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COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Vietnam

COVID-19 pandemic inVietnam
Clockwise from top:
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationVietnam
First outbreakWuhan,Hubei, China
Index caseHo Chi Minh City
Arrival date23 January 2020
(5 years, 9 months, 4 weeks and 2 days)
Confirmed cases11,624,000[1]
Recovered11,580,908 (updated 8 December 2023)[2]
Deaths
43,206[1]
Fatality rate0.37%
Vaccinations
  • 90,497,670[1] (total vaccinated)
  • 85,961,570[1] (fully vaccinated)
  • 266,492,140[1] (doses administered)
Government website
covid19.gov.vnArchived June 2, 2024, at theWayback Machine
(in Vietnamese)
ncov.vncdc.gov.vn/viet-nam-full.htmlArchived May 10, 2023, at theWayback Machine
(in Vietnamese)

TheCOVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam has resulted in 11,624,000[1] confirmed cases ofCOVID-19 and 43,206[1] deaths. The number of confirmed cases is the highest total inSoutheast Asia, and the 13th highestin the world.Hanoi is the most affected locale with 1,649,654 confirmed cases and 1,238 deaths, followed byHo Chi Minh City with 628,736 cases and 20,476 deaths; however, theVietnamese Ministry of Health has estimated that the real number of cases may be four to five times higher.[3][4][5]

On 31 December 2019,China announced the discovery of a cluster ofpneumonia cases in Wuhan; the news had circulated on Vietnamese media by early January 2020.[6] The virus was first confirmed to have spread toVietnam on 23 January 2020, when two Chinese people inHo Chi Minh City tested positive for the virus.[7][8] Early cases were primarily imported until local transmission began to develop in February and March. Clusters of cases were later detected inVĩnh Phúc,[9]Hải Dương, and three other major cities, with the first death on 31 July 2020.[10]

During 2020, theVietnamese government's efforts to contain the spread of COVID-19 were mostly successful.[11] The country pursued azero-COVID strategy, usingcontact tracing,mass testing,quarantining, andlockdowns to aggressively suppress transmission of the virus. Vietnam suspended the entry of all foreigners from 22 March 2020 until 17 November 2021[12] to limit the spread of the virus. The measure did not apply to diplomats, officials, foreign investors, experts, and skilled workers.[13] On 5 January 2021, the government strengthened prevention and control of COVID-19, particularly through border control, with the principle of "protecting people's health first."[14] Individuals entering Vietnam had to isolate for at least 14 days if they were unvaccinated, or seven days if they had been fully vaccinated, and were contained in government-funded quarantine facilities.[15] Specially designated individuals such as diplomats were exempt.[16][17][18]

Vietnam experienced its largest outbreak beginning in April 2021, with over 1.2 million infections recorded by that November.[19] This led to two of its largest cities,Ho Chi Minh City andHanoi, and around a third of the country's population coming under some form oflockdown by late July.[20] A shortage of theAstraZeneca vaccine supply in the country,[21] along with some degree of complacency after successes in previous outbreaks, as well as infections originating from foreign workers, were considered to have contributed to the outbreak. In response, government-mandated quarantine for foreign arrivals and close contacts to confirmed cases were extended to 21 days, and accompanying safety measures were also increased.[18] The emergence of theOmicron variant brought about a rapid rise in infections in early 2022, although drastically fewer deaths were reported due to high vaccination rates in the country.[22] Infection rates dropped and stabilised throughout 2022 and 2023, leading to the end of COVID-19's classification as a severe transmissible disease in June 2023.[23]

Although the pandemic has heavily disrupted the country'seconomy,[24] Vietnam's GDP growth rate has remained one of the highest inAsia-Pacific, at 2.91% in 2020. Due to the more severe impact of the outbreak in 2021, Vietnam's GDP grew at a slower rate, at 2.58%.[25]

Vaccinations commenced on 8 March 2021[26] with a total of 200,179,247 administered vaccination doses reported by 12 March 2022.[3][27] TheVietnamese Ministry of Health has approved theOxford–AstraZeneca vaccine, theSputnik V vaccine, theSinopharm BIBP vaccine, thePfizer–BioNTech vaccine, theModerna vaccine, theJanssen vaccine, and theAbdala vaccine.[28] Vietnam also approvedCovaxin from Bharat Biotech.[29][30] As of 13 March 2022, a total of 221,807,484 doses have arrived in Vietnam.[3]

Background

[edit]

Novel infectious diseases, such asCOVID-19, are a significant public health threat.[31] Althoughhuman coronaviruses (CoVs) were known as majorpathogens which causedrespiratory illnesses,[32][33] a new strain of coronavirus known asSARS-CoV caused anoutbreak in 29 countries from 2002 to 2004. The outbreak, which infected 8,098 people and caused 774 deaths,[33] Evidence showed that the virus may have originated from an animal coronavirus that found its way into the human population.[33][34][35] indicated thatanimal coronaviruses could be dangerous to humans.[33]

Although it is still unknown exactly where COVID-19 began, many early cases have been attributed to visitors to theHuanan Seafood Wholesale Market inWuhan,Hubei,China.[36] The earliest known symptomatic person was later discovered to have become ill on 1 December 2019, but that person was apparently unconnected to the laterwet-market cluster;[37] an earlier case possibly occurred on 17 November.[38][39][40] China reported thecluster on 31 December 2019,[41] and theWorld Health Organization (WHO) issued its first report on the outbreak on 5 January 2020.[42] A week later, the WHO confirmed that anovel coronavirus caused a cluster of respiratory illness reported earlier in Wuhan.[43][44] On 20 January, the WHO and China confirmed that human-to-human transmission had occurred.[45] WHO declared the outbreak aPublic Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) on 30 January, saying that its Wuhan investigation was finished and citing mounting evidence that thenovel coronavirus had spread to 18 countries.[46]

Vietnam has a history of managing pandemics; it was the second country (after China) to address the 2002–04 SARS outbreak and, after 63 cases and five deaths, was the first country to be declared SARS-free by the WHO. Since that outbreak, Vietnam had increased investment in its public-health infrastructure, developed a national public health emergency operations center and a national public health surveillance system, and maintained systems to collect public data. Since 2016, hospitals are required to report notifiable diseases to a central database within 24 hours so the Ministry of Health can track epidemiological developments nationwide. In collaboration with the United StatesCenters for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Vietnam implemented an "event-based" surveillance program in 2018 which enables the public to report public-health issues. Officials can identify clusters of people with similar symptoms, which might indicate an outbreak.[11]

With a population of nearly 100 million and millions of visitors from China, the country's largest trading partner, annually,[47][48][49][50] Vietnam was initially perceived as likely to be hard-hit by the pandemic. When the country recorded its first two cases on 23 January 2020, it was among the first countries affected by COVID-19.[51] Two weeks later, only 150 cases had been reported outside mainland China; ten were in Vietnam, however, making it one of the top-ten affected countries. By early 2021, Vietnam was one of the countries with the lowest case count and mortality per million inhabitants.[52]

Epidemiology

[edit]
COVID-19 pandemic waves in Vietnam[53]
WaveTimeNo. of casesDescription
SumDomesticDeath
1
23 January – 24 July 2020
415
106
0
The first cases discovered in Ho Chi Minh City were two people from Wuhan (China). The disease then spread in 13 other localities.
2
25 July 2020 – 27 January 2021
1,136
554
35
The epicenter was in Da Nang, with the source of infection purported to be from Hospital C in the city.
3
28 January – 26 April 2021
1,301
910
0
This outbreak started in Hải Dương from a person who was found positive after entering Japan, and the true source of the infection is unknown. The epicenter was in Hải Dương; this local outbreak accounted for nearly 80% of the total number of cases.
4
27 April 2021 – ongoing
Last official number at 31 October 2023
11,621,262
11,616,174
43,171
Numerous outbreaks were discovered in all localities. This surge occurred due to the more transmissibleDelta andOmicron variants, and a change in COVID-19 response strategies.[54][55][56][57]

Timeline

[edit]
COVID-19 cases in Vietnam  ()
     Deaths        Recoveries        Active cases
20202020202120212022202220232023
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
JanJanFebFebMarMarAprAprMayMayJunJunJulJulAugAugSepSepOctOctNovNovDecDec
Last 15 daysLast 15 days
Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2020-01-23class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-01-28class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-01-31class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-01class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-02class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-03class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-04class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-05class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-06class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-07class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-08class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-09class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-10class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-11class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-12class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-13class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-18class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-19class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-20class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-02-26class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-06class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-07class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-08class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-09class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-10class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-11class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-12class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-13class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-14class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-15class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-16class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-17class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-18class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-19class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-20class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-21class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-22class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-23class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-24class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-25class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-26class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-27class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-28class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-29class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-30class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-03-31class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-01class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-02class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-03class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-04class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-05class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-06class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-07class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-08class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-09class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-10class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-11class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-12class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-13class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-14class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-15class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-16class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-17class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-18class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-19class=bb-bclass=bb-c|0(n.a.)
2020-04-20
0(n.a.)
2020-04-21
0(n.a.)
2020-04-22
0(n.a.)
2020-04-23
0(n.a.)
2020-04-24
0(n.a.)
2020-04-25
0(n.a.)
0(n.a.)
2020-05-03
0(n.a.)
2020-05-04
0(n.a.)
2020-05-05
0(n.a.)
2020-05-06
0(n.a.)
2020-05-07
0(n.a.)
2020-05-08
0(n.a.)
2020-05-09
0(n.a.)
2020-05-10
0(n.a.)
2020-05-11
0(n.a.)
2020-05-12
0(n.a.)
2020-05-13
0(n.a.)
2020-05-14
0(n.a.)
2020-05-15
0(n.a.)
2020-05-16
0(n.a.)
2020-05-17
0(n.a.)
2020-05-18
0(n.a.)
2020-05-19
0(n.a.)
2020-05-20
0(n.a.)
2020-05-21
0(n.a.)
2020-05-22
0(n.a.)
2020-05-23
0(n.a.)
2020-05-24
0(n.a.)
2020-05-25
0(n.a.)
2020-05-26
0(n.a.)
2020-05-27
0(n.a.)
2020-05-28
0(n.a.)
2020-05-29
0(n.a.)
2020-05-30
0(n.a.)
2020-05-31
0(n.a.)
2020-06-01
0(n.a.)
2020-06-02
0(n.a.)
2020-06-03
0(n.a.)
2020-06-04
0(n.a.)
2020-06-05
0(n.a.)
2020-06-06
0(n.a.)
2020-06-07
0(n.a.)
2020-06-08
0(n.a.)
2020-06-09
0(n.a.)
2020-06-10
0(n.a.)
2020-06-11
0(n.a.)
2020-06-12
0(n.a.)
2020-06-13
0(n.a.)
2020-06-14
0(n.a.)
2020-06-15
0(n.a.)
2020-06-16
0(n.a.)
2020-06-17
0(n.a.)
2020-06-18
0(n.a.)
2020-06-19
0(n.a.)
2020-06-20
0(n.a.)
2020-06-21
0(n.a.)
2020-06-22
0(n.a.)
2020-06-23
0(n.a.)
2020-06-24
0(n.a.)
2020-06-25
0(n.a.)
2020-06-26
0(n.a.)
2020-06-27
0(n.a.)
2020-06-28
0(n.a.)
2020-06-29
0(n.a.)
2020-06-30
0(n.a.)
2020-07-01
0(n.a.)
2020-07-02
0(n.a.)
0(n.a.)
2020-07-06
0(n.a.)
2020-07-07
0(n.a.)
2020-07-08
0(n.a.)
2020-07-09
0(n.a.)
2020-07-10
0(n.a.)
2020-07-11
0(n.a.)
2020-07-12
0(n.a.)
2020-07-13
0(n.a.)
2020-07-14
0(n.a.)
2020-07-15
0(n.a.)
2020-07-16
0(n.a.)
2020-07-17
0(n.a.)
2020-07-18
0(n.a.)
2020-07-19
0(n.a.)
2020-07-20
0(n.a.)
2020-07-21
0(n.a.)
2020-07-22
0(n.a.)
2020-07-23
0(n.a.)
2020-07-24
0(n.a.)
2020-07-25
0(n.a.)
2020-07-26
0(n.a.)
2020-07-27
0(n.a.)
2020-07-28
0(n.a.)
2020-07-29
0(n.a.)
2020-07-30
0(n.a.)
2020-07-31
2(n.a.)
2020-08-01
3(+1)
2020-08-02
6(+3)
2020-08-03
6(=)
2020-08-04
8(+2)
2020-08-05
8(=)
2020-08-06
10(+2)
2020-08-07
10(=)
2020-08-08
10(=)
2020-08-09
11(+1)
2020-08-10
15(+4)
2020-08-11
16(+1)
2020-08-12
17(+1)
2020-08-13
20(+3)
2020-08-14
21(+1)
2020-08-15
23(+2)
2020-08-16
24(+1)
2020-08-17
24(=)
2020-08-18
25(+1)
2020-08-19
25(=)
2020-08-20
25(=)
2020-08-21
25(=)
2020-08-22
26(+1)
2020-08-23
27(+1)
2020-08-24
27(=)
2020-08-25
27(=)
2020-08-26
29(+2)
2020-08-27
30(+1)
2020-08-28
30(=)
2020-08-29
32(+2)
2020-08-30
32(=)
2020-08-31
34(+2)
2020-09-01
34(=)
2020-09-02
34(=)
2020-09-03
35(+1)
2020-09-04
35(=)
2020-09-05
35(=)
2020-09-06
35(=)
2020-09-07
35(=)
2020-09-08
35(=)
2020-09-09
35(=)
2020-09-10
35(=)
2020-09-11
35(=)
2020-09-12
35(=)
2020-09-13
35(=)
2020-09-14
35(=)
2020-09-15
35(=)
2020-09-16
35(=)
2020-09-17
35(=)
2020-09-18
35(=)
2020-09-19
35(=)
2020-09-20
35(=)
2020-09-21
35(=)
2020-09-22
35(=)
2020-09-23
35(=)
2020-09-24
35(=)
2020-09-25
35(=)
2020-09-26
35(=)
2020-09-27
35(=)
2020-09-28
35(=)
2020-09-29
35(=)
2020-09-30
35(=)
2020-10-01
35(=)
2020-10-02
35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
2020-10-05
35(=)
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35(=)
2020-10-07
35(=)
2020-10-08
35(=)
2020-10-09
35(=)
2020-10-10
35(=)
2020-10-11
35(=)
2020-10-12
35(=)
2020-10-13
35(=)
2020-10-14
35(=)
2020-10-15
35(=)
2020-10-16
35(=)
2020-10-17
35(=)
2020-10-18
35(=)
2020-10-19
35(=)
2020-10-20
35(=)
2020-10-21
35(=)
2020-10-22
35(=)
2020-10-23
35(=)
2020-10-24
35(=)
2020-10-25
35(=)
2020-10-26
35(=)
2020-10-27
35(=)
2020-10-28
35(=)
2020-10-29
35(=)
2020-10-30
35(=)
2020-10-31
35(=)
2020-11-01
35(=)
2020-11-02
35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
2020-11-12
35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
2020-11-24
35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
2020-12-01
35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
2020-12-22
35(=)
2020-12-23
35(=)
2020-12-24
35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
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35(=)
2020-12-28
35(=)
2020-12-29
35(=)
2020-12-30
35(=)
2020-12-31
35(=)
2021-01-01
35(=)
2021-01-02
35(=)
2021-01-03
35(=)
2021-01-04
35(=)
2021-01-05
35(=)
2021-01-06
35(=)
2021-01-07
35(=)
2021-01-08
35(=)
2021-01-09
35(=)
2021-01-10
35(=)
2021-01-11
35(=)
2021-01-12
35(=)
2021-01-13
35(=)
2021-01-14
35(=)
2021-01-15
35(=)
2021-01-16
35(=)
2021-01-17
35(=)
2021-01-18
35(=)
2021-01-19
35(=)
2021-01-20
35(=)
2021-01-21
35(=)
2021-01-22
35(=)
2021-01-23
35(=)
2021-01-24
35(=)
2021-01-25
35(=)
2021-01-26
35(=)
2021-01-27
35(=)
2021-01-28
35(=)
2021-01-29
35(=)
2021-01-30
35(=)
2021-01-31
35(=)
2021-02-01
35(=)
2021-02-02
35(=)
2021-02-03
35(=)
2021-02-04
35(=)
2021-02-05
35(=)
2021-02-06
35(=)
2021-02-07
35(=)
2021-02-08
35(=)
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35(=)
2021-02-10
35(=)
2021-02-11
35(=)
2021-02-12
35(=)
2021-02-13
35(=)
2021-02-14
35(=)
2021-02-15
35(=)
2021-02-16
35(=)
2021-02-17
35(=)
2021-02-18
35(=)
2021-02-19
35(=)
2021-02-20
35(=)
2021-02-21
35(=)
2021-02-22
35(=)
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43,094(=)
2022-08-05
43,094(=)
2022-08-06
43,094(=)
2022-08-07
43,094(=)
2022-08-08
43,094(=)
2022-08-09
43,094(=)
2022-08-10
43,095(+1)
2022-08-11
43,095(=)
2022-08-12
43,096(+1)
2022-08-13
43,097(+1)
2022-08-14
43,098(+1)
2022-08-15
43,098(=)
2022-08-16
43,100(+2)
2022-08-17
43,103(+3)
2022-08-18
43,103(=)
2022-08-19
43,103(=)
2022-08-20
43,104(+1)
2022-08-21
43,105(+1)
2022-08-22
43,106(+1)
2022-08-23
43,106(=)
2022-08-24
43,108(+2)
2022-08-25
43,110(+2)
2022-08-26
43,110(=)
2022-08-27
43,111(+1)
2022-08-28
43,112(+1)
2022-08-29
43,113(+1)
2022-08-30
43,117(+4)
2022-08-31
43,117(=)
2022-09-01
43,117(=)
2022-09-02
43,118(+1)
2022-09-03
43,119(+1)
2022-09-04
43,120(+1)
2022-09-05
43,122(+2)
2022-09-06
43,123(+1)
2022-09-07
43,125(+2)
2022-09-08
43,126(+1)
2022-09-09
43,126(=)
2022-09-10
43,126(=)
2022-09-11
43,129(+3)
2022-09-12
43,130(+1)
2022-09-13
43,132(+2)
2022-09-14
43,132(=)
2022-09-15
43,137(+5)
2022-09-16
43,137(=)
2022-09-17
43,138(+1)
2022-09-18
43,139(+1)
2022-09-19
43,141(+2)
2022-09-20
43,142(+1)
2022-09-21
43,146(+4)
2022-09-22
43,146(=)
2022-09-23
43,146(=)
2022-09-24
43,146(=)
2022-09-25
43,146(=)
2022-09-26
43,146(=)
2022-09-27
43,147(+1)
2022-09-28
43,147(=)
2022-09-29
43,148(+1)
2022-09-30
43,148(=)
2022-10-01
43,149(+1)
2022-10-02
43,149(=)
2022-10-03
43,149(=)
2022-10-04
43,151(+2)
2022-10-05
43,151(=)
2022-10-06
43,151(=)
2022-10-07
43,152(+1)
2022-10-08
43,153(+1)
2022-10-09
43,153(=)
2022-10-10
43,153(=)
2022-10-11
43,154(+1)
2022-10-12
43,155(+1)
2022-10-13
43,155(=)
2022-10-14
43,155(=)
2022-10-15
43,155(=)
2022-10-16
43,155(=)
2022-10-17
43,157(+2)
2022-10-18
43,158(+1)
2022-10-19
43,159(+1)
2022-10-20
43,159(=)
2022-10-21
43,159(=)
2022-10-22
43,159(=)
2022-10-23
43,159(=)
2022-10-24
43,161(+2)
2022-10-25
43,161(=)
2022-10-26
43,162(+1)
2022-10-27
43,162(=)
2022-10-28
43,162(=)
2022-10-29
43,163(+1)
2022-10-30
43,163(=)
2022-10-31
43,163(=)
2022-11-01
43,164(+1)
2022-11-02
43,165(+1)
2022-11-03
43,165(=)
2022-11-04
43,165(=)
2022-11-05
43,165(=)
2022-11-06
43,166(+1)
2022-11-07
43,166(=)
2022-11-08
43,166(=)
2022-11-09
43,166(=)
2022-11-10
43,166(=)
2022-11-11
43,166(=)
2022-11-12
43,166(=)
2022-11-13
43,166(=)
2022-11-14
43,166(=)
2022-11-15
43,166(=)
2022-11-16
43,167(+1)
2022-11-17
43,167(=)
2022-11-18
43,168(+1)
2022-11-19
43,169(+1)
2022-11-20
43,169(=)
2022-11-21
43,169(=)
2022-11-22
43,169(=)
2022-11-23
43,169(=)
2022-11-24
43,170(+1)
2022-11-25
43,170(=)
2022-11-26
43,170(=)
2022-11-27
43,170(=)
2022-11-28
43,170(=)
2022-11-29
43,172(+2)
2022-11-30
43,175(+3)
2022-12-01
43,176(+1)
2022-12-02
43,176(=)
2022-12-03
43,177(+1)
2022-12-04
43,177(=)
2022-12-05
43,177(=)
2022-12-06
43,178(+1)
2022-12-07
43,178(=)
2022-12-08
43,178(=)
2022-12-09
43,178(=)
2022-12-10
43,178(=)
2022-12-11
43,178(=)
2022-12-12
43,178(=)
2022-12-13
43,179(+1)
2022-12-14
43,179(=)
2022-12-15
43,179(=)
2022-12-16
43,179(=)
2022-12-17
43,179(=)
2022-12-18
43,179(=)
2022-12-19
43,180(+1)
2022-12-20
43,180(=)
2022-12-21
43,181(+1)
2022-12-22
43,182(+1)
2022-12-23
43,184(+2)
2022-12-24
43,184(=)
2022-12-25
43,184(=)
2022-12-26
43,184(=)
2022-12-27
43,184(=)
2022-12-28
43,184(=)
2022-12-29
43,184(=)
2022-12-30
43,186(+2)
2022-12-31
43,186(=)
2023-01-01
43,186(=)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-02-01
43,186(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-03-01
43,186(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-04-01
43,186(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-05-01
43,191(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-06-01
43,206(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-07-01
43,206(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-08-01
43,206(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-09-01
43,206(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-10-01
43,206(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-10-31
43,206(n.a.)
class=bb-bclass=bb-c|
2023-12-31
43,206(n.a.)
Sources:

Ministry of Health of Vietnam

Main article:Timeline of the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam

First cases

[edit]

The first two confirmed cases in Vietnam, a Chinese man born in 1954 and his son, were admitted toCho Ray Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City on 22 January 2020. The son was believed to have contracted the virus from his father (who flew from Wuhan on 13 January) when they met inNha Trang on 17 January.[8][58][59] The first cluster appeared in Son Loi Commune,Bình Xuyên District,Vĩnh Phúc, after several workers returned from a Wuhan training trip and infected people in close contact with them.[9] The Vietnamese government locked down the district until 4 March to prevent further spread, the first large-scale lockdown outside China.[60] Identifying cases early gave Vietnam some success in combating the virus. The first 16 cases were a cross-section of the population (infants, the elderly, and people with underlying conditions), which the country's medical system used as "an exercise" to prepare for the new virus.[61]

March 2020–2021: sporadic outbreaks and strict measures

[edit]

As the pandemic began to spread worldwide, COVID-19 cases in Vietnam also surged. On the evening of 6 March, the Hanoi Department of Health confirmed the capital's first case: a 26-year-old woman who had travelled to Europe, the country's 17th recorded case.[62] During the afternoon of 20 March, the Ministry of Health reported two new COVID-19 patients (Vietnam's 86th and 87th): two female nurses atBạch Mai Hospital with no history of contact with COVID-19 patients.[63] In March and April 2020, the number of cases increased rapidly due to the large number of people comingfrom European countries and the appearance of clusters which included Bạch Mai Hospital, Ha Loi Commune in Hanoi, and the Buddha Bar in Ho Chi Minh City.[64][65][66]

On 21 March 2020, Vietnam suspended entry for all foreigners effective the following midnight, and introduced a mandatory fourteen-day quarantine for all incoming Vietnamese citizens.[67] The country imposed a fifteen-day nationwide lockdown on 1 April,[68] when former Prime MinisterNguyễn Xuân Phúc announced that COVID-19 had spread throughout Vietnam.[69] The drastic epidemic-control measures had positive results, and the country did not confirm any cases of local transmission from mid-April to the end of July.[70] Vietnam began loosening restrictions in May, again permitting domestic travel.[11]

The country entered itssecond wave of infection when the Ministry of Health announced the 416th case in Da Nang – the first case with an unknown source in 99 days.[71][72] On 28 July, Da Nang authorities locked down the city for 15 days.[73] Hundreds of cases across the country connected to the Da Nang outbreak were detected,[74] and the first death was recorded on 31 July.[10][75][76] After two months Vietnam contained the disease for the second time and resumed almost all economic activity, including international commercial flights.[77][78] Sporadic community infections continued in November and December, alarming the public and requiring increased measures.[79][80]

Thethird wave of infection began on 28 January 2021, when Vietnam reported 84 community-transmission cases in one day in the provinces ofHải Dương andQuảng Ninh. Most were linked to a Hai Duong migrant worker who was diagnosed with theUK variant by Japanese authorities after arriving inOsaka on 17 January.[81] To limit the outbreak's economic impact, the government initially quarantined areas directly related to the infected people; after two weeks, however, the increasing number of cases showed no sign of slowing. Hai Duong was locked down for 15 days on 15 February, and Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City halted all entertainment activities.[82][83] This was one of the most serious outbreaks, due to a slow tracing process, mismanagement of quarantine facilities, and disobedience of lockdown rules in the face of enduring restrictions.[84][85] On 7 March 2021, the situation in the northern provinces appeared to have been brought largely under control as the number of new cases fell to single digits. Vietnam began its COVID-19 vaccination campaign the following day.[86][87]

April 2021–October 2023: Severe outbreak and endemic stage

[edit]
Colour-coded map of Ho Chi Minh City
Cases in Ho Chi Minh City

Since the end of April 2021, Vietnam experienced "a fast-spreading outbreak" of over 700,000 cases. Clusters were found inBac Giang province industrial parks and at least ten major hospitals throughout the country.[88][89] According to the WHO, Vietnam has built over 30field hospitals with 1,500 ICU beds and 30,000 non-ICU beds. When total cases reached several thousand per day, the government locked downSouthern Vietnam and Hanoi.[90][91] On 26 July 2021, for the first time in Vietnam's disease prevention history, Ho Chi Minh City imposed a daily 6:00 pmcurfew; no one could leave the city, and only emergency services were permitted to operate.[92][93] TheNational Assembly authorised the central government on 28 July to implement local emergency measures to curb the pandemic.[94] On 20 August,Nguyễn Thành Phong was dismissed by thePolitburo as chair of thePeople's Committee of Ho Chi Minh City.[95] The government also moved 10,000 troops into the city to enforce the lockdown and deliver food.[96][97][98] A main cause of the outbreak was a four-day holiday forReunification Day andInternational Workers' Day, during which many vacation destinations were packed with travelers.[99][100][101][102]DNA sequencing indicated that theSARS-CoV-2 Delta variant dominated this wave, particularly in central and southern Vietnam.[103]

On 29 August 2021, Prime MinisterPhạm Minh Chính stated that Vietnam might have to live with the virus and could not rely on indefinite closures and quarantines. This marked a major change in the country's approach to COVID-19,[104][105][106] forcing Vietnam to accelerate its vaccination campaign to control the pandemic.[107] The number of new cases began to fall to several thousand per day in mid-September, and restrictions were eased.[108] Vietnam recorded its first case of theOmicron variant in December, leading to a significant new wave of infections going into the first months of 2022, with the highest 7-day average of 217,164 cases recorded on 13 March.[109] However, due to the country's widespread vaccination coverage, deaths remained low in proportion to the number of confirmed cases.[22]

A road blockade during the 2021 outbreak inHo Chi Minh City

In March 2022, Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính declared COVID-19 to be "endemic" and considered ending daily reporting of new cases.[110] An article inBloomberg noted that Vietnam has a high level of vaccination and has seen a dramatic drop in COVID-19 related deaths.[111] However, in August, the Ministry of Health issued a recommendation to not declare COVID-19 endemic, and to instead shift the country's response from "prevention" to "stable management".[112]

In June 2023, Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính stated that COVID-19 no longer constituted a severe transmissible disease, leaving the jurisdiction of future COVID-19 prevention and classification to the Ministry of Health.[113] The National Steering Committee for COVID-19 Prevention and Control was dissolved on 29 October 2023. Two days later, the Ministry of Health published its last COVID-19 daily report.[114]

Variants

[edit]

The COVID-19 strain which entered Vietnam in the second wave had a mutation which increased its infection rate, leading to a higher number of cases than the first wave. Thebasic reproduction number (R0) in the second wave was 5 to 6; in April, it was 1.8 to 2.2. The rate of people testing positive for COVID-19 who had had indirect contact with COVID-19 patients was higher than in the previous wave. Minister of HealthNguyễn Thanh Long said that the new strain may have begun to spread in early July 2020. Da Nang had experienced four waves of infection by that month.[115][116] The health ministry sent experts to Da Nang to help the city contain the infection and quickly identify its source, submitting the new strain's data to a world gene bank for comparison. On 4 August, the ministry confirmed the dominant second-wave strain asD614G (the dominant global variant).[117] A study published byLos Alamos National Laboratory inNew Mexico said that patients infected by that mutation have a heavier viral load and are more likely to infect others.[118][119][120] Vietnam has recorded ten COVID-19 strains: the original Wuhan strain and theAlpha, A.23.1 (fromRwanda),Beta, B.1.222, B.1.619,Delta, D614G,Epsilon andOmicron variants.[121][122][123][124]

Reinfection and recurrence

[edit]
A seated laboratory worker in protective clothing
Pasteur Institute of Nha Trang technician taking a sample in July 2020

Many COVID-19 patients in Vietnam have reported positive tests after they were considered to have recovered from the disease. This has also occurred in other countries, such as the United States,South Korea, and China. South Korea's Central Clinical Committee for Emerging Disease Control head Oh Myoung-don rejected the possibility ofreinfection, saying that patients probably tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 because "the testing kit collected RNA from dead virus fragments, [which] may remain in the body for months".[125][126] Vietnam Minister of Health Nguyen Thanh Long agreed, saying that a patient may not have fully recovered; the virus might still exist in the body, particularly in lung cells.[127]

The Ministry of Health reduced home quarantine in April 2021 to seven days because it did not record community infections from relapses. The previous mandatory quarantine on immigrants was 14 days inisolation and 14 days at home.[128] In July, after 400 reported relapses, the ministry did not record any cases of community spread and rescinded quarantine rules for relapsed patients and their communities.[129][130]

Medical response

[edit]

Vietnam,Taiwan andSouth Korea were cited by global media as having some of the world's best-organized epidemic control programs.[131][132][133][134] This success has been attributed to several factors, including a well-developed public health system, a decisive central government, and a proactive containment strategy based on testing, tracing, and quarantining.[11] Vietnam's response to the outbreak has received broad international praise for its speed, effectiveness and transparency,[135] in contrast to censorship inChina[136] and poor preparation in theUnited States andEurope.[134][137][138][139]

Isolation and quarantine

[edit]

On 11 January 2020, after China reported its first coronavirus death, Vietnam implemented health checks at airports.[140][141] All visitors had their body temperatures measured, and those with a fever, cough, chest pain or breathing difficulties were isolated for testing. In the event of a positive test, fellow passengers and crew and all their contacts were quarantined for 14 days.[142]

The government issued diagnostic and management guidelines for COVID-19 on 16 January, providing instructions on contact tracing and 14-day isolation.[143] On 22 January, health authorities began monitoring body temperatures at border crossings and started detection and contact tracing, with mandatory isolation of infected people and anyone with whom they had come into contact.[144]

Vietnam's meticulous contact-tracing effort is unique.[47] Due to its inability to conduct mass testing (like South Korea), the country has taken a targeted approach to testing: increasing it in areas with community transmission, implementing a strict 14-day quarantine policy, and keeping track of second, third and fourth contact levels of infected persons (who would then be placed on different levels of movement and contact restrictions).[145][11] According toCNN, if authorities had not proactively sought out people with infection risks, the virus could have quietly spread in communities days before being detected.[47] In early April 2020, 45,000 people were ordered to quarantine in response to 240 cases. When a small cluster of infections emerged, an entire village (or city) was quarantined.[146][147] By 9 May 2021, over 16 million people had been quarantined.[148] Instead of relying on medicine and technology, Vietnam adopted a widespread public-surveillance system backed bymilitary force.[145][149] The country has a surveillance culture, in which neighbours will inform local police of suspected misconduct (an approach not taken in Western societies).[150] Experience with pandemics has led to the development of institutional preparedness and "social memory," instrumental in encouraging people to adopt protective behaviors and heed official regulations and guidance.[151]

Testing

[edit]
See also:COVID-19 testing

On 30 January 2020, the Ministry of Science and Technology met with medical experts to propose solutions to contain and mitigate COVID-19.[152] Deputy Minister Phạm Công Tạc urged virologists to accelerate the development of diagnostic tests.[153] In early February, publicly funded Vietnamese institutions began developing at least four locally manufactured COVID-19 tests which were approved by the Ministry of Defense and the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology. Private companies, including Viet A and Thai Duong, then offered to manufacture the test kits. Most laboratories analyzing the tests use in-house versions of WHO protocol, allowing broad testing without long wait times.[11] A research team at Hanoi University of Science and Technology's Institute of Biotechnology and Food Technology announced in early February 2020 that it had developed test kits using RT-LAMP technology, with a 70-minute turnaround time.[154]

The Ministry of Health approvedGeneXpert, a test used by Vietnam's tuberculosis-prevention network since 2012, for COVID-19 testing in August 2020. Nguyễn Viết Nhung, director of the National Lung Hospital in Hanoi, said that the test is similar to RT-PCR and gives accurate results in 35–45 minutes for COVID-19 and tuberculosis.[155] Plans were underway to expand GeneXpert testing at 42-46 lung hospitals around the country.[156] In May 2021, Vietnam had 180 laboratories capable of testing for COVID-19 using RT-PCR with a capacity of 238,000 tests per day.[157] Health officials prepared to extend testing capacity to more hospital laboratories, including provincial and military hospitals.[158][159] During the Hải Dương outbreak, random testing of households and inpatients and targeted testing of high-risk groups was used instead of mass testing.[160]

Treatment

[edit]

With its experience of the 2003SARS outbreak, Vietnam has been proactive in treating COVID-19 patients. Key is a well-ventilated environment, regularly disinfected and without air conditioning; addressing clinical and psychological symptoms, physiotherapy and appropriate nutrition are additional treatments.[161][162]

According to the Ministry of Health, antiretroviral therapy will be considered. To leave the hospital, patients need two consecutive negative COVID-19 tests and must isolate at home for 14 days. The patient should be indoors in a well-ventilated, separate room, masked, washing hands frequently, and limiting contact with others. Body temperature should be checked twice daily.[163]

During the second wave in Da Nang, treatment was improved with antiviral drugs. Specifically,Lopinavir, ritonavir andinterferon have been used effectively, with patients becoming virus-free in seven days.Blood plasma from recovered patients is considered for severe cases as an alternative to antiviral drugs. The malaria drugschloroquine andhydroxychloroquine are no longer used.[164][165]

Doctors studiedplasma therapy for COVID-19 treatment since April 2020, and theNational Hospital of Tropical Diseases selects plasma donors; by January 2021, however, no patient in the country had been treated this way. Nguyen Trung Cap, deputy director of the Hanoi National Hospital for Tropical Diseases, said that plasma therapy has limited benefit in COVID-19. During the first week of illness, a patient's viral load is high but symptoms are generally mild. Severe symptoms usually begin during the second week of illness (due to immune response), but the patient's viral load is lower. Antibody levels fall quickly after recovery, and side effects similar to those ofblood transfusion (includingfluid overload,acute hemolytic transfusion reaction andallergic transfusion reaction) may occur.[166]

In October 2020, scientists at the Medical Genetics Institute, the Ho Chi Minh City Center for Disease Control (HCDC) andHo Chi Minh City Medicine and Pharmacy University planned tosequence the genome of COVID-19 to learn how it affects different people and possibly identify genes sensitive to the virus. In the study's first stage, twenty recovered patients would have their genes sequenced by HCDC.[167]

With the Delta variant and a rapid increase in cases during the fourth wave, the Ministry of Health implemented a new treatment regimen in July 2021. According to the ministry, over 80 percent of patients had a low fever, cough and fatigue and recovered in about a week; some were asymptomatic. About 20 percent of patients experienced severe symptoms within five to eight days; after seven to ten days of severe illness, patients without symptoms of respiratory failure gradually recovered. Under the new regimen, patients with no or mild symptoms would be treated in the general ward; severely-ill patients with life-threatening conditions required treatment in an intensive-care unit. Individualized treatment plans would be provided, particularly for severe cases. After returning home, patients must monitor their body temperature twice a day; if it is higher than 38 °C (100 °F) two consecutive times or they have symptoms, they must notify the medical facility immediately.[129] In August 2021, the ministry approved the use ofremdesivir and considered approvingfavipiravir.[168]

Field hospital

[edit]
Exterior of a large sports stadium
Tien Son Sport Center before its conversion into a COVID field hospital

On 31 July 2020, the Da Nang Party Committee announced that it would use Tien Son Sport Center inHải Châu district as a temporary field hospital to help the city's hospitals cope with the rising number of COVID-19 patients. The sports center covers an area of 10,000 m2 (110,000 sq ft), and has a 2,000-bed capacity.[169] The committee also agreed to use the Da Nang Military Command sports ground to store necessities and medical equipment to control the epidemic.[170] Committee chair Huynh Duc Tho said that the COVID-19 epidemic was very serious in the area, with drastic action and strong measures required to control the outbreak. The Committee tasked the city with quickly buying necessary medical equipment, includingECMO machines,ventilators, protective suits and medical masks.[171]

In January 2021, responding to an outbreak inHải Dương province, two field hospitals with a combined 600-bed capacity were set up in the north of the province within 24 hours. The first, at theChí Linh medical centre, was staffed by 45 doctors and about 70 nurses to treat 200 patients. The second was converted from the Hải Dương Medical Technical University, with 210 beds.[172]

In 2021, Vietnam had about 2,000 ICU doctors and 16,000 ICU beds. On 16 August 2021, Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) established a three-level care pathway with a planned 60,000 beds, including 1,700 ICU beds:

  • Level 1: Monitoring and care centres (centralized quarantine area and district hospitals) for asymptomatic and mildly-ill patients.
  • Level 2: For mildly- and moderately-symptomatic patients
  • Level 3: For severely-ill patients. This level includes eight hospitals: the Hospital of Tropical Diseases, Chợ Rẫy, Military Hospital 175, and five national ICU centers.

On 5 August, the committee's deputy secretary reported that the city's level-three capacity was nearing its limit. Due to the increase in new cases, HCMC Medical University established a 70-bed ICU centre on 3 August. Four days later, medical staffs from three of the country's major hospitals (Bạch Mai, Việt Đức and Central Huế) established three ICU centres with a total of 1,500 beds. HCMC assigned a total of 3,270 ICU beds to COVID-19 patients.[173] HCMC established the 1,000-bed Tân Bình District Field Hospital on 18 August, the first multi-level field hospital to accept mildly-, moderately- and critically ill patients. The hospital was intended to relieve pressure on major hospitals.[174]

  • Bình Dương Province: In August 2021, Bình Dương had 22 treatment facilities with 15,627 beds and a staff of 2,851. The provincial government used the three-level care pathway, and asked for support fromHanoi Medical University and the private health sector.[175]
  • Long An: The MOH supported the province in establishing a 500-bed ICU centre.
  • Đồng Nai: The Hanoi-based National Lung Hospital helped Đồng Nai open a 380-bed ICU centre.[176][177][178]

Drug and vaccine development

[edit]
Further information:COVID-19 vaccine,COVID-19 drug development, andCOVID-19 drug repurposing research
See caption
COVID-19 viruses under a microscope, isolated from a patient in the U.S.

On 7 February 2020, the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology in Hanoi announced that it had successfullycultured and isolated COVID-19 in the lab; Vietnam was the fourth country to do so. This would enable quicker test results; thousands of samples could be tested per day,[179] and the research would be the basis of a vaccine. Institute deputy director Le Quynh Mai said that Vietnam had identified two virus variants: one from patients returning from Wuhan in February, and the other from patients returning from Europe in March.[180][181]

In May 2020, Vietnam announced the development of its COVID-19 vaccine after scientists generated the viral antigen in the lab. The vaccine, developed in a collaboration by Vabiotech inHanoi andBristol University, would be tested for safety and effectiveness before manufacture. According to the institute, an effective vaccine safe for humans would take at least 12 to 18 months to develop.[182][183] After successful testing on mice, a trial vaccine would be stabilized for mass production of up to tens of millions of units.[184][185] In October 2020, theVabiotech COVID-19 vaccine was tested on monkeys;[186][187] the result of the trials laid the foundation for human testing.[188][189]

Vietnam has four COVID-19 vaccines, produced by Nanogen, Vabiotech, Polyvac and the Institute of Vaccines and Medical Biologicals (IVAC). The health ministry assessed theNanocovax vaccine, produced by Nanogen, as the most promising.[190] IVAC and Vabiotech completed their laboratory-scale production, and evaluated the safety and efficacy of their vaccines on animals.[191] On 7 December, the institute announced successful Nanocovax animal test results.[192] Ten days later, Nanogen began human trials of the vaccine.[193][194] Nanogen began phase-II trials in Hanoi and southernLong An province on 26 February 2021.[195] On 25 March, 26 volunteers who received the first phase-II shots between 26 February and 10 March received second Nanocovax shots. Some volunteers experienced side effects around the injection site, but did not require medical care.[196] Results of the trial would be issued in May before preparing for the phase-III trial of 10,000 to 30,000 people.[197][198] A Nanogen official toldNikkei Asia that if the government implemented its emergency designation, Nanovax might be rolled out in May.[197] Deputy Minister of Science and Technology Phạm Công Tạc and Deputy Prime MinisterVũ Đức Đam received second doses of Nanocovax on 26 March 2021.[199][200]

COVIVAC (the second Vietnamese-produced vaccine), developed by the Institute of Vaccine and Medical Biologicals (IVAC), began a human clinical trial on 21 January. IVAC studied the vaccine since May 2020, conducting successful pre-clinical trials in India, the United States and Vietnam; vaccine stability was evaluated at New York City'sIcahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.[201] On 15 March 2021, six volunteers were injected with COVIVAC atHanoi Medical University. A vaccine with or withoutadjuvants, without preservatives, itsvector is theNewcastle disease virus and it can be produced with chicken eggs (similar to influenza vaccines).[202]

On 8 September 2021, Deputy Minister of Health Tran Van Thuan met with France's Xenothera company to discuss collaboration on phase-III clinical trials of the XAV-19 COVID-19 drug and the transfer of production technology to Vietnam. The drug prevents the virus from developing, neutralises it and reduces inflammation.[203]

Vaccination programme

[edit]
Main article:COVID-19 vaccination in Vietnam


Vaccination (as of 31 October 2023)
Doses administered[204]266,532,582
Total population[205]97,580,000
1st dose2nd dose3rd and more doses
90,277,45285,967,82490,287,306
Vietnam vaccinations (cumulative)
  First dose  Second and third dose
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Vietnam total administered doses per half-month
  First dose  Second and third dose
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Large group of people onstage
2021 handover ceremony of COVID-19 vaccine for Vietnam from a COVAX facility
Dose supplied by vaccine product, as of 13 March 2022[3]
  1. AstraZeneca (28.8%)
  2. Sinopharm (23.6%)
  3. Pfizer and Moderna (44.6%)
  4. Abdala (2.32%)
  5. Sputnik V and Sputnik Light (0.73%)
Dose supplied by source, as of 13 March 2022[3]
  1. Government procurement (47.9%)
  2. COVAX (25.6%)
  3. Foreign government aid (14.3%)
  4. Private enterprise (12.1%)

After approval of theOxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine on 30 January 2021, vaccinations began on 8 March with a goal of vaccinating 80 percent of the population by June 2022.[206] TheSputnik V vaccine was approved on 23 March 2021.[207] TheSinopharm BIBP vaccine was approved for emergency use on 4 June[208] and thePfizer–BioNTech,Moderna andJanssen vaccines were approved on 12 June,[209] 29 June[210][211] and 15 July,[212] respectively. Vietnam approvedAbdala vaccine from theCenter for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology on 18 September,[28] andCovaxin from Bharat Biotech on 10 November 2021.[29][30]

The immunization campaign is Vietnam's largest ever, with over 150 million doses.[213] Although the country has prevented disease and kept outbreaks under control, its COVID-19 vaccination program is considered slower than those of most Asian countries.[214][215][216] Vietnam had administered 200,179,247 vaccine doses by 12 March 2022, and 221,807,484 doses had arrived in the country by 13 March.[3] On 7 May 2021, Vietnam recorded the first death of a person vaccinated with the AstraZeneca vaccine: a female, 35-year-old medical worker inAn Giang province.[217][218]

In July 2021, the Ministry of Health authorized mixing first and second doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines with patient consent if supplies are limited.[219] On 8 September, Vietnam allowed recipients of Moderna's vaccine to receive a different second dose due to lack of vaccines.[220][221] The ministry authorized vaccinating children aged 12 to 17 on 14 October 2021.[222][223]

Government response

[edit]
This section is an excerpt fromVietnamese government response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[edit]
A 2021Vietnamese government meeting on COVID-19.

Thegovernment of Vietnam prepared for the COVID-19 pandemic as early as the first cases in China emerged in December 2019, and pursued azero-COVID strategy until September 2021.

In January 2020, Vietnam's Prime MinisterNguyễn Xuân Phúc ordered measures to prevent and counter the spread of the disease into Vietnam,[224] as well as to warn Vietnamese citizens to avoid visiting areas with outbreaks.[225] During the same year, authorities enacted severallockdowns in response to localised outbreaks.Contact tracing andsocial distancing measures were rolled out, and Vietnam's communications and propaganda apparatus dispelled information about the disease. In 2021, avaccination programme began, whilst outbreaks inHo Chi Minh City andHanoi prompted the government to introduce further lockdowns, which were ultimately lifted due to their economic and social impacts, and continued spread of theDelta variant.

Reception for the government's response was mixed. While the government's decisiveness and effectiveness in controlling the disease during 2020 received high public approval and international recognition, outbreaks the following year and low vaccine uptake signalled a decline in public trust. Thehuman rights implications of some interventions attracted controversy, whilst theViệt Á corruption scandal related to COVID-19 testing kits led to several senior officials resigning, being removed from office, or facing prosecution and imprisonment forcorruption.

Social interaction

[edit]

TheUnited Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Mekong Development Research Institute (MDRI) surveyed 1,335 Vietnamese in September 2020 about their opinions and experiences of the government's response to the pandemic. Respondents strongly supported the April national social-distancing order, with 88 percent praising its timing. Thirty-nine percent said that they consistently followed the order, and 12.2 percent followed it somewhat or disobeyed it. Eighty-nine percent of respondents said that they supported the government's measures to save as many lives as possible, even if it meant a slow economic recovery; a global average of 67 percent said that governments should prioritize saving lives over economic recovery.[226]

A January 2021 survey by Singapore'sUnited Overseas Bank found that Vietnamese were Southeast Asia's most optimistic about their future, despite the economic and social challenges posed by the pandemic. About 81 percent of Vietnamese respondents said that they expected life to return to normal by the end of the year, and 72 percent believed that they would be financially better-off. "Their optimism could be due to Vietnam's success in handling the COVID-19 crisis, which has set a strong foundation for the recovery of the economy," UOB Vietnam CEO Harry Loh said. Another reason for Vietnamese optimism might be because most grew up during theVietnam War and subsequentsubsidy economy period.[227]

Donations

[edit]

In addition to government aid, sponsors have provided food and water to those in need.[228]A number of businesspeople and celebrities have contributed to the fight against the pandemic. At a 20 March 2020 meeting with representatives of the Vietnam Fatherland Front Committee of Ho Chi Minh City, Johnathan Hanh Nguyen promised to donate 30 billion; 25 billion₫ was spent on medical equipment, and he donated a 5,000-square-metre (54,000 sq ft) supermarket for use as an isolation area.[229][230]

State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese deputy chair Luong Thanh Nghi said that when the pandemic began in China and other Asia-Pacific countries,overseas Vietnamese in Eastern Europe provided nearly 80,000 medical masks, hundreds of sterile water bottles, protective clothing and surgical gloves to the Sơn Lôi commune,Vĩnh Phúc province and a number of hospitals in Hanoi.[231][232] In August 2020,Vingroup (Vietnam's largest corporation) donated 3,200 ventilators and chemicals for 100,000 RT-PCR tests to the Ministry of Health.[233][234]

At the end of May 2021, Prime MinisterPhạm Minh Chính ordered government agencies and ministries to establish a vaccine fund of cash and vaccine doses[235] to purchase vaccines from abroad and supporting the production of domestic vaccines. Although the government said that it intends to secure 150 million vaccine doses in 2021 (vaccinating 70 percent of the population at a cost of US$1.1 billion), only $630 million was allocated to vaccine procurement in the budget. By 10 June, over 253,000 businesses, banks and individuals pledged to contribute $179 million to the fund.[236] According to the Ministry of Finance, another $140 million was pledged by businesses.[237][238] Hanoi residents were reportedly forced to contribute to the fund.[239]

Labour and immigration

[edit]

Many Vietnamese work abroad, and many Vietnamese families depend onremittances from relatives – aboutUS$17 billion in 2019 (according to theWorld Bank) but expected to drop 7.6 percent in 2020, the first drop in 11 years. The Overseas Labor Bureau reported that about 54,300 workers left Vietnam to work abroad in the first eleven months of 2020, down from 148,000 in 2019. Mekong Development Research Institute director Phung Duc Tung said that the biggest challenge for overseas workers when they returned is losing their jobs due to the lack of official information about repatriation dates and a government plan. "This led to psychological problems, depression, pessimism, and there was a suicide case when he returned to Vietnam", Tung said, referring to a Vietnamese driver who killed himself in a quarantine facility. He helped a group of undocumented Chinese citizens he believed faced pandemic-related financial problems enter the country for $260 per person.[240]

Strict government measures left many citizens trapped abroad. At the end of April 2020, Hanoi organized charter repatriation flights; about 65,000 Vietnamese were repatriated on 235 flights. Demand exceeds supply, however, and many risk criminal charges in illegally attempting to return home.[241] Some illegal returnees tested positive for COVID-19 after living in communities for a long time.[242] TheVietnam Border Guard detained over 31,000 illegal entrants in 2020, including 25,000 from China; the remainder were from Laos and Cambodia.[243][244]

Infractions

[edit]

Although authorities imposed mandatory measures to prevent disease spread, some people left quarantined areas or were dishonest about reporting symptoms;[245] in March 2020, the first patient in Hanoi did not provide an accurate travel history.[246] Anger was reported at infections in the Muslim community returning from Malaysia'sTablighi Jamaat festival; several patients did not self-quarantine in Vietnam, and attended Islamic events in Ho Chi Minh City.[247] A 28-year-oldVietnam Airlines attendant breached self-isolation protocols by going outside and attending university, infecting a friend (who infected others).[248][249][250]

On 24 February 2020, a group of 20 South Koreans arrived inDa Nang on a flight fromDaegu (South Korea's COVID-19 epicentre).[251][252]Some refused to isolate, and were returned home.[253]YTN reported that Korean citizens were "detained" in poor conditions.[253][251]

A riot alleging weak government disease control broke out in South Tân Uyên Industrial Park on 21 August 2021.[254][255] On 6 September, a 28-year-old man was sentenced to five years in prison and fined£630 for breaching COVID-19 restrictions and spreading the virus.[256]

Fraud

[edit]

On 3 March 2020, nearly one million masks of unknown origin were discovered in a warehouse by police inTân Phú district, Ho Chi Minh City.[257] Other cases involving illegal masks were prosecuted inAn Giang province,[258]Lạng Sơn,[259]Cao Bằng[260] andQuảng Ninh province,[261] in addition to other forms of fraud.[262][263][264]

At a 17 April 2020 meeting of the Steering Committee on COVID-19 Prevention and Control of Hanoi, Hanoi People's Committee chair Nguyen Duc Chung said that the Investigation Police Department on Economic, Corruption Crimes and Smuggling (C03) of the Ministry of Public Security had summoned Hanoi Center for Disease Control (HCDC) officials to an investigation of the purchase of COVID-19 testing machines.[265][266] On 22 April, investigators determined that Hanoi CDC director Nguyen Nhat Cam and others had tripled the purchase price of areal-time PCR test-kit package.[267] Chung and six others were charged with fraud, and he faced 10 years in prison.[268][269][270]

Xenophobia

[edit]

Asia Times reported, "A number of Vietnamese hotels and guesthouses have reportedly hung signs on their doors saying that Chinese guests are not welcome, while many Vietnamese have gone online to demand the closure ofall border crossings with China."[271] Signs implying that Chinese customers were not welcome were seen in front of a shop inPhú Quốc and a restaurant inDa Nang.[272] South Koreans are reportedly screened due to widespread COVID-19 in South Korea, which has extensive trade with Vietnam.[253][251] When racism began receiving more coverage in news and social media, the Vietnamese government announced that it would fine those who refused service to foreigners and set up a hotline for assistance and reporting violations.[273]

Xenophobia was also evident in the use of Chinese vaccines.Control Risks lead analyst Nguyen Phuong Linh said that China's vaccine diplomacy had failed with Vietnam primarily because of anti-Chinese sentiment. Vietnamese leaders have strong public support, which they would not want to lose by using Chinese vaccines for most of the population. "From the beginning of the pandemic, the virus has been widely reported in Vietnam as originally coming from China. Since then, the anti-China sentiments, which were already strong, have shown no sign of weakening", Linh said.[274][275] In June 2021, however, Vietnam approved theSinopharm BIBP vaccine for emergency use and received a donation of 500,000 doses from China.[276] Ho Chi Minh City received five million Sinopharm vaccine doses as part of a late-July corporate donation, triggering a public backlash.[277] Le Dong Hai Nguyen, an economist at theGeorgetown School of Foreign Service, suggested inThe Diplomat that the Chinese vaccine debacle might be apublicity stunt in which the Vietnamese government leveraged anti-Chinese sentiment to boost public acceptance of the AstraZeneca vaccine: "Just as standing next to a less attractive friend makes you look better, Vietnam's strategy to briefly include the Chinese vaccines in its vaccine pool might just make the AstraZeneca vaccine look marginally more appealing". Le wrote that many Vietnamese were willing to wait for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines instead of taking the AstraZeneca vaccine because of concern aboutblood clots, which could "seriously derail Vietnam's already sluggish vaccination campaign" (dependent on the AstraZeneca vaccine).[21]

Impact

[edit]

Economy

[edit]
See also:Economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic
Vietnam economy growth rate forecast of some international organizations. In the worst scenario, the growth rate of the country is lower than the economic recession in 1986 after a failed monetary policy duringĐổi Mới period.
2020 GDP growth rate forecast byAsian Development Bank
(by percentage)
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Sources: Asian Development Bank (ADB)[278]

2020

[edit]

Vietnam's economy was hit hard by the pandemic; private and national industries slowed, stocks fell and tourism faltered, making hundreds of thousands people jobless and relying onunemployment benefits to survive.[24] According to government figures, 3,000 businesses closed in the first two months of 2020;[145] however, Vietnam's economic growth was expected to exceed the Asian average of 2.2 percent. Despite the deceleration in economic activity, theAsian Development Bank reported that Vietnam's GDP growth rate was expected to remain one of the highest in theAsia-Pacific region.[278][279][280] In November, the IMF said that Vietnam was expected to be the only Southeast Asian country expected to grow that year.[281]

The Vietnam Industry Agency said that manufacturers lacked raw materials and components (mainly imported from Japan, China, andSouth Korea), endangering factory operations.[282] TheVietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) and theWorld Bank surveyed almost 10,200 businesses (nearly 85 percent private domestic firms, the remainder in theFDI sector) about the impact of COVID-19; the survey indicated that the greatest difficulties for businesses during the pandemic were accessing customers, cash flow, labor, and supply-chain issues. VCCI Legal Department head Dau Anh Tuan said on 12 March 2021 that the pandemic had a generally-negative impact on Vietnamese businesses.[283] The vast majority of survey respondents (87.2 percent) reported a negative effect; 11 percent were unaffected, and two percent reported growth. New businesses (in operation for less than three years), small companies, andmicro-enterprises struggled the most. Industries with the highest negative-impact rates were the garment industry (97 percent), information and communications (96 percent), and electrical-equipment manufacturing (94 percent). Real estate and mining had negative-impact rates of about 80 percent, and FDI real estate, information and communications, agriculture and fisheries had an over-95-percent negative-impact rate.

Thirty-five percent of private companies and 22 percent of FDI firms laid off employees; thirty-six percent of private small and micro-enterprises, 26 percent of medium-sized businesses and 32 percent of large companies implemented layoffs.[284] The Vietnam General Statistics Office said that exports were $99.36 billion, down 1.7 percent from the previous year. Imports were $97.48 billion, down three percent. Vietnam's exports to the EU andASEAN fell by 12 and 13.4 percent, respectively.[285]

The International Monetary Fund projected Vietnam's 2020 economic growth as 2.4 percent. IMF mission chief Era Dabla-Norris said that the country's growth was "among the highest in the world, thanks to its decisive steps to contain the health and economic fallout from COVID-19". The VCCI said that the pandemic gave Vietnam an opportunity to develop its economy when Japan, the US, the EU, and Australia might want to transfer portions of their supply chains from China. TheComprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) andEuropean Union–Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) were expected to help the country diversify its economic and trade relations, create favorable conditions for Vietnamese businesses, and attract investment to prioritized industries and sectors.[286]

2021

[edit]

Due to fears generated by a January 2021 outbreak in Hải Dương and Quảng Ninh, theVN Index fell 73.23 points (6.67 percent); it was the worst single-session loss since theSeptember 11 attacks. On the Ho Chi Minh Stock City Stock Exchange (HoSE, on which the VN Index is based), 478 stocks lost and 20 gained. Of the 478, a record 276 stocks reached their floor prices (the lowest they could fall in a trading day). The VN30 index of the exchange's 30 largest-cap stocks fell 6.73 percent, with 29 stocks losing and one gaining. Twenty-eight of the 29 losing stocks fell to their floor prices.[287]

According to Vietnam's General Statistics Office, the number of employed workers in the first quarter of 2021 decreased by one million (to 49.9 million) from the previous quarter. The country had 9.1 million workers aged 15 and older who were negatively affected by the pandemic. Over half a million people lost their jobs, 2.8 million took unpaid leave, 3.1 million had their working hours cut, and 6.5 million reported reduced income; two-thirds of those people were between ages of 24 and 54. As many as 40,300 companies shut down in the first quarter, a year-over-year decrease of 16 percent. The pandemic changed working habits, prompting the use of online tools; at least 78,000 workers said that they turned to technological solutions to keep their jobs.[288]

The April 2021 outbreak in the southern provinces further disrupted supply chains. Lockdowns prevented on-site work, dropping production capacity. Two major footwear suppliers for Adidas and Nike, Taiwan's Pouchen and South Korea's Changshin (with 41,000 workers) ceased operations on 14 July 2021.[289] Six days later, Feng Tay (another Taiwanese sports-footwear manufacturer, which accounted for one-sixth of Nike's annual sales) closed several factories.[290] According to the Vietnam Textile and Apparel Association (VITAS), over one-third of the country's garment and textile factories were closed and the immunization rate of the sector's workforce remained very low due to a delay by the Vietnamese government in purchasing vaccine. In August, textile businesses maintained good export capacity but were expected to face declines in growth beginning in the fourth quarter of 2021.[291]

Samsung, one of Vietnam's largest employers, had manufacturing problems with its smartphones when its injection-molding-equipment supplier went out of business. Near Ho Chi Minh City, the company's appliance facilities were operating at 50 percent of capacity.[292] The outbreak disrupted a plan to shift production from China to Vietnam of Apple, Google, Amazon and their main suppliers. Google's Pixel 6 smartphone would still be manufactured in China, although Google had planned to move production to northern Vietnam in early 2020. Apple's plan to shift production of MacBook, AirPods and iPad to Vietnam was also postponed. Production of smart doorbells, security cameras and smart speakers for Amazon were delayed since a May outbreak in the north.[293] Many Japanese businesses wanted to repatriate their staffs from Vietnam, and Chico's (a Florida-based women's clothing brand) and Callaway Golf (a golf manufacturer)h announced that some of their production had been moved to other countries.[294][295] In August 2021,Nikkei Asia ranked Vietnam last in resilience after the pandemic.[296] A two-month lockdown in Ho Chi Minh City (which contributes 20 percent of Vietnam's GDP) pushed many businesses to the limit when nearly all economic activity froze. Of 21,000 businesses surveyed by the Private Economic Development Research Board andVnExpress, 70 percent had closed (largely because of supply-chain disruptions). Concern about the Delta outbreak drove tens of thousands of people from their workplaces.[297] The lockdown jeopardized Vietnam's standing in the global supply chain.[298] According to the General Statistics Office, the country's gross domestic product (GDP) in the third quarter of 2021 fell 6.17 percent from the previous year.[299]

At a 5 December 2021 forum to discuss economic recovery plans, Central Economic Commission deputy head Nguyen Thanh Phong said that Vietnam's economy would have grown by seven percent in 2020 and 2021 without the pandemic. The country's growth rate increased by 2.91 percent in 2020, and was expected to increase by 2.5 percent in 2021. The Vietnamese economy lost about ₫847 trillion, equivalent to US$37 billion.[300]

Unemployment

[edit]

According to a December 2020 General Statistics Office report, 32.1 million people nationwide were affected by the pandemic; 69.2 percent lost income, 39.9 percent had their work hours reduced, and about 14 percent were laid off. The service-sector workforce had the heaviest losses (71.6 percent affected), followed by industry and construction (64.7 percent) and agriculture, forestry and fishery (26.4 percent). TheMinistry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs said that the number of people filing for unemployment in May 2020 increased 44 percent from the previous year. In the first five months of 2020, 26,000 companies ceased operating. The ministry estimated that the number of workers affected by the pandemic could increase during the second quarter of 2020.[278] Vietnam's workforce decreased by 1.2 million people that year; from 2016 to 2019 period, it increased by an average of 0.8 percent per year.[301]

The pandemic changed quarterly workforce trends. From 2016 to 2019 period, the workforce was smallest in the first quarter before increasing gradually and peaking in the fourth quarter. In 2020, the workforce began to decline in the first quarter; it declined sharply before bottoming in the second quarter, gradually recovering in the third and fourth quarters.[302]

Stockpiling

[edit]

Stores across Vietnam quickly sold out ofsurgical masks andhand sanitizer after the initial cases of COVID-19 were reported in January 2020, following a similar trend in other Asian countries.[303] Interim Health MinisterVũ Đức Đam urged the public to remain calm during the outbreak and avoid excessive emergency buying.[304] Vietnamese authorities moved to arrest people who profiteered from the outbreak.[305]

Transportation and tourism

[edit]
See also:Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on aviation andImpact of the COVID-19 pandemic on tourism
Number of flights from January to November in 2019 and 2020, byCivil Aviation Authority of Vietnam
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Sources: Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV)[306]

Planes on the tarmac, facing in different directions
Line of Vietnam Airlines andJetstar Pacific aircraft grounded due to the pandemic atNoi Bai International Airport

Tourism is Vietnam's most-severely-affected industry, with the country'sCivil Aviation Authority (CAAV) calling the pandemic the aviation industry's worst situation in the 60 years of the authority's existence. Of 234 Vietnam-registered aircraft, over 200 were grounded while airlines must spend hundreds of millions dollars on aircraft leasing costs, employee salaries, aircraft maintenance, and apron parking fees.[307]Vietnam Airlines estimated that its 2020 revenues could decline by $2.1 billion. As many as 10,000 employees (over 50 percent of its staff) took unpaid leave. According to CEO Duong Tri Thanh, the carrier was experiencing the most difficult period in its history.[308]

According to the General Statistics Office, about 16,300 foreigners came to Vietnam in August 2020 (primarily experts arriving to work). Since 25 July 2020, when the second wave began, many tourist attractions have been closed and measures were implemented to curb the spread of infection. The ancient imperial city ofHuế, popular with foreign visitors, was empty during the pandemic;Thừa Thiên Huế province's tourism department said that 80 percent of its hotels were closed, and 8,000 people had lost their jobs.[309]Khánh Hòa province (whereNha Trang is located) saw its number of tourists fall by over 80 percent in 2020, and hundreds of hotels are being sold for low prices. Authorities have said that the pandemic has caused major difficulties for more than 1,100 accommodation facilities, and by February 2021 the provincial tourism department said that about 100 had suspended operations.[310]

Revenue from lodging and food and beverage services in 2020 was $22.1 billion (down 13 percent), and travel-agency revenue was $776 million (down 59.5 percent). The tourism sector served 3.83 million visitors (compared with a record 18 million in 2019) as the government closed borders and canceled all international flights.[311] Similar drops were seen in nearly all major markets, such as China,Malaysia,South Korea, Japan and France.[285] According to a Ho Chi Minh City Department of Tourism report, about 90 percent of travel-related businesses in the city had to suspend operations during the pandemic's second wave.[312]

According to CAAV, 66 million passengers passed through the country's airports in 2020 (a 43.5-percent decrease). Twenty-two airports across Vietnam accommodated 340,000 flights operated by 68 foreign and five Vietnamese carriers, down 31.9 percent from 2019; they handled nearly 1.3 million tons of cargo, down 14.7 percent. Vietnam Airlines and two low-cost carriers (VietJet Air andBamboo Airways) requested government support and refinanced loans, estimating that the industry would not fully recover until 2023 at the earliest.[313][314]

The fourth wave of COVID-19 froze the summer 2021 tourist season, closing travel agencies, restaurants, hotels, and amusement parks. According to theVietnam National Administration of Tourism, in the first nine months of 2021 the number of domestic tourists decreased by 16 percent compared with 2020 and by 52 percent compared with 2019. Tourism revenue was almost 137 trillion₫, down 41 percent from 2020. At the end of September, Vinh Phuc, Quang Ninh, Hai Phong, Thanh Hoa, Quang Binh, Lam Dong and Ho Chi Minh City resumed intra-provincial tourism. Ho Chi Minh City offers tours of Can Gio and Cu Chi and other, commercial tours for frontline doctors. In mid-October, foreign tourists were again allowed at isolated resorts and tourist areas.[315] On 12 November, CAAV deputy director Vo Huy Cuong said that the agency planned to organize nearly 30 flights to Kiên Giang andKhánh Hòa province. CAAV received a flight plan five days later from Vietnam Airlines and from VietJet Air on 20 November to the island ofPhú Quốc inKiên Giang province. About 20 flights to Kien Giang and Khanh Hoa are planned from Korea, Japan, Taiwan and Thailand. On 17 November, a flight bringing 29 international tourists toHội An landed atDa Nang International Airport. They were the first international tourists to return to Vietnam under the country'svaccine passport program since the March 2020 suspension of international arrivals.[12][316]

Education

[edit]
See also:Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on education
Elementary-school girl having her temperature checked outside a school
ABắc Giang province student has her temperature checked in May 2020.

On 6 February 2020, under the leadership ofMinister of Vietnam Education and Training Phung Xuan Nha, the Steering Committee for Disease Prevention and Control agreed to allow students to remain at home for an additional week after theTết holiday. On 14 February, the Ministry of Health reported that schools would remain closed nationwide. The closure was linked to a nationwide 31 March quarantine order, effect the following day. Schools began to adopt online instruction,[317] and the Ministry of Education and Training issued junior high- and high-school teaching plans for the second semester of the 2019–2020 academic year on 31 March.[318]

School closures from February to May impacted an estimated 21.2 million children nationwide, eliminating access to health and protective services and subsidized school meals. COVID-19 triggered school absences as children accompanied parents seeking employment opportunities in new locations. About three percent of rural households reported they stopped sending children to school due to reduced income.[319] Household registration was an administrative barrier, especially for migrant children, to the public-education system. The pandemic exacerbated Vietnam'sdigital divide; many students live in remote regions with limited internet coverage, cannot afford devices required for online learning, or do not have teachers proficient in such learning.[320] Online and distance-learning programmes did not attain nationwide coverage. Such learning programmes were available from primary to university levels in some provinces, focusing on grades 9 to 12 in others. Only large cities had programmes from elementary to high school, and user fees were required for some video lessons. Online and distance learning focused on maths, Vietnamese and English, and were often unavailable in ethnic-minority languages;[321] extracurricular programmes such as sex education were often not covered. Half of a UNICEF survey's respondents reported that their children studied less, or not at all, while schools were closed. Many teachers were not equipped for online learning, with ethnic-minority and disabled children disproportionately affected.[322]

Pharmaceutical industry

[edit]

Contrary to a pre-pandemic positive forecast, 2020 pharmaceutical revenue increased by less than three percent (compared with an historical annual average of nearly 12 percent) due to social distancing and tight control of hospital visits. According to SSI Research, infection concerns and strict health procedures at many hospitals limited the number of patients who come for periodic check-ups, reducing the number of nationwide medical examinations and treatments by 10 to 15 percent. Consumers bought hand sanitizer and masks instead ofover-the-counter drugs, reducing industry sales.

However, 2020 was a "significant" year for merger and acquisition activity (M&A) in the pharmaceutical industry. The total value of M&A in 2020 is estimated at $72.8 million, with many foreign investors. The largest deal wasSK Group (Korea)'s $39.8 million purchase of 25 percent of Imexpharm Pharmaceutical Company (IMP).Stada Arzneimittel (Germany), specializing in generic drugs, spent over $17.3 million increasing its ownership in Pymepharco Joint Stock Company from 70 to 76 percent; ASKA Pharmaceutical (Japan), specializing in gastrointestinal drugs, hormones and obstetrics and gynecology, spent $16 million to buy a 25-percent stake in Hataphar (Vietnam's second-largest drug company in 2019).[323]

The pandemic challenged the pharmaceutical industry, especially with disease spread. Vietnam's rapidly-aging population and increasing per-capita income supports long-term growth of the healthcare market, so "the possibility of the industry recovering in 2021 [was] very likely".[324]

Sports

[edit]
See also:Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sports

The pandemic delayed the2020 V.League 1 season, affecting theVietnam national football team's preparations for the2022 World Cup qualifications.[325][326] On 23 May 2020,Nam Dinh FC hosted a match againstHoang Anh Gia Lai FC before 10,000 fans atThiên Trường Stadium; it was the world's first professional football match to allow spectators since the pandemic began.[327][328] The inaugural Vietnamese Grand Prix, scheduled to be part of the2020 Formula One World Championship, was postponed and later cancelled.[329][330][331] Due to international travel restrictions,esports winners of theVietnam Championship Series could not participate in the2020 League of Legends World Championship[332] and the2021 Mid-Season Invitational.[333]

Music

[edit]

The Vietnamese National Institute of Occupational and Environmental Health commissionedMin andErik to record "Ghen Cô Vy" ("Jealous [of] Coronavirus"), a remake of the 2017 song "Ghen" ("Jealous"), to promote preventative measures against the pandemic such as personal hygiene, hand-washing and social distancing.[334][335][145] The song went viral, and was praised byJohn Oliver onLast Week Tonight with John Oliver. UNICEF promoted the video to counteract COVID-19 hysteria.[336]

International reaction

[edit]
  • Asian Development Bank: In December 2020, ADB announced that it gave Vietnam $600,000 in material aid. It facilitated the addition of protective equipment worth $500,000 to the National Lung Hospital in Hanoi and a $100,000 equipment upgrade at the Ministry of Health's Public Health Emergency Operation Center (PHEOC).[337]
  • Australia:Minister of Trade, Tourism and InvestmentSimon Birmingham congratulated Vietnam on its achievements against the pandemic.[338] Birmingham thanked Vietnam for resuming the export of rice, helping rice-importing countries (including small countries in the Oceania-Pacific region) secure their food supply.[338] The Australian government pledged to supply 1.5 million AstraZeneca vaccine doses to Vietnam by the end of 2021.[339]
  • Chile: Chilean Ambassador to Vietnam Jaime Chomali said that Vietnam recorded few new infections despite its high population (indicating that its efforts were successful), and was more confident in Vietnam's economic recovery than other regional countries.[340]
  • China: In a phone call with his Vietnamese counterpartNguyễn Phú Trọng,Chinese Communist Partygeneral secretaryXi Jinping said that he "appreciates the results of the prevention and control of the COVID-19 epidemic in Vietnam, as well as the cooperation and coordination between the two countries in the fight against the coronavirus".[341][342] In June 2021, 500,000 doses of Sinopharm's Vero Cell vaccine and over 500,000 syringes (donated by the Chinese government) arrived in Hanoi.[343]
  • Czech Republic: On 26 July 2021, the Czech government announced that it would provide Vietnam with 250,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine. The Czech prime minister said that although the epidemic in the Czech Republic continued to be complicated, the Czech government would continue to support Vietnam. It was ready to provide 500,000 doses of vaccines and rapid test kits to the country, calling on other European countries for similar support with doses of AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Moderna, and Sinopharm vaccines.[344]
  • France: In August 2021, French presidentEmmanuel Macron announced that he would supply 670,000 doses of vaccine to Vietnam through COVAX.[345]
  • Germany: In a 14 April 2020 statement on its Facebook page on, theFederal Foreign Office expressed gratitude for the support of the Vietnamese government and its people for Germany's efforts to combat COVID-19.[346] By the end of September 2021, Germany had donated 3.45 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine and tens of thousands of medical devices to Vietnam.[347]
  • Hungary: On 11 August 2021, the Hungarian government said that it would donate 100,000 doses of AstraZeneca vaccine and 100,000 rapid antigen test kits to Vietnam.[348]
  • Japan: Prime MinisterShinzo Abe said that his government would distribute an economic stimulus of¥100,000 per person (including Vietnamese living and working in Japan), affirming that efforts would continue to ensure safety for Vietnamese citizens. The governments agreed to continue working closely to strengthen exchanges and cooperation in all fields. Abe said that Japan would offer a second support package to help Vietnam cope with the pandemic and assist its economic growth.[349] By August 2021, Japan had donated nearly three million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine to Vietnam.[350]
  • Poland: In August 2021, the Polish government donated over 501,000 doses of AstraZeneca vaccine and medical equipment and supplies worth $4 million to Vietnam.[351]
  • Romania: On 6 August 2021, thegovernment of Romania announced that it would begin to donate 300,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine to Vietnam.[352]
  • Russia: Prime MinisterMikhail Mishustin agreed with the Vietnamese government to continue facilitating trade between the two countries during the pandemic. Mishustin praised Vietnam's response, and thanked the country for offering 150,000 face masks to Russia.[353] Russian Ambassador Konstantin Vnukov also praised Vietnam's fight against COVID-19, and hoped that the countries would continue their mutual support.[340]
  • South Korea: South Korean PresidentMoon Jae-in appreciated the measures taken by the Vietnamese government to contain the pandemic, saying that South Korea was ready to share experiences and cooperate with the country in fighting the pandemic and protecting the population.[354]
  • Switzerland: The Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Swiss Humanitarian Aid agency said that a shipment of medical aid was sent fromZürich on 12 August 2021. The shipment, worthCHF five million ($5.4 million), consisted of 13 tons of medical equipment (including 30 ventilators, 500,000 antigen test kits and 300,000 masks).[355]
  • United Kingdom: Gareth Ward,British Ambassador to Vietnam, expressed thanks for the support of the Vietnamese government for a British repatriation flight and its provision of medical supplies to aid the UK in combating the pandemic.[356] In August 2021, the United Kìngdom donated 415,000 doses of AstraZeneca vaccine to Vietnam.[357]
  • United States: United States Ambassador to VietnamDaniel Kritenbrink praised the country's rapid response to the outbreak.[358] The US delegation also praised Vietnam for its quarantine efforts and has cooperated with the Vietnamese embassy in the United States.[359] Matthew Moore, a Hanoi-basedCDC official, expressed "great confidence" in the Vietnamese government's response to the pandemic.[360]

Statistics

[edit]
Number of cases by city & province in Vietnam
LocalityCasesDeaths
63/63
localities
11,623,18743,206
Hanoi1,649,6741,238
Ho Chi Minh City628,73720,476
Hải Phòng538,348138
Nghệ An502,496145
Bắc Giang391,38993
Bình Dương388,8353,466
Vĩnh Phúc376,26619
Hải Dương373,118120
Quảng Ninh365,405156
Bắc Ninh352,073135
Thái Nguyên348,082112
Phú Thọ332,47597
Nam Định301,582150
Thái Bình272,11123
Hưng Yên245,2205
Thanh Hóa210,258107
Hòa Bình208,799104
Lào Cai187,55938
Đắk Lắk172,589197
Tuyên Quang162,87614
Yên Bái162,79413
Lạng Sơn160,93187
Sơn La153,7440
Cà Mau152,140352
Bình Định142,063283
Tây Ninh141,256911
Quảng Bình133,39076
Hà Giang122,73581
Khánh Hòa122,633358
Bình Phước121,036221
Đà Nẵng114,407358
Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu110,989490
Đồng Nai107,6321,865
Ninh Bình106,09192
Vĩnh Long102,978817
Bến Tre99,959492
Cao Bằng99,39060
Lâm Đồng98,646138
Hà Nam91,62364
Điện Biên91,06223
Quảng Trị86,53537
Bắc Kạn78,81330
Lai Châu75,7540
Đắk Nông73,48046
Gia Lai70,643116
Trà Vinh66,093301
Hà Tĩnh55,30251
Phú Yên54,669135
Bình Thuận54,339479
Đồng Tháp51,723997
Quảng Ngãi50,565124
Long An50,328990
Cần Thơ50,049953
Quảng Nam49,678146
Thừa Thiên-Huế48,314172
Bạc Liêu46,966472
Kiên Giang44,1631,023
An Giang43,5011,385
Tiền Giang40,2451,220
Sóc Trăng34,727626
Kon Tum26,4481
Hậu Giang18,391231
Ninh Thuận9,07057
As of 22 November 2025
Number of cases by age and conditions
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Female
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Male


COVID-19 severe patient condition in Vietnam (as of 24 August 2023)
ConditionsNumber of cases
Using oxygen mask1
Usinghigh flow nasal cannula (HFNC)0
Usingnon-invasive ventilation0
Usinginvasive ventilation0
UsingECMO0


Number of cases by condition:

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  In-patient: 590 (0.005% of confirmed cases)
  Discharged: 11,578,791 (99.623% of confirmed cases)
  Deaths: 43,206 (0.372% of confirmed cases)


Number of cases by gender:

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  Male: 45.0% of confirmed cases
  Female: 55.0% of confirmed cases


Number of cases by source of infection:

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  Community-spread: 99.6% of confirmed cases
  Imported: 0.4% of confirmed cases

No. of confirmed cases, active cases, recoveries and deaths (linear)
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Number of new cases
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2022
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2023
Number of active cases
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2022
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2023
Number of fatalities
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2022
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2023
Number of recoveries
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2022
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2023

Sources:
Ministry of Health of Vietnam(Statistics from Vietnam Ministry of Health)
Vietnam COVID-19 statistics (VnExpress)


Details of deaths due to COVID-19 in Vietnam (as of 14 July 2021)
NumberCase no.DateAgeGenderNationalityPlace of detectionPlace of deathCauses of deathNotesSource
Confirmed deaths
142831 July 202070MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central HospitalHeart attack and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure, ischemic heart disease[361]
243761MaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure, respiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure and gout[362]
34991 August 202068FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng Oncology HospitalRespiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of leukemia, type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure[363]
45242 August 202086FemaleVietnamQuảng Nam ProvinceHuế Central HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease and heart disease[364]
547583FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalHigh blood pressure and COVID-19Had a history of multiple joint osteoarthritis
642953FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalHeart failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes[365]
74264 August 202062FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease[366]
849665MaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalHeart failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease and sepsis[367]
96516 August 202067FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalRespiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, lupus erythematosus and type 2 diabetes[368]
1071867FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalHeart failure and COVID-19Had a history of malignant multiple myeloma, type 2 diabetes and sepsis[369]
114569 August 202055FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Gastrointestinal bleeding, cardiac arrest and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure[370]
1243010 August 202033FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Respiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, heart disease, high blood pressure and sepsis[371]
1373747FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreHeart failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, heart disease and high blood pressure
1443666MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Heart failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease[372]
1552268MaleVietnamQuảng Nam ProvinceHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Pulmonary artery occlusion and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, left kidney cancer with lung metastases and type 2 diabetes[373]
1683211 August 202037MaleVietnamQuảng Trị ProvinceHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Heart failure and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease and type 1 diabetes[374]
1743112 August 202055MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Hypotension and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure and type 1 diabetes[375]
1848513 August 202052FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreCOVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes[376]
1962383FemaleVietnamQuảng Nam ProvinceHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Septic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of myelosuppression, sigmoid colon tumor, malnutrition[377]
2047987MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSurgical site infection and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease, type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure
2158514 August 202061FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and obesity[378]
2270215 August 202063MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure and heart disease[379]
2369975MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and heart disease[380]
2457516 August 202082FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, respiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of meningitis[381]
2569818 August 202051FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng Hospital for Lung DiseasesSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of ovarian cancer metastasis to the abdomen, kidney stones, urinary tract infections[382]
2666622 August 202093MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, heart disease, high blood pressure[383]
2757723 August 202073FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng HospitalSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure and anemia[384]
2875826 August 202036FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, peritoneal dialysis, heart disease and high blood pressure[385]
2982766MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease and high blood pressure[386]
3069627 August 202051FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, heart disease and high blood pressure[387]
3199629 August 202028MaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng Hospital for Lung DiseasesSeptic shock, total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of acute lymphocytic leukemia, myelosuppression.[388]
3295767FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, cerebrovascular accident and hemiplegia[389]
3374231 August 202069MaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng Hospital for Lung DiseasesSeptic shock, total organ failure, respiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, heart disease, atrial fibrillation, type 2 diabetes[390]
341,04055MaleVietnamĐà NẵngAt homeCOVID-19Had a history of Guillain-barre syndrome, type 2 diabetes[391]
357613 September 202083FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreRespiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease, high blood pressure and gastrointestinal bleeding[392]
363,83915 May 202189FemaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch) (NHTD #2)Respiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and collapsed vertebrae[393]
373,05517 May 202134MaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Traumatic brain injury and COVID-19Brain injury due to traffic accident[394]
383,19720 May 202164FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of liver cancer[395]
393,55481MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of cirrhosis, diabetes, hypertension, gout[396]
403,02821 May 202170FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of diabetes and stroke[397]
413,65389FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng Hospital for Lung DiseasesSeptic shock, respiratory arrest and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease, high blood pressure and gastritis[398]
423,02223 May 202172FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Total organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, high blood pressure[399]
433,01524 May 202150MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure, sepsis, gastrointestinal bleeding and COVID-19Had a history of cirrhosis[400]
444,80738FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang General HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19The first case died without any underlying disease[401]
453,76026 May 202167FemaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, heart failure and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, hypothyroidism, diabetes and obesity[402]
463,88127 May 202181MaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19[403]
473,02628 May 202122FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, fungal bloodstream infection and COVID-19Had a history of bone marrow failure. Youngest patient died by COVID-19[404]
483,3541 June 202176MaleVietnamLạng Sơn ProvinceNHTD #2Multiple organ failure, hypovolemic shock and COVID-19[405]
495,4632 June 202137FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock, sepsis and COVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease and peritoneal dialysis[406]
503,7804 June 202167MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure, sepsis and COVID-19Had a history of lung cancer brain metastases[407]
513,15363MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of ankylosing spondylitis[408]
524,3695 June 202135FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of colon cancer lung metastases[409]
533,01853FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure, aspergillosis and COVID-19Had a history of polyneuropathy[410]
543,4228 June 202151MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, gastrointestinal bleeding and COVID-19Had a history of toxic hepatitis[411]
554,63288FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang Lung HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease and senility[412]
564,11511 June 202165FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of cervical cancer[413]
573,59559FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of gallbladder cancer
584,11812 June 202164FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of lung cancer[414]
595,35513 June 202176MaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of polyarthritis, duodenal ulcer[415]
608,51214 June 202187FemaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease, high blood pressure and parkinson's disease[416]
614,73160FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, aspergillosis and COVID-19Had a history of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
628,21718 June 202171FemaleVietnamTây Ninh ProvinceBến Cầu Medical CentreSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of tuberculosis, high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes[417]
6312,15119 June 202190FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang Psychiatric HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, necrosis of the left forearm and senility[418]
643,86667MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, candidiasis and COVID-19Had a history of bronchial cancer
654,39120 June 202153MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and high blood pressure[419]
666,04380MaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney disease and asthma
6711,59221 June 202175MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCủ Chi COVID-19 HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure, sepsis and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and dyslipidemia[420][421]
686,89186FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang General HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease and senility
6912,00767FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCủ Chi COVID-19 HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and Cushing's syndrome
7011,79323 June 202161FemaleVietnamTiền Giang ProvinceTiền Giang Hospital of Tuberculosis and Respiratory DiseaseSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes[422]
7113,08224 June 202188MaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang Psychiatric HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and senility[423]
7211,08182MaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang Psychiatric HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, diabetes, gout and senility
739,83025 June 202144MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes[424]
7411,45668FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and diabetes
759,77927 June 202180MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, gout and Cushing's syndrome[425][426]
7614,65653FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19
7713,82729 June 202177MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityTrưng Vương HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of cerebrovascular accident, hemiplegia and high blood pressure[427][428]
7813,34754MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityTrưng Vương HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of kidney disease, high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes
7910,47464FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceBắc Giang Psychiatric HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of cerebrovascular accident and polyarthritis
809,01485FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes
8112,93830 June 202161MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityTrưng Vương HospitalMultiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of tuberculosis[429]
823,7992 July 202169MaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceBắc Ninh General HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19[430]
8315,97067MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalHeart attack and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes chronic kidney disease and prostatic hypertrophy
8411,61864MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCủ Chi COVID-19 HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure, sepsis and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and ischemic heart disease
855,2204 July 202181FemaleVietnamBắc Ninh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, blood fungal infection and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and stroke[431]
869,53364MaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock, blood fungal infection and COVID-19Had a history of throat cancer
8718,2655 July 202168MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and ischemic heart disease[432]
8816,34081FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and acute adrenal insufficiency
8917,10073FemaleVietnamLong An ProvinceLong An General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, heart disease, lupus erythematosus, knee osteoarthritis, sacral ulcers and Cushing's syndrome
9019,60288FemaleVietnamLong An ProvinceLong An General HospitalGastrointestinal perforation and COVID-19Had a history of ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pulmonary tuberculosis and stroke
9113,8816 July 202171FemaleVietnamNghệ An ProvinceNghệ An Friendship General HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, diabetes and osteoarthritis[433][434][435]
9219,18262FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesPulmonary embolism, septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, diabetes, chronic kidney disease and atrial fibrillation
938,58197FemaleVietnamHà Tĩnh ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure
943,18062FemaleVietnamHanoiNHTD #2Septic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, diabetes and pancreatic cancer
9517,90168FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityBình Chánh District HospitalCOVID-19
9616,33964FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and adrenal failure
9720,26164MaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and ischemic heart disease
9810,0967 July 202167FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure, heart attack and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and diabetes[436]
9913,18349MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock, acute kidney injury and COVID-19
10012,41162MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes
10113,70963FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalCOVID-19
10214,81256MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19
10312,5668 July 202174MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityTrưng Vương HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of cirrhosis due to hepatitis C, liver cancer, high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes[437]
10413,04172FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngĐà Nẵng Lung HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, candidiasis and COVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, obesity and heart disease
10510,09667FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceNHTD #2There was an error in the MOH's statistics, causing this patient to appear twice in the list of deaths (the 98th death)
10615,5699 July 202150FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityTrưng Vương HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19[438]
10713,93885FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityTrưng Vương HospitalMultiple organ failure, heart failure and COVID-19Had a history of stroke
10820,58754FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and ischemic heart disease
10920,02643FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalAcute coronary syndrome and COVID-19Had a history of elevated liver enzymes, type 2 diabetes and thalassaemia
11021,62359FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceAn Hiệp commune quarantine facilityCOVID-19Had a history of heart disease, diabetes and multi-membrane tuberculosis
11119,59110 July 202159FemaleVietnamLong An ProvinceLong An Lung HospitalSepsis and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure[439]
11210,93664FemaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of diabetes and thyroid nodules
11313,09911 July 202179MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure and COVID-19Had a history of tuberculosis and type 2 diabetes[440]
11412,96761FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19
11519,94361FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease and ischemic heart disease
11620,04365MaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of sacral ulcer, cerebrovascular accident, type 2 diabetes and Cushing's syndrome
11720,01052FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes
11820,03543FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, stroke and Cushing's syndrome
11920,60859MaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and cirrhosis due to hepatitis B
12026,65812 July 202144MaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of pleural cancer and cirrhosis[441][442]
12117,05374MaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalHeart attack and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease
12219,97148FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalHeart attack and COVID-19Had a history of heart disease, high blood pressure, chronic kidney disease and ischemic heart disease
12319,60767FemaleVietnamLong An ProvinceLong An General HospitalKlebsiella pneumoniae infection and COVID-19Had a history of decompensated cirrhosis, hepatitis B and heart disease
12420,02378FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of gastrointestinal infections, type 2 diabetes, chronic kidney disease and liver cancer
12520,02563FemaleVietnamĐồng Tháp ProvinceSa Đéc General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, chronic kidney disease and Cushing's syndrome
12617,48813 July 202138FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCủ Chi COVID-19 HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of chronic kidney disease[443][444]
12714,62539MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalSeptic shock, kidney failure and COVID-19Had a history of tuberculosis
12813,29861MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityPhạm Ngọc Thạch HospitalKidney failure and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure
12918,75348FemaleVietnamĐồng Nai ProvinceĐồng Nai Lung HospitalHeart attack and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, obesity, abnormal liver enzymes and lipid disorder
13012,45155MaleVietnamBắc Giang ProvinceNHTD #2Septic shock, pneumothorax and COVID-19Had a history of cirrhosis
1312,98365FemaleVietnamAn Giang ProvinceHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock, brain hemorrhage and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and diabetes
13217,16577FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes
13321,84214 July 202187FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock, heart attack and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and senility[445]
13427,27267MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock, multiple organ failure, trichosporon asahii skin infection and COVID-19Had a history of arthritis and stroke
13516,22383FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, senility and heart attack
13618,45380FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital for Tropical DiseasesSeptic shock and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and heart disease
13719,61465FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCần Giờ COVID-19 HospitalSeptic shock, multiple organ failure, gastrointestinal bleeding and COVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes
13825,57442MaleVietnamLong An ProvinceEn-route to hospitalHeart failure, subcutaneous emphysema and COVID-19Had a history of bronchial asthma and obesity
Other causes and unconfirmed deaths
141818 August 202061MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHuế Central Hospital (2nd Branch)Septic shock and chronic kidney failureTested negative four times for COVID-19[446]
245326 August 202056FemaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock, heart failure and chronic kidney failureTested negative three times for COVID-19[447]
37642 September 202067MaleVietnamĐà NẵngHòa Vang Medical CentreSeptic shock and chronic kidney failureTested negative three times for COVID-19[448]
42,22913 February 202154MaleJapanHanoiHanoi Somerset West PointUnknownTested positive for COVID-19 after died, the patient was autopsied but the Vietnamese government never publicly announced the cause of death[449]
58 June 202157FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityEn-route to hospitalMultiple organ failureHad a history of high blood pressure and diabetes. Died before confirmed with COVID-19[450]
617,1083 July 202168MaleVietnamPhú Yên ProvinceSơn Hòa District Medical CentreCOVID-19Had a history of stroke, unconfirmed by Vietnam's Ministry of Health[451]
73 July 202126MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh City30-4 HospitalSeptic shock, respiratory failureTested positive for COVID-19 after died. The patient was a prisoner, may infected from guards atChí Hòa Prison[452]
821,32112 July 202181UnknownVietnamPhú Yên ProvincePhú Yên General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and Parkinson's disease[453]
931,60554UnknownVietnamPhú Yên ProvincePhú Yên General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of diabetes and polyarthritis
1020,53265UnknownVietnamPhú Yên ProvincePhú Yên General HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of high blood pressure
1133,71613 July 202168FemaleVietnamPhú Yên ProvinceAt homeUnknownHad a history of high blood pressure and diabetes. Died before tested positive for COVID-19[454][455]
1241MaleVietnamTiền Giang ProvinceTiền Giang Tuberculosis and Lung Disease HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of gout
1319,68494MaleVietnamTiền Giang ProvinceTiền Giang Tuberculosis and Lung Disease HospitalCOVID-19Had a history of senility


Details of first 250 COVID-19 confirmed cases in Vietnam (as of 6 July 2020)
CaseDateAgeGenderNationalityPlace of detectionPlace of treatmentBeen toWuhan, HubeiBeen toCovid-19 countries (excludingChina)StatusNoteSource
123 January 202066MaleChinaHo Chi Minh CityCho Ray HospitalYesNoDischarged[456]
228YesNoDischargedSon of case 1
330 January 202025FemaleVietnamThanh HoaThanh Hoa General HospitalYesNoDischarged[456]
429MaleVinh PhucHanoi National Hospital of Tropical DiseasesYesNoDischarged
523FemaleYesNoDischarged
61 February 202025FemaleVietnamKhanh HoaKhanh Hoa Hospital of Tropical DiseasesNoNoDischargedRelated to cases 1 and 2, first community transmission case[456]
72 February 202073MaleUnited StatesHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital of Tropical DiseasesYesNoDischargedStayed atWuhan Tianhe International Airport before flying to Vietnam[456]
83 February 202029FemaleVietnamVinh PhucHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)YesNoDischarged[456]
94 February 202030MaleVietnamVinh PhucHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)YesNoDischarged[456]
1042FemaleBinh Xuyen District Medical CentreNoNoDischargedCousin of case 5
116 February 202049FemaleVietnamVinh PhucBinh Xuyen District Medical CentreNoNoDischargedMother of case 5[456]
1216NoNoDischargedSister of case 5
137 February 202029FemaleVietnamVinh PhucTam Dao Health CentreYesNoDischarged[456]
149 February 202055FemaleVietnamVinh PhucHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedNeighbor of case 5[456]
1511 February 20203 monthsFemaleVietnamVinh PhucVietnam National Children's HospitalNoNoDischargedGrandchildren of case 10[456]
1613 February 202050MaleVietnamVinh PhucBinh Xuyen District Medical CentreNoNoDischargedFather of case 5[456]
176 March 202026FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischargedVisited toUnited Kingdom,Italy andFrance. Related to flight VN54 cluster[457][458]
187 March 202027MaleVietnamNinh BinhNinh Binh General HospitalNoYesDischargedWorked inDaegu[459]
1964FemaleHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedAunt of case 17
2027MaleNoNoDischargedDriver of case 17
218 March 202061MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischargedFlight VN54 cluster[460]
2260United KingdomDa NangDa Nang HospitalNoYesDischarged
2366NoYesDischarged
2467FemaleIrelandQuang NinhHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
2550United KingdomNoYesDischarged
2674MaleNoYesDischarged
2770FemaleNoYesDischarged
2869MaleLao CaiNoYesDischarged
2970FemaleNoYesDischarged
3066Thua Thien HueHue Central Hospital (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
319 March 202049MaleUnited KingdomQuang NamHue Central Hospital (2nd Branch)NoYesDischargedFlight VN54 cluster[461]
3210 March 202024FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityHo Chi Minh City Hospital of Tropical DiseasesNoYesDischargedFriend of case 17 inLondon[462]
3358MaleUnited KingdomQuang NamHue Central Hospital (2nd Branch)NoYesDischargedFlight VN54 cluster[463]
3451FemaleVietnamBinh ThuanBinh Thuan General HospitalNoYesDischargedVisitedUnited States andQatar
3511 March 202029FemaleVietnamDa NangDa Nang HospitalNoNoDischargedRelated to cases 22 and 23 in Da Nang
3664Binh ThuanBinh Thuan General HospitalNoNoDischargedHelper of case 34
3737NoNoDischargedEmployee of case 34
3828NoNoDischargedDaughter-in-law of case 34
3925MaleHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedTour guide of case 24[464]
4012 March 202059MaleVietnamBinh ThuanBinh Thuan General HospitalNoNoDischargedHusband of case 34
4128NoNoDischargedSon of case 34
422FemaleNoNoDischargedGranddaughter of case 34
4347NoNoDischargedClose contact with case 38
4413MaleNoNoDischargedSon of case 37
4513 March 202025MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedClose contact with case 34
4630FemaleHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischargedFlight attendant on flight VN54
4743NoNoDischargedHelper of case 17
4814 March 202031MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedClose contact with case 34
4971United KingdomThua Thien HueHue Central Hospital (2nd Branch)NoYesDischargedHusband of case 30
5024FemaleVietnamQuang Ninh2nd Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
5150MaleHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
5222FemaleNoYesDischarged
5353MaleCzech RepublicHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
5415 March 202033MaleLatviaHo Chi Minh CityCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged[465][466]
5535GermanyHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
5630United KingdomNoYesDischarged
5766United KingdomQuang NamQuang Nam General HospitalNoYesDischargedFlight VN54 cluster
5816 March 202026FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged[465]
5930NoYesDischargedFlight attendant on flight VN54
6029MaleFranceNoYesDischarged
6142VietnamNinh ThuanNinh Thuan General HospitalNoYesDischargedVisited Malaysia
6217 March 202018MaleVietnamQuang NinhHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged[465]
6320FemaleHanoiNoYesDischarged
6436Ho Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
6528NoNoDischargedColleague of case 45 and 48
6621NoYesDischarged
6718 March 202036MaleVietnamNinh ThuanNinh Thuan General HospitalNoYesDischargedVisited Malaysia[465]
6841United StatesDa NangDa Nang HospitalNoYesDischarged
6930GermanyHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
7019VietnamNoYesDischarged
7119FemaleNoYesDischarged
7225FranceNoYesDischargedGirlfriend of case 60
7311MaleVietnamHai DuongThanh Mien District Medical CentreNoYesDischargedFlight VN54 cluster
7423Bac NinhBac Ninh General HospitalNoYesDischarged
7540FemaleHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
7652MaleFranceHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
7719 March 202025FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged[465]
7822MaleNoYesDischarged
7948FemaleHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
8018MaleNoYesDischargedSon of case 79
8120NoYesDischarged
8216FemaleNoYesDischarged
8350United StatesNoYesDischarged
8421MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
8520NoYesDischarged
8620 March 202054FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedBach Mai Hospital nurses[465]
8734NoNoDischarged
8825NoYesDischarged
8922Ho Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
9021NoYesDischarged
9143MaleUnited KingdomHo Chi Minh City Hospital of Tropical Diseases & Cho Ray Hospital[467]NoYesDischargedPilot ofVietnam Airlines, related to Bar Buddha cluster
9221 March 202021MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged[465]
9320HanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
9464FemaleNoYesDischarged
9522 March 202020MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged[465]
9621FemaleNoYesDischarged
9734MaleUnited KingdomCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischargedRelated to Bar Buddha cluster
9834NoYesDischarged
9929VietnamNoYesDischarged
10055NoYesDischarged
10126FemaleDong ThapSa Dec General HospitalNoYesDischargedPassengers on flight VN50
1029NoYesDischarged
10322MaleNoYesDischarged
10433FemaleNoYesDischarged
10535Tra VinhTra Vinh Tuberculosis and Lung Disease HospitalNoYesDischarged
10620NoYesDischarged
10725HanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedDaughter of case 86
10819MaleNoYesDischarged
10942NoYesDischarged
11019FemaleNoYesDischarged
11125NoYesDischarged
11230NoYesDischarged
11318NoYesDischarged
11423 March 202019MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged[465]
11544FemaleNoYesDischargedDaughter of case 94
11629MaleNoNoDischargedDoctor who infected from his patients
11730Tay NinhTay Ninh General HospitalNoYesDischargedVisitedCambodia
11823FemaleNoYesDischarged
11929MaleUnited StatesHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
12027CanadaNoYesDischargedClose contact with case 91
12158VietnamCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
12224FemaleDa NangDa Nang HospitalNoYesDischargedWorked as a bartender inBangkok,Thailand
12317Ben TreBinh Dai District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
12424 March 202052MaleBrazilHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedRelated to Bar Buddha cluster[468]
12522FemaleSouth AfricaCan Gio District Medical CentreNoNoDischarged
12628MaleCan Gio District Medical CentreNoNoDischarged
12723VietnamCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischarged
12820HanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
12920NoYesDischarged
13030NoYesDischarged
13123NoYesDischarged
13225FemaleNoYesDischarged
13366Lai ChauNoNoDischargedInfected fromBach Mai Hospital
13410MaleThanh HoaNoYesDischarged
13525 March 202027FemaleVietnamDa NangDa Nang HospitalNoYesDischarged[468]
136-14021-363 males, 2 femalesVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYes5Discharged
14129MaleVietnamNoNoDischargedDoctor infected by his patients
14226 March 202026MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
14358FemaleSouth AfricaCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
14422MaleVietnamTra VinhTra Vinh Tuberculosis and Lung Disease HospitalNoYesDischarged
14534MaleVietnamCan ThoCan Tho Tuberculosis and Lung Disease HospitalNoYesDischarged
14617FemaleVietnamHa TinhCau Treo General HospitalNoYesDischarged
14719MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
14858FranceNoYesDischarged
14940MaleVietnamQuang Ninh2nd Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
15055MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
15145FemaleBrazilCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedClose contact with case 124
15227FemaleVietnamCan Gio District Medical CentreNoNoDischargedSister of case 127
15360FemaleVietnamCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
15427 March 202023FemaleVietnamCan ThoCan Tho Tuberculosis and Lung Disease HospitalNoYesDischarged
155-156211 male, 1 femaleVietnamBac LieuBac Lieu General HospitalNoYes2Discharged
15731FemaleUnited KingdomHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedRelated to Bar Buddha cluster
15845MaleBrazilNoNoDischarged
15933MaleBrazilCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
16030FemaleVietnamNoYesDischarged
16188FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedInfected fromBach Mai Hospital
16263FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedDaughter-in-law of case 161
16343FemaleVietnamHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedGrand daughter of case 161
164-16628 March 202023-582 males, 1 femaleVietnamNinh BinhNinh Binh General HospitalNoYes3Discharged
16720FemaleDenmarkHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
16849FemalesVietnamHa NamHa Nam General HospitalNoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
16949FemalesVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischarged
17027MaleVietnamNinh BinhKim Son District General HospitalNoNoDischargedRelated toBach Mai Hospital cluster
17119FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
17235FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedDaughter-in-law of case 133
17343FemaleVietnamNoYesDischarged
17457FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
175-17729 March 202038-571 male, 2 femalesVietnamHanoiNoNo3Discharged
17844FemaleVietnamThai NguyenNoNoDischarged
17962MaleVietnamThanh HoaHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
180-18219-331 male, 2 femalesVietnamNinh BinhNinh Binh General HospitalNoYes3Discharged
18343FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedClose contact with case 148
18442FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
18538MaleVietnamNoNoDischargedInfected fromBach Mai Hospital
18652FemaleFranceNoYesDischargedWife of case 76
18730MaleUnited StatesNoYesDischarged
18844FemaleVietnamHa NamHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
189-19630 March 202021-498 femalesVietnamHanoiNoNo8Discharged
19741MaleVietnamNoNoDischargedInfected fromBach Mai Hospital
198-20223-615 femalesVietnamNoNo5DischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
20335FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
20431 March 202010MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh City Children's HospitalNoYesDischarged
20541MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
20648MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedDriver of cases 124 and 151
20749MaleBrazilNoNoDischargedHusband of case 151 and colleague of case 124
2081 April 202038FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
20955FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedRelated to case 163
21026FemaleVietnamHa TinhCau Treo General HospitalNoYesDischarged
21123FemaleVietnamNinh BinhNinh Binh General HospitalNoYesDischarged
21235FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
21340FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedRelated toBach Mai Hospital cluster
214-21531-451 male, 1 femaleVietnamNoNo2DischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
216-21825-483 femalesVietnamNoYes3Discharged
2192 April 202059FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedRelated to case 133 and infected fromBach Mai Hospital
220-22220-281 male, 2 femalesVietnamNoYes3Discharged
22329FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
22439MaleBrazilHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoNoDischargedRelated to case 158
225-22622-352 malesVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYes2Discharged
22731MaleVietnamNoNoDischargedSon of case 209
2283 April 202029MaleVietnamNinh BinhNinh Binh General HospitalNoYesDischarged
22930FemaleVietnamNho Quan District General HospitalNoYesDischarged
23028FemaleVietnamNinh Binh General HospitalNoYesDischarged
23157FemaleVietnamHa NamHa Nam General HospitalNoNoDischargedWorking atBach Mai Hospital
232-23324-671 male, 1 femaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYes2Discharged
23469FemaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCan Gio District Medical CentreNoYesDischarged
235-23625-261 male, 1 femaleUnited KingdomCu Chi Field HospitalNoNo2DischargedRelated to Bar Buddha cluster
23764MaleSwedenHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
2384 April 202017FemaleVietnamHa TinhCau Treo General HospitalNoYesDischargedClose contact with case 210
23971MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoNoDischargedInfected fromBach Mai Hospital
24029FemaleVietnamNinh BinhNinh Binh General HospitalNoYesDischargedWorking inBangkok,Thailand and related to case 166
2415 April 202020MaleVietnamBac LieuBac Lieu General HospitalNoYesDischarged
2426 April 202034FemaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
24347MaleVietnamNoNoDischargedInfected inBach Mai Hospital
244-24521-442 femalesVietnamNoYes2DischargedPassengers on flight SU290
2467 April 202033MaleVietnamNoYesDischarged
24728MaleVietnamDong NaiDong Nai Lung HospitalNoNoDischargedClose contact with cases 124 and 151
24820MaleVietnamHo Chi Minh CityCu Chi Field HospitalNoYesDischarged
24955MaleVietnamHanoiHanoi National Hospital of Tropical Diseases (2nd Branch)NoYesDischarged
2508 April 202050FemaleVietnamNoNoDischargedNeighbour of case 243


See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toCOVID-19 pandemic in Vietnam.

References

[edit]
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  344. ^"CH Czech nhượng lại 500.000 liều vắc xin COVID-19 cho Việt Nam". Tuổi Trẻ. 9 August 2021. Retrieved12 August 2021.
  345. ^"Pháp tuyên bố chia sẻ 670.000 liều vaccine cho Việt Nam".VnExpress. 12 August 2021. Retrieved12 August 2021.
  346. ^"Germany's Foreign Ministry appreciates Vietnam's support in COVID-19 fight".Báo Nhân Dân. 15 April 2020. Retrieved21 May 2020.
  347. ^"Việt Nam tiếp nhận 2,6 triệu liều vaccine ngừa COVID-19 từ Chính phủ Đức" (in Vietnamese). Vietnam Ministry of Health. 27 September 2021. Retrieved27 September 2021.
  348. ^"Hungary tặng Việt Nam 100.000 liều vaccine Astra Zeneca".Vietnam Television. 12 August 2021. Retrieved12 August 2021.
  349. ^Hương Giang (4 May 2020)."PM Phuc, Japanese PM Abe discuss COVID-19, bilateral ties over phone call".Vietnam Government Online Newspaper. Retrieved21 May 2020.
  350. ^N.Dung (13 July 2020)."Nhật Bản hỗ trợ thêm 1 triệu liều vắc-xin, chuyển đến TP HCM".Người Lao Động. Retrieved12 August 2020.
  351. ^Viết Tuân (17 August 2020)."Ba Lan tặng Việt Nam hơn 500.000 liều vaccine".VnExpress. Retrieved17 August 2020.
  352. ^"Tiếp nhận 300.000 liều vắc xin Romania tặng Việt Nam".
  353. ^Ngoc Van (21 April 2020)."VN, Russia vow to facilitate trade exchange amid COVID-19 pandemic".Vietnam Government Online Newspaper. Retrieved21 May 2020.
  354. ^Quang Minh (3 April 2020)."VN controls COVID-19 pandemic well, says Korean President Moon".Vietnam Government Online Newspaper. Retrieved21 May 2020.
  355. ^"Chuyến hàng viện trợ khẩn cấp trang thiết bị y tế của Thụy Sỹ dành cho Việt Nam rời sân bay Zurich".Báo Thế giới và Việt Nam. 12 August 2021.
  356. ^Jennifer Tran (15 April 2020)."British Ambassador thanks Vietnam for its support to repatriate UK citizens".Vietnam Times. Retrieved21 May 2020.
  357. ^"Việt Nam nhận 415.000 liều vaccine COVID-19 do Chính phủ Anh trao tặng". Vietnam Ministry of Health. 3 August 2021. Retrieved12 August 2021.
  358. ^Đại sứ Mỹ Daniel Kritenbrink: "Ấn tượng với mức độ hợp tác và minh bạch của chính phủ VN" [US Ambassador Daniel Kritenbrink: "Impressed with the level of cooperation and transparency of the Vietnamese government"](video) (07:14) (in Vietnamese). PhoBolsaTV. 19 February 2020. Retrieved9 March 2020 – via YouTube.
  359. ^Đăng, Nhật (22 February 2020)."Mỹ tin Việt Nam sẽ chống COVID-19 hiệu quả, sắp cử đoàn sang hợp tác" [The US believes that Vietnam will fight COVID-19 effectively, about to send a delegation to co-operate].Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese).Archived from the original on 15 March 2020. Retrieved9 March 2020.
  360. ^Vu, Khanh; Nguyen, Phuong; Pearson, James (30 April 2020)."After aggressive mass testing, Vietnam says it contains coronavirus outbreak".Reuters.
  361. ^"Việt Nam có ca COVID-19 đầu tiên tử vong, vì nhồi máu cơ tim trên nền bệnh lý nặng".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 31 July 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  362. ^"Bệnh nhân 437 tử vong vì sốc nhiễm trùng trên nền bệnh lý nặng và mắc COVID-19".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 1 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  363. ^"Bệnh nhân 499 tử vong do ung thư máu không đáp ứng hoá chất, viêm phổi nặng và COVID-19".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 1 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  364. ^"Bệnh nhân 524 và 475 tử vong vì nền bệnh lý nặng và mắc COVID-19".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 2 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  365. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 6 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 2 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  366. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 7 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 4 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  367. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 8 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 4 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  368. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 9 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 6 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  369. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 10 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 6 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  370. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 11 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 9 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  371. ^"Hai bệnh nhân nữ 33, 47 tuổi không qua khỏi, Việt Nam có 13 ca COVID-19 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 10 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  372. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID thứ 14 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 10 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  373. ^"BN 522 tử vong vì viêm phổi nặng do COVID-19, biến chứng suy hô hấp nặng, tắc động mạch phổi trên bệnh nhân ung thư thận".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 10 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  374. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 tử vong ở tuổi 37".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 11 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  375. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 17 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 12 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  376. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 18 tử vong ở tuổi 52".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 13 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  377. ^"Thêm 2 bệnh nhân COVID-19 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 13 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  378. ^"Trường hợp mắc COVID-19 tử vong thứ 21 vì bệnh lý nền nặng".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 14 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  379. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 22 tử vong".Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese). 15 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  380. ^"Trường hợp mắc COVID-19 thứ 23 tử vong vì bệnh lý nền nặng".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 15 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  381. ^"Trường hợp mắc COVID-19 thứ 24 tử vong vì bệnh lý nền nặng".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 16 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  382. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 25 tử vong ở tuổi 51".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 18 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  383. ^"Bệnh nhân 666 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 22 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  384. ^"Bệnh nhân 577 - ca thứ 27 tại Việt Nam tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 23 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  385. ^"Trường hợp mắc COVID-19 thứ 28 tử vong là bệnh nhân 758".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 26 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  386. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 29 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 26 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  387. ^"Bệnh nhân 696 tử vong lúc nửa đêm ở tuổi 51".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 27 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  388. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 tử vong ở tuổi 28".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 29 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  389. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 2 tử vong trong ngày là người phụ nữ 67 tuổi".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 29 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  390. ^"Trường hợp mắc COVID-19 thứ 33 tử vong vì bệnh lý nền nặng là bệnh nhân 742".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 31 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  391. ^"Bệnh nhân 1040 tử vong trước khi có kết quả dương tính SARS-CoV-2".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 29 August 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  392. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 35 tử vong".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 3 September 2020. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  393. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 89 tuổi tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 15 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  394. ^"Nam bệnh nhân 34 tuổi tử vong, ca tử vong thứ 37 liên quan COVID-19".Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese). 17 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  395. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 trên nền ung thư gan tử vong, ca tử vong thứ 38".Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese). 20 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  396. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 39 liên quan tới COVID-19 tại Việt Nam có nhiều bệnh nền".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 20 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  397. ^"Bộ Y tế chính thức công bố ca tử vong 40 có liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 21 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  398. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 41 tử vong là cụ bà 89 tuổi có nhiều bệnh lý nền nặng".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 21 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  399. ^"Bệnh nhân COVID-19 thứ 42 tử vong là cụ bà 72 tuổi".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 23 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  400. ^"Ca tử vong liên quan đến COVID-19 thứ 43 tại Việt Nam là bệnh nhân 50 tuổi có tiền sử xơ gan".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 24 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  401. ^"Bộ Y tế công bố ca tử vong thứ 44 là nữ bệnh nhân 38 tuổi ở Bắc Giang".Vietnam MOH (in Vietnamese). 24 May 2021. Retrieved24 May 2021.
  402. ^"Ca bệnh thứ 45 tử vong liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 26 May 2021. Retrieved26 May 2021.
  403. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 46 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 27 May 2021. Retrieved27 May 2021.
  404. ^"Nữ bệnh nhân 22 tuổi là ca tử vong thứ 47 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 28 May 2021. Retrieved28 May 2021.
  405. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 48 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 1 June 2021. Retrieved1 June 2021.
  406. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 49 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 2 June 2021. Retrieved2 June 2021.
  407. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 50 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 4 June 2021. Retrieved4 June 2021.
  408. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 thứ 51 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 4 June 2021. Retrieved4 June 2021.
  409. ^"Bệnh nhân ung thư 35 tuổi mắc Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 5 June 2021. Retrieved5 June 2021.
  410. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 53 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 5 June 2021. Retrieved5 June 2021.
  411. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 54 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 8 June 2021. Retrieved8 June 2021.
  412. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 thứ 55 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 8 June 2021. Retrieved8 June 2021.
  413. ^"Hai bệnh nhân ung thư mắc Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 11 June 2021. Retrieved11 June 2021.
  414. ^"Thêm bệnh nhân ung thư mắc Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 12 June 2021. Retrieved12 June 2021.
  415. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 59 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 13 June 2021. Retrieved13 June 2021.
  416. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 60, 61 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 14 June 2021. Retrieved14 June 2021.
  417. ^"Ca tử vong thứ 62 liên quan đến COVID-19 tại Việt Nam".VTV (in Vietnamese). 18 June 2021. Retrieved18 June 2021.
  418. ^"Thêm 2 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 19 June 2021. Retrieved19 June 2021.
  419. ^"Thêm 2 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 20 June 2021. Retrieved20 June 2021.
  420. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 thứ 67 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 21 June 2021. Retrieved21 June 2021.
  421. ^"Thêm hai bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 21 June 2021. Retrieved21 June 2021.
  422. ^"Thêm 1 ca tử vong liên quan đến COVID-19".VTV (in Vietnamese). 23 June 2021. Retrieved23 June 2021.
  423. ^"Hai bệnh nhân Covid hơn 80 tuổi ở Bắc Giang tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 24 June 2021. Retrieved24 June 2021.
  424. ^"Thêm hai bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 25 June 2021. Retrieved25 June 2021.
  425. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 thứ 75 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 27 June 2021. Retrieved27 June 2021.
  426. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong sau một ngày nhập viện".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 27 June 2021. Retrieved27 June 2021.
  427. ^"Hai bệnh nhân Covid-19 ở TP HCM tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 29 June 2021. Retrieved29 June 2021.
  428. ^"Thêm 2 bệnh nhân COVID-19 tại TP. Hồ Chí Minh, Bắc Giang tử vong".VTV (in Vietnamese). 29 June 2021. Retrieved30 June 2021.
  429. ^"TP. Hồ Chí Minh: Thêm 1 người ở quận Bình Tân tử vong do COVID-19".VTV (in Vietnamese). 30 June 2021. Retrieved30 June 2021.
  430. ^"Ba bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 2 July 2021. Retrieved2 July 2021.
  431. ^"Hai bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 4 July 2021. Retrieved4 July 2021.
  432. ^"Bốn bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 5 July 2021. Retrieved5 July 2021.
  433. ^"Bệnh nhân Covid-19 đầu tiên ở Nghệ An tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 5 July 2021. Retrieved5 July 2021.
  434. ^"4 nữ bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 6 July 2021. Retrieved6 July 2021.
  435. ^"Thêm 3 bệnh nhân tử vong do COVID-19 tại TP. Hồ Chí Minh, Đồng Tháp".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 6 July 2021. Retrieved6 July 2021.
  436. ^"5 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 7 July 2021. Retrieved7 July 2021.
  437. ^"Thêm ba bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 8 July 2021. Retrieved8 July 2021.
  438. ^"5 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 9 July 2021. Retrieved9 July 2021.
  439. ^"Hai bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 10 July 2021. Retrieved10 July 2021.
  440. ^"7 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 11 July 2021. Retrieved11 July 2021.
  441. ^"Thêm 4 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 12 July 2021. Retrieved12 July 2021.
  442. ^"Thêm 2 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VTV (in Vietnamese). 12 July 2021. Retrieved12 July 2021.
  443. ^"Thêm 5 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 13 July 2021. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  444. ^"Thêm 2 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong tại An Giang, TP HCM".VTV (in Vietnamese). 13 July 2021. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  445. ^"Thêm 6 bệnh nhân Covid-19 tử vong".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 14 July 2021. Retrieved14 July 2021.
  446. ^"Bệnh nhân 418 tử vong sau khi có kết quả xét nghiệm 4 lần âm tính với SARS-CoV-2".Thư viện pháp luật (in Vietnamese). 18 August 2020. Retrieved31 May 2021.
  447. ^"Bệnh nhân 453 tử vong sau 3 lần âm tính SARS-CoV-2".Vietnam Ministry of Health (in Vietnamese). 26 August 2020. Retrieved31 May 2021.
  448. ^"Bệnh nhân 764 tử vong sau 3 lần âm tính SARS-CoV-2".Vietnam Ministry of Health (in Vietnamese). 2 September 2020. Retrieved31 May 2021.
  449. ^"Hà Nội ghi nhận ca nhiễm Covid-19 mới là người Nhật Bản".Nhân Dân (in Vietnamese). 15 February 2021. Retrieved31 May 2021.
  450. ^"Một bệnh nhân tử vong trên đường đi cấp cứu, dương tính với SARS-CoV-2".VTV (in Vietnamese). 8 June 2021. Retrieved8 June 2021.
  451. ^"Phú Yên ghi nhận thêm 50 ca dương tính SARS-CoV-2, một bệnh nhân tử vong".VTV (in Vietnamese). 3 July 2021. Retrieved3 July 2021.
  452. ^"Bị can ở trại giam Chí Hòa tử vong, nhiễm Covid-19".VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 6 July 2021. Retrieved6 July 2021.
  453. ^"Phú Yên thông tin về 3 bệnh nhân Covid-19 vừa tử vong".Vietnamnet (in Vietnamese). 13 July 2021. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  454. ^"Phó Hiệu trưởng trường THPT ở Tiền Giang tử vong do Covid-19".Vietnamnet (in Vietnamese). 13 July 2021. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  455. ^"Phú Yên thêm 12 người nhiễm SARS-CoV-2 và 1 bệnh nhân tử vong".Vietnamnet (in Vietnamese). 13 July 2021. Retrieved13 July 2021.
  456. ^abcdefghijk"COVID-19 Pandemic Situation in Vietnam".Vietnam Centers for Disease Control (in Vietnamese). 14 April 2020.Archived from the original on 14 April 2020. Retrieved14 April 2020.
  457. ^"Bệnh Covid-19 xuất hiện ở Hà Nội" [Covid-19 disease appeared in Hanoi].VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 6 March 2020.Archived from the original on 7 March 2020. Retrieved7 March 2020.
  458. ^"Vietnam confirms 17th Covid-19 patient".VnExpress. 7 March 2020.Archived from the original on 7 March 2020. Retrieved7 March 2020.
  459. ^Nga, Lê (7 March 2020)."Ca nhiễm nCoV thứ 18 ở Việt Nam" [The 18th case of nCoV in Vietnam].VnExpress (in Vietnamese).Archived from the original on 7 March 2020. Retrieved7 March 2020.
  460. ^Huệ, Bích; Anh, Phương; Quyên, Hà (8 March 2020)."9 người nước ngoài mắc Covid-19 cùng chuyến bay với bệnh nhân thứ 17" [9 foreigners with Covid-19 on the same flight as 17th patient].Zing.vn (in Vietnamese). Retrieved9 March 2020.
  461. ^Thạnh, Võ; Thành, Đắc (11 March 2020)."Ba bệnh nhân Covid-19 ở Huế sức khỏe ổn định" [Three Covid-19 patients in Huế were in stable condition].VnExpress (in Vietnamese).Archived from the original on 15 March 2020. Retrieved11 March 2020.
  462. ^Xuân, Kim (10 March 2020)."Việt Nam phát hiện trường hợp nhiễm COVID-19 thứ 32" [Vietnam detected the 32nd COVID-19 infection].VTV (in Vietnamese).Archived from the original on 10 March 2020. Retrieved10 March 2020.
  463. ^"Ca nhiễm Covid-19 thứ 33 cùng trên chuyến bay VN0054 với bệnh nhân 17" [33rd Covid-19 case on flight VN0054 with patient 17].Voice of Vietnam (in Vietnamese). 10 March 2020. Retrieved10 March 2020.
  464. ^Anh, Lan (11 March 2020)."Đang chờ kết quả xét nghiệm lần 4 của bệnh nhân nghi là ca thứ 39" [Waiting for the 4th test results of patients suspected to be the 39th case].Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese).Archived from the original on 11 March 2020. Retrieved11 March 2020.
  465. ^abcdefghi"TP HCM thêm 3 ca dương tính nCoV" [3 more nCoV cases in Ho Chi Minh City].VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 23 March 2020. Retrieved23 March 2020.
  466. ^"Lãnh đạo tỉnh Đồng Tháp họp khẩn trong đêm khi có 4 ca dương tính với COVID-19 về từ Anh" [4 COVID-19 cases in Dong Thap Province].Tuổi Trẻ (in Vietnamese). 22 March 2020. Retrieved23 March 2020.
  467. ^"BV Chợ Rẫy huy động toàn lực để cứu chữa cho phi công người Anh". Tuổi Trẻ. Retrieved22 May 2020.
  468. ^ab"Thêm 11 ca dương tính nCoV" [More 11 nCoV cases in].VnExpress (in Vietnamese). 24 March 2020. Retrieved24 March 2020.

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 This article incorporates text from afree content work. Licensed under CC BY 4.0. Text taken from Emerging COVID-19 success story: Vietnam's commitment to containment, Our World in Data.

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