Tag Archives: quarantine

Singapore builds world’s first ‘bubble’ hotel for business travelers to skip quarantine

Vaccines may be rolling out across the world, but the return of normal international travel may still be a ways off. So Singapore has come up with an intermediary solution: a COVID-safe “bubble” hotel for business travelers.

Advertised as “the world’s first bubble facility for non-quarantining business travelers,” Connect@Changi offers business travelers a space to stay where they can bypass the city-state’s mandatory 14-day quarantine, according to Business Insider. The only catch? They can’t leave.

The meeting room separated in half by air-tight glass panels at a short-stay facility, Connect@Changi, in Singapore on Feb. 18, 2021.

Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images


However, the facility is designed to offer travelers everything they need for a “test-stay-work-meet” short stay: built inside a massive expo center originally designed for live concerts and conferences, Connect@Changi features 150 hotel rooms, gym pods and 40 COVID-safe meeting rooms.

The meeting rooms, designed for conducting in-person business with outside visitors, are separated down the middle with air-tight glass panels and separate ventilation systems. Those on opposite sides of the glass are able to communicate via a microphone system.

A general view of the Connect@Changi courtyard, billed as the world’s first coronavirus-safe hotel and conference complex is pictured in Singapore on February 18, 2021.

Roslan Rahman/AFP via Getty Images

Travelers are required to take a COVID test before their flight, and once again when they arrive at Changi Airport in Singapore. They are then shuttled from the airport directly to Connect@Changi, where they check in and await test results via text message for about six to 12 hours.

Room rates per night starts at 384 Singapore dollars, or about $287, which includes meals delivered to a cubbyhole outside your door and COVID tests (the hotel has its own on-site COVID-19 testing center, where all guests are tested periodically throughout their visit).

A general view of the Connect@Changi guest room billed as the world’s first coronavirus-safe hotel and conference complex is pictured in Singapore on February 18, 2021.

Roslan Rahman/AFP via Getty Images

“Without such a facility, travel options are essentially binary – either stay at home due to travel restrictions, or fly overseas and endure long periods in quarantine,” Robin Hu, the head of one of the project’s developers, said in a press release, according to Business Insider.

For more photos of the facility and information on the rooms, food and amenities, read the Business Insider story here.

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Miranda Lambert shares gratitude over having more time with husband Brendan McLoughlin in quarantine

Miranda Lambert shares gratitude over spending more time with husband Brendan McLoughlin during COVID-19 quarantine: ‘It made us really strong’

Among all the uncertainty and tense times since COVID-19 was deemed a pandemic last March, Miranda Lambert has found a silver lining.

The country music superstar shared how she is thankful for all the extra time she’s been able to spend with her husband Brendan McLoughlin during their months in quarantine.

The couple had a whirlwind two-and-a-half-month courtship before tying-the-knot in January 2019.

Silver lining: Miranda Lambert, 37, is thankful for the extra she has had with her husband Brendan McLoughlin, 30, while in quarantine , beginning in March 2020

‘We didn’t date very long before we got married,’ the singer revealed during an appearance on SiriusXM’s The Storme Warren Show.  

‘And so we sort of got to just really, really, really get to know each other. Cause it was just us two with no distraction, at my farm outside of Nashville. And so I was really thankful for it because it made us really strong.’

The two-time Grammy winner, 37, went on to share how the coronavirus crisis helped her take stock on what really matters in life and love.

The country music superstar revealed she and her husband ‘really got to know each other’ when they were along together during lockdown

‘A lot of couples, especially a lot of my friends don’t really see their significant other because we’re different directions all the time,’ she said of the typical scenario for many couples.

‘But with everything that happened last year, I think everybody was forced to sort of reconnect with themselves and with people that they really love and that are close to them,’ she said.  

During the interview, the Heart Like Mine star agreed that being alone in lockdown as a couple will likely defined a relationship — one way or another.

‘And I kept saying there’s gonna be a lot of engagements and babies or a lot of divorce,’ she added. 

Make or break! Lambert also opened up about how quarantine and traveling can often define a relationship one way or another; she is pictured during a recent road trip in an airstream with her husband to North Carolina and Georgia

With more time on their hands, Lambert and McLoughlin, a former New York City Police Department officer, recently took a road trip in an airstream to North Carolina and Georgia. 

And oftentimes, traveling in close quarters can also define a relationship. With that in mind Lambert shared on instance that has the potential to push her buttons.

‘Backing up [a trailer is] sort of a trigger,’ she confessed. 

‘That’ll be the one time you really identified as like, one person trying to back up the other person, trying to tell the other person how to back up a trailer.’

The couple celebrated their second wedding anniversary on January 26. 

Going strong: The couple, who celebrated their second wedding anniversary on January 26, only dated two-and-a-half-months before getting hitched

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Rainbow Six: Quarantine Patch Appears, Renamed Rainbow Six: Parasite

Update: We suppose Rainbow Six: Quarantine was just not going to fly as a title during a real-world global pandemic. Ubisoft already announced it was mulling a name change, and it looks like it’s settled upon Rainbow Six: Parasite.

Artwork of the game’s PlayStation 4 home screen has leaked online, following patches for the release being pushed onto PlayStation’s servers. Is a release date imminent?


Original Story: We don’t know when Rainbow Six: Quarantine is coming out. Ubisoft reiterated in its most recent financial call that it’s still eyeing a 2021 release alongside Far Cry 6 — but could the unfortunately named co-op shooter arrive sooner than we think?

The reason we ask is because a pre-launch update for the game has actually been pushed onto PlayStation’s servers (as per PlayStation Game Size on Twitter). This suggests that Rainbow Six: Quarantine could be incoming, but we’ll obviously have to wait for an official announcement before getting too excited.

It’s crazy to think that Rainbow Six: Quarantine was originally set to release in early 2020 following its reveal at E3 2019. It was then delayed into the next fiscal year, and we haven’t heard much about it since.

Are you interested in Rainbow Six: Quarantine? Wear a mask in the comments section below.



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Canada to quarantine travelers, suspend flights south

TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday announced stricter restrictions on travelers in response to new, likely more contagious variants of the novel coronavirus — including making it mandatory for travelers to quarantine in a hotel at their own expense when they arrive in Canada and suspending airline service to Mexico and all Caribbean destinations until April 30.

Trudeau said in addition to the pre-boarding test Canada already requires, the government will be introducing mandatory PCR testing at the airport for people returning to Canada.

“Travelers will then have to wait for up to three days at an approved hotel for their test results, at their own expense, which is expected to be more than $2000,” Trudeau said.

“Those with negative test results will then be able to quarantine at home under significantly increased surveillance and enforcement.”

He said the measure will be take effect “in the coming weeks.”

The steep cost for the hotel stay includes the cost for a private PCR test, security, food and the cost of measures the designated hotels will have to take to keep their workers safe.

“The cost is a ballparking. This isn’t like any other facility. This is one where there has to be infection prevention control measures, security and other costs as well. It’s not just a regular stay at a hotel,” said Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer.

Tam also said a test will be required on the 10th day after people return.

The prime minister said those with positive tests will be immediately required to quarantine in designated government facilities to make sure they’re not carrying variants of particular concern.

Trudeau also said the government and Canada’s main airlines have agreed to suspend service to sun destinations right away. He said Air Canada, WestJet, Sunwing, and Air Transat are cancelling air service to all Caribbean destinations and Mexico starting Sunday until April 30.

“They will be making arrangements with their customers who are currently on a trip in these regions to organize their return flights,” Trudeau said.

He said starting next week, all international passenger flights must land at the following four airports: Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary and Montreal.

“We will also, in the coming weeks, be requiring nonessential travelers to show a negative test before entry at the land border with the US, and we are working to stand up additional testing requirements for land travel,” Trudeau said.

Canada already requires those entering the country to self-isolate for 14 days and to present a negative COVID-19 test taken within three days before arrival.

Tam, Canada’s top health official, said that security contractors will be going door-to-door to check on returnees who are isolating at home.

The move to require a hotel stay upon return would discourage vacations as people would not want to have to quarantine at a hotel at their own expense upon return.

“It’s excellent. It’s a shame it’s this late. This is something they could have done ages ago,” said Dr. Andrew Morris, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Toronto and the medical director of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at Sinai-University Health Network.

“This is definitely a step in the right direction.”

More and more governments are thinking about ways to be more aggressive because of the new variants, delays in vaccines, the challenges with getting the population vaccinated and the strains on health care systems.

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said officials have been urging Canadians to cancel all nonessential travel and are trying to eliminate it.

“Unfortunately, some are making the choice to engage in nonessential travel. If they are going to make that choice, they should bear the full cost,” Blair said.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said his province will begin testing at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport on Monday as a stop gap until federal measures are in place.

Trudeau also announced there will be a delay in part of the next shipment of the Moderna vaccine, which arrives next week. He said Canada will receive 78% of the expected amount, translating to 180,000 doses.

Read original article here

Canada to quarantine travelers, suspend flights south

TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday announced stricter restrictions on travelers in response to new, likely more contagious variants of the novel coronavirus — including making it mandatory for travelers to quarantine in a hotel at their own expense when they arrive in Canada and suspending airline service to Mexico and all Caribbean destinations until April 30.

Trudeau said in addition to the pre-boarding test Canada already requires, the government will be introducing mandatory PCR testing at the airport for people returning to Canada.

“Travelers will then have to wait for up to three days at an approved hotel for their test results, at their own expense, which is expected to be more than $2000,” Trudeau said.

“Those with negative test results will then be able to quarantine at home under significantly increased surveillance and enforcement.”

The steep cost for the hotel stay includes the cost for a private PCR test, security, food and the cost of measures the designated hotels will have to take to keep their workers safe.

The prime minister said those with positive tests will be immediately required to quarantine in designated government facilities to make sure they’re not carrying variants of particular concern. .

Trudeau also said the government and Canada’s main airlines have agreed to suspend service to sun destinations right away. He said Air Canada, WestJet, Sunwing, and Air Transat are cancelling air service to all Caribbean destinations and Mexico starting Sunday until April 30.

“They will be making arrangements with their customers who are currently on a trip in these regions to organize their return flights,” Trudeau said.

He said starting next week, all international passenger flights must land at the following four airports: Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary and Montreal.

“We will also, in the coming weeks, be requiring nonessential travelers to show a negative test before entry at the land border with the US, and we are working to stand up additional testing requirements for land travel,” Trudeau said.

Canada already requires those entering the country to self-isolate for 14 days and to present a negative COVID-19 test taken within three days before arrival.

The move to require a hotel stay upon return would discourage vacations as people would not want to have to quarantine at a hotel at their own expense upon return.

“It’s excellent. It’s a shame it’s this late. This is something they could have done ages ago,” said Dr. Andrew Morris, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Toronto and the medical director of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at Sinai-University Health Network.

“This is definitely a step in the right direction.”

More and more governments are thinking about ways to be more aggressive because of the new variants, delays in vaccines, the challenges with getting the population vaccinated and the strains on health care systems.

Trudeau also announced there will be a delay in part of the next shipment of the Moderna vaccine, which arrives next week. He said Canada will receive 78% of the expected amount, translating to 180,000 doses.

Read original article here

New Zealand virus quarantine flaw exposed

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — The woman who took a flight back to New Zealand was supposed to avoid all physical contact with others for 14 days as she went into mandatory quarantine. The man working at the quarantine hotel was supposed to be the last line of defense.

But the two started passing notes to each other, including one written on the back of a face mask. Then she ordered a bottle of wine, which he delivered to her room. When he didn’t return 20 minutes later, a security manager sent to investigate found the pair together in what authorities are describing as an inappropriate encounter, one in which physical distancing wasn’t maintained.

The incident earlier this month, which came to light Friday, has highlighted a very human weak point in New Zealand’s coronavirus elimination procedures, in a country which has stamped out community spread of the virus. It is similar to lapses in Australia that may have contributed to a major outbreak last year in Melbourne.

“We’re dealing with human beings,” said COVID-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins. “We ask everybody to adhere to the standards that we put in place. I cannot control the actions of every individual.”

Hipkins said the pair’s behavior was totally unacceptable and he’d asked for a thorough inquiry.

Brigadier Jim Bliss, the head of managed isolation and quarantine, said the worker was immediately sent home and told to self-isolate. He was later fired. The returning traveler, meanwhile, was given a formal written warning by the police. Authorities breathed a sigh of relief after both returned negative coronavirus tests.

“The actions of the two people involved in this incident are incredibly irresponsible and extremely disappointing,” Bliss said. “There is absolutely no room for complacency.”

Bliss said the actions of the staffer at the Grand Millennium Auckland hotel weren’t reflective of the 4,000 people working at quarantine hotels who each day “selflessly put themselves between us and this virus.” He said an investigation is underway to consider whether additional security measures are needed.

The identities of the two people involved have not been disclosed by authorities.

New Zealand’s successful response has resulted in just 25 people dying from the virus in a nation of 5 million. The only new cases are those originating from returning travelers, 100,000 of whom have flown in over the past year. Authorities and people around the country remain highly tuned to any breaches at the border.

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Taiwan to put 5,000 into quarantine over hospital COVID-19 cluster

FILE PHOTO: A man wears a protective mask to prevent the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) while shopping ahead of the Chinese new year in Taipei, Taiwan, January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo

TAIPEI (Reuters) – Taiwan will more than double the number of people who have to quarantine at home to more than 5,000 as it seeks to contain a rare domestic cluster of COVID-19 connected to a hospital, the health minister said on Sunday.

While Taiwan has kept the pandemic well under control thanks to early and effective prevention, with the large majority of its 890 infections imported cases, it has since Jan. 12 been dealing with a small number of domestic transmissions at a hospital.

While the 15 people infected so far at the hospital in the northern city of Taoyuan is small compared to many other parts of the world, it has unnerved the government, which has cancelled many large-scale events related to the upcoming Lunar New Year.

Health Minister Chen Shih-chung told reporters that they will expand the number of people who have to quarantine at home for 14 days who may have had contact with the infected patients from the hospital cluster.

He put the number at about 5,000 people, compared to around 1,300 who are currently in quarantine.

The government has been testing all of those who have been in quarantine, and has been announcing new cases amongst them as they are confirmed.

Taiwan has a well-honed system to track those who have been in contact with confirmed cases and an electronic monitoring network to ensure those in quarantine remain at home.

Despite the new infections, Taiwan only has 95 active cases being treated in hospital. The government holds news conferences to announce details of every new infection.

Reporting by Ben Blanchard; editing by David Evans

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