Coronavirus: Singapore
Visits to hospitals, care homes can resume from tomorrow
Visitors, patients must be fully vaccinated; concessions will be made for certain cases
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Vaccinated people will be allowed to visit hospitals and residential care homes from tomorrow, provided that those being visited are also inoculated.
However, concessions will be made for those who are medically ineligible for vaccination as well as those in exceptional circumstances, the Ministry of Health (MOH) announced yesterday.
From tomorrow, visits to hospitals and residential care homes can resume with vaccination-differentiated safe management measures (VDS) in place.
"We are balancing the need to support the well-being of our patients and home residents to facilitate their receiving of close family support that is conducive for recovery, while at the same time continuing to protect vulnerable individuals in these hospitals and homes," Singapore's director of medical services Kenneth Mak said at a virtual media conference by the multi-ministry task force handling the pandemic.
For hospitals, each patient can receive up to two visits daily, and register up to two visitors each time. But only one visitor will be allowed at the bedside at any one time, and each visit must last no more than 30 minutes, though this may be extended under exceptional conditions.
Patients who are critically ill can admit up to five registered visitors, with two visitors allowed at the bedside each time.
For residential care homes, up to four visitors are allowed, with one designated visitor per visit, and with each visit capped at 30 minutes.
Visits will be allowed only when hospital patients or home residents and their visitors are all fully vaccinated.
"If the patient/resident and/or visitor is not fully vaccinated, in-person visits will only be allowed under exceptional circumstances on a case-by-case basis, as advised by the hospitals and homes," said MOH, noting that the measures for visits do not apply to those seeking medical care at hospitals.
Exceptional conditions include patients in critical condition, paediatric patients, birthing or post-partum mothers and patients requiring additional care support from caregivers.
"The strict implementation of such VDS measures will minimise the risk of outbreaks, which may otherwise jeopardise the lives of vulnerable patients and residents, and affect the operating capacity of our hospitals and residential care homes," the ministry added.
According to an MOH release, visitors to hospitals and homes will also need to show a valid negative antigen rapid test (ART) result obtained within the last 24 hours of their visit.
Those who have recovered from Covid-19 within the past nine months or so are exempted from this testing requirement.
Visitors can either self-administer the ART or head to MOH-approved test providers, including those performed at quick test centres. If self-administered, a time-stamped photo of the dated test result must be presented before entering the hospital or home.
In its release, MOH reminded visitors to hospitals to don face masks with good filtration capability at all times. These include surgical masks and reusable masks with two layers of fabric, it said.
Visitors should also avoid eating or drinking in hospital wards, using patients' toilets in the wards and sitting on patients' beds.
For homes, visits will be suspended if there is an active Covid-19 cluster.
"MOH will also review these measures regularly in line with the evolving Covid-19 situation so as to reduce the risk of Covid-19 importation and transmission in our healthcare institutions and residential care facilities," said the ministry.


