evacuation routes for when the spark ignites and the chaos begins.
Calvo, as he commented to La Nacion’s Revista Dominical last November, is aware that his lifestyle generates different opinions in people: “Many think that I am a truly fatalistic individual and that all my logistics are focused on preparing me for the ‘call of the end of the world'”.
However, Calvo does not consider himself a fatalistic person, “but realistic and cautious.”
“As for the fact that we are preparing for the end of the world, that is not true. We do it for a collapse or chaos that may occur at the least expected moment, and that could put our lives at risk,” said the survivalist.
Calvo has lived relatively calmly, however, these days, he and his survivalist community are more restless than ever. The covid-19 pandemic has put them on their guard, as everything seems to indicate that this is not a minor episode.
“I’m going to tell you one thing. Not that I think that the coronavirus is going to be the end of the world, no, I don’t think so. I think things are going well in Costa Rica. But something is true, this is like a tug of war for society, something that will make us all react and prepare better. Now everyone is going to understand us, without a doubt it will be like this,” said Calvo.
But while Calvo’s predictions sound relatively favorable, this prepper doesn’t rule out the possibility that something could go wrong and things with the covid-19 get completely out of control.
“Sure, the possibility of everything going wrong exists. Let’s remember that this is unprecedented in our history and the same Health Minister, Daniel Salas, cannot answer how long he will have to maintain the protocols to avoid contagion since everything must be measured day by day. Until now everything is unknown and that keeps you in suspense,” he reflected.
In summary, what Calvo fears the most are two things: firstly, that there will be a massive contagion of police officers and, secondly, the impact that the economic crisis will inevitably have on people, which inevitably brings with it the pandemic.
Calvo’s fear of the loss of the police to keep order is based on his observations that “many people cannot even obey a simple sanitary order”, not heeding to the call to stay at home, th hundreds daily violating the vehicular restrictions. “We already know that the economy of Costa Rica is going to be torn to shreds, that is a fact, so nothing is going to be the same as before,” he warns.
For him, looting, despair, and anarchy would be the consequences of a dangerous combo: a crisis of citizen security and hunger.
“I’m going to confess something to you. Me and the preppers in my community we were not prepared for a health emergency, because we did not have gallons of gel stored, or masks, or anything like that. We should have done it, I did not prepare for a pandemic of this type, but what we did prepare for was the lockdown,” said Calvo.
Costa Rica Preppers, is one of the Costa Rican survivalist groups on Facebook. In some of these communities, administration approval is required to enter and they have internal operating rules. Image from Facebook
“One cannot predict everything that is going to happen, it is impossible, one must be prepared for a sudden change in society. For example, the ‘last minute preppers’ were the ones that caused supermarkets to collapse and spread the virus further in Costa Rica and around the world.
“It is noted that human reaction is dangerous. In such a case, one should focus and be prepared in case a wave of looting comes into being,” he added.
For that, Calvo and his community of preppers already have some security protocols planned in their survival hideout. And yes, this includes weapons.
For preppers like Eduardo Rojas, owner of a mountaineering business located in Guadalupe, he points out what can happen before a global collapse breaks out.
He calls it “waves” that society goes through before possible chaos.
“I said it before. The first wave has to do with what we have already seen in Costa Rica. Feelings of hysteria about what is going to happen, the expectation of whether I am going to get sick or not, and the necessary practice of washing my hands every now and then. Confining yourself in one place,” Rojas explained.
The second wave, according to Rojas, “is the gradual collapse of the economic system, where people begin to see their purchasing power diminished, either because they lost their jobs, their jobs were suspended or their working hours were reduced. We are already seeing that”.
Finally, the third wave is the one that nobody wants to see, “It is the complete collapse of the economy and the political system, a fact for which virtually no one would be prepared. At this stage, according to Rojas, people do not have access to basic food and hunger begins to rise dangerously,” according to Rojas.
Rojas and other preppers already have plan A, B, and C.
First, he would take refuge in his house, then in another strategic position already identified and, finally, if necessary, in a secret place outside the Metropolitan Area. The evacuation routes are already planned out and could be activated the day this prepper considers that the security of his family nucleus is being violated.
For Rojas there are already signs to be concerned about, especially due to economic and social behavior. “You can already see that there are more aggressive and intolerant people than usual and that is evident with the Nicaraguan issue,” said the prepper.
”When people are stressed and confined, receiving worrisome information and without work all day, it becomes a time bomb, about to explode. The social order is simply broken. For me, the possibility of that happening is high, because when they tell you that the covid-19 vaccine will be ready in 18 months or 12 months, imagine,” he added, pessimistically.
Rojas says he is on yellow alert.
Preppers in Costa Rica use social networks, the different groups keeping in touch and informed.
All the news shared in the Facebook groups are commented with singular fury by the preppers, who in these days are in solidarity and uniquely united.
For many, the moment to act seems to be close, very close.
Another thing that Tico preppers do is stay on top of what other preppers around the world are doing.
Like the extreme measures taken by the Gembala family, to avoid the global pandemic, left Indiana moving into converted former military shelters in South Dakota, saying: “We’ve got life insurance and car insurance… now we’ve got TOTAL insurance.”
Sources: La Nacion, Revista Dominical, RT, Facebook
A 54-year-old doctor became the sixth fatality of covid-19 in Costa Rica on Monday. He was the first Costa Rica to test positive for the virus in the country, confirmed on March 6.
He was considered a super-disseminator due to the large number of infections generated as a result of his case. He worked as a gynecologist at the San Rafael de Alajuela Hospital.
On March 11, Health authorities confirmed he had infected at least five people with whom he had direct contact, infecting others and so on. Some 165 workers at the Alajuela hospital had to be isolated, as they also had contact with their co-worker.
The man had multiple risk factors, such as hypertension, diabetes, smoking, in addition to other conditions that were not cited by the Ministry of Health.
As detailed by the authorities, on April 7 he tested negative for the SARS-CoV-2. However, he is counted as one more death from said disease.
The other five deceased are:
March 18: an 87-year-old man admitted to the Alajuela hospital with risk factors.
March 19: Another 87-year-old man admitted to the Alajuela hospital, with risk factors.
April 8: A 45-year-old man admitted to the San Juan de Dios Hospital, without risk factors.
April 15: An 84-year-old man admitted to the San Juan de Dios Hospital, with risk factors.
April 19:. A 69-year-old man admitted to the San Juan de Dios Hospital, with risk factors.
This Sunday the number of confirmed cases reached 660, of which 112 patients have already recovered, or 17% of the total infected with the virus.
A 69-year-old man became the fifth fatality of covid-19 in Costa Rica on Sunday.
The death of the San Jose resident occurred on Sunday afternoon at the San Juan de Dios Hospital, where he had been in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) since March 28.
In addition to his age, the victim suffered from high blood pressure, one of the risk factors that aggravate the virus.
The man had been diagnosed with the respiratory virus disease on March 25 and three days later he entered intensive care.
The other four deaths are:
March 18: an 87-year-old man at Alajuela hospital with risk factors.
March 19: Another 87-year-old man at Alajuela hospital, with risk factors.
April 8: a 45-year-old man at the San Juan de Dios Hospital, without risk factors.
April 15: an 84-year-old man at San Juan de Dios Hospital, with risk factors.
With the fifth death, the case fatality rate of the coronavirus pandemic in Costa Rica is 0.76%.
Sunday afternoon, the Minister of Health, Daniel Salas, reported the number of confirmed cases in the country reached 660 cases, and 112 patients have recovered.
The Ministry of Health does not release the names of the patients and victims to protect their and the family’s privacy.
On April 14, the Swiss company Novartis donated to the CCSS a shipment of 108,000 hydroxychloroquine tablets. CCSS PHOTO
Used in the world for decades in the treatment of malaria, a month ago, the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS) decided to apply hydroxychloroquine to patients infected with the new coronavirus until a vaccine is available.
On April 14, the Swiss company Novartis donated to the CCSS a shipment of 108,000 hydroxychloroquine tablets.
Thi immunosuppressanta drug is produced in Costa Rica.
The medical director of the Caja, Mario Ruiz, as the director of Pharmacoepidemiology, Marjorie Obando Elizondo, the director of the Children’s Hospital, Olga Arguedas and the minister of Health, Daniel Salas, confirmed the use of the drug and the success in mitigating and containing the progression of the virus and also in reducing the number of patients who must be hospitalized in intensive care units.
“In Costa Rica we have been applying hydroxychloroquine since we had a meeting by teleconference with personnel in China who attended the emergency in the cities of Shanghai and Wuhan,” explained Ruiz.
That videoconference, offered by the Chinese Embassy in Costa Rica, took place on the night of March 18. It included, among others, the director-general and the director of epidemiology of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (briefly as China CDC).
On March 18, a videoconference was held between the health authorities of Costa Rica and China. Costa Ricans talked from the Huawei center, west of San José, thanks to the help of the Chinese Embassy. (Photo Embassy of China)
“We decided to ask for help from those who have gone through this. The experts from Shanghai and Wuhan gave us recommendations for patient management. We were told that it is key that a mild or moderate patient does not become severe. They explained that they used hydroxychloroquine for this, but never azithromycin (an antibiotic for respiratory infections) due to the associated cardiac complications,” Ruiz said.
In the group of 88 patients recovered up to Friday, April 17, the use of this drug has allowed covid-19 control tests to be negative, he added.
Marjorie Obando confirmed that up to Thursday, April 16, hydroxychloroquine treatment had been given to 1,361 people, including cases suspected of being infected. Of these, 498 corresponded to confirmed patients.
The average age of those who have received this treatment is 38.8 years; 7% are under 18 years of age, 10% over 60 and 54% are women.
“The prescription must be carried out as part of the medical record, individually for each patient, considering the benefit-risk ratio, pre-existing health conditions, medications they take and the possible drug interactions, that is why it is not given to all patients,” said the director of Pharmacoepidemiology.
Diseases like diabetes mellitus, hypertension, cancer, and asthma are not contraindications to giving treatment, she added. However, she warned, each case must be assessed individually.
Ruiz explained: “Hydroxychloroquine has specific specifications and doses. Thanks to the help that Chinese scientists gave us and a manual of therapeutic care, we are using this treatment at the established doses.”
The Minister of Health indicated that this drug “is the most widely used treatment to treat patients with malaria and is widely used throughout the world. In this sense, the complications that are seen are minimal if the doses that are already indicated are respected”.
The CCSS Director of Pharmacoepidemiology clarified that the approach with China has been important, but it is not the only source that they have turned to for the formulation and application of the covid-19 treatment protocols.
Every week, we review the available literature. We have done two protocol versions (of treatment for covid-19 positive patients), but we also understand that, in the current context of the pandemic, we will probably do a third or fourth version because this changes in real time.
“We receive the information from patients and their doctors, and through online communication with the Ministry of Health, we keep track of side effects. So far, those that have been reported are of the gastrointestinal type,” Obando reported.
“We are not adopting a protocol from another country just for the sake of it. We are responsible and we verify that what they present is true and convincing. Their experience is valid. The studies published are international, but on the other side, we have a life-threatening infection.
“Therefore, it is necessary to approach the patient with decisions based on the best scientific evidence that exists in a situation such as the current one in order to make a public health decision,” Obando said.
Avoid the ICU at all costs
Hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine are “first cousins,” explained Olga Arguedas, who is a specialist in immunology. Both drugs have chemical compositions and medical uses that are not exactly the same.
“They are old acquaintances. They are registered in Costa Rica and are produced locally. This was taken into account as an important point in the decision to give hydroxychloroquine as treatment. They are known because they have antiviral mechanisms. Hydroxychloroquine was used in Shanghai as the first line of treatment,” said Arguedas.
The specialist in immunology explained the drug has been used in Brazil and France and the Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública summarized all the treatments that are being published for covid-19. Those in more advanced stages (with more scientific information) are those where hydroxychloroquine has been used.
“We still cannot be sure because there is no scientific evidence. However, in the very particular case of Costa Rica, this could be one of the elements that is influencing the good results of the country so far,” added Arguedas.
She emphasized that the purpose pursued with the use of hydroxychloroquine is to mitigate the progression of the disease.
Contraindicated in patients with risk factors
Olga Arguedas explained that hydroxychloroquine cannot always be used in people who have a risk factor.
Olga Arguedas, director of the Children’s Hospital, says the drug has so far “good results” in patients.
“It is contraindicated in those with liver disease or heart problems (arrhythmias or cardiac conduction disorders). It cannot be used in people who are alcoholic or have kidney failure. It must be administered with great care in patients who use concomitant medications, such as heart medications and others that lower defenses,” said the immunologist.
Regarding adverse effects, she said that among the most common are blurred vision, vomiting, and sometimes diarrhea and headache.
Infrequent effects include changes in blood count or allergies and a phenomenon that increases cardiac conduction intervals has been described.
Therefore, in those with arrhythmias, the prescription must be done under strict supervision.
“There are many studies that are running at an accelerated pace. The WHO (World Health Organization) is promoting the participation of countries in studies.
“In light of what there is, Costa Rica is looking for the best evidence to ensure the least toxicity to patients. They are all proven medications, we know how they behave and what to expect. That is the strategic point”, declared Marjorie Obando, director of Pharmacoepidemiology.
Team effort
“This is the work of a whole team. It starts with early detection and continues with the measures that are being taken at all levels as part of a strategy that, for now, is paying off,” said Mario Ruiz.
Román Macaya, executive president of the CCSS, on April 14, when he received a donation of the 108,000 tablets of the drug that is applied to mitigate the coronavirus. He is accompanied by representatives of the Novartis firm.
The CCSS medical director is emphatic: no one should self-medicate with hydroxychloroquine because it is risky.
In the country, there are sufficient doses for now because, however, world demand is increasing, explained CCSS president, Roman Macaya, on Tuesday, April 14, when he received a donation of 108,000 tablets from the Swiss manufacturer Novartis.
“We want to thank the company for the donation of this product, which is highly demanded throughout the world and that Costa Rica has been included in the countries that receive this type of donation,” said Macaya.
The president of the Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (CCSS), Roman Macaya, said that on Saturday began the assembly of the Mobile Medical Unit in Los Chiles, Alajuela, bordering Nicaragua.
Photo from CCSS
It consists of a provisional or field hospital, whose objective will be to free the local medical center so that it can take care of hospitalized patients with covid-19.
The mobile unit will be located in the Emergency Service of the hospital for the care of patients with other pathologies, for which there will be three modules: two measuring 52 square meters (m²) and one measuring 26 m², for a total work area of 130 m².
Macaya explained that the CCSS has several of the field hospitals that will be deployed as needed, the first on the northern border because it is a high-traffic area.
“I am talking about a border area that has a fluctuating pace of people and we wanted to make a difference. It is a strategy to mitigate risks and its purpose is the differentiated care of patients with respiratory symptoms from other people with other conditions,” he said.
According to the director of the Los Chiles medical center, Edual Alfaro, one of the planned scenarios is the care of migrants.
In addition, he explained that being a vulnerable area, there could be a sudden increase in the demand for health services in a short time, due to the migratory flows.
Macaya said during the Saturday heath briefing, the field hospital is expected fully operational on Monday.