News On Japan

Coronavirus hits Japanese stores and restaurants

Mar 10 (Nikkei) - A growing number of Japanese stores and restaurants are having to shut their doors temporarily as employees become infected with the new coronavirus.

McDonald's Japan, Seven-Eleven Japan and other consumer-focused companies are responding quickly, closing virus-hit outlets and disinfecting them once infections are confirmed.

Retailers and restaurants depend on a wide range of people for staffing, from housewives to students. Because it is difficult to monitor what all their employees are doing in their off hours, spotting and coping with infections quickly is essential.

McDonald's Japan confirmed on March 3 that a female employee at its Kyoto Kisshoin outlet in the city of Kyoto was infected with the coronavirus. After the restaurant was contacted by the municipal government the same day, the company closed the outlet by 9 p.m. to disinfect it.

The employee had attended a live event in Osaka that took place on Feb. 15 and 16 and was the source of many coronavirus infections. She interacted with customers for three days after that.

In response, McDonald's Japan again directed all its outlets to take steps to prevent the spread of the disease and carefully monitor employees' health. The fast food chain has also closed children's play areas at all its restaurants since March 5.

Meanwhile, it emerged on March 7 that a part-time worker at Seven-Eleven Japan's Yamanashi Kamiishimori outlet in the city of Yamanashi, some 115 km west of Tokyo, was infected with the coronavirus. The outlet has been closed since the early-morning hours of March 8.

Hamazushi, a sushi restaurant chain, also learned on March 7 that an employee at its Ibaraki Shinwacho outlet in Ibaraki, Osaka Prefecture, had become infected. The outlet was closed the same day.

The Hamazushi worker attended live events in Osaka between Feb. 15 and 23 but did not show symptoms. The worker mentioned attending the live events following media reports of coronavirus infections at music venues and voluntarily stayed home. The employee was later screened at a public health center and tested positive for the virus.

While the government decides when a restaurant can reopen in cases of food poisoning, a different approach is taken in the case of an infectious disease, according to the Foodservice Industry Research Institute.

At the moment, operators sterilize affected outlets at their own discretion. After disinfection, operators decide when to reopen, assessing the risk of secondary infection, such as close contract between employees, taking necessary preventive measures, the institute said.

News On Japan
POPULAR NEWS

Lime, the world’s largest electric scooter-sharing service, has announced a collaboration with a major insurance company to pursue a full-scale entry into the Japanese market.

A man was arrested in Higashi-Osaka for allegedly abducting three girls, one of whom has died, with around 80 empty medicine shells discovered in his home.

Prince Hisahito, the eldest son of Japan's Crown Prince and Crown Princess Akishino, turned 18 on September 6, officially becoming an adult member of the Imperial family.

The Ariake Urban Sports Park, which will open next month at the former Tokyo Olympic skateboarding site, was previewed Thursday ahead of its official opening on October 12.

The total cash earnings received by workers in Japan increased by 3.6% in July compared to last year, marking the second consecutive month of positive growth in real wages after adjusting for inflation.

MEDIA CHANNELS
         

MORE Society NEWS

Violinist Taro Hakase (53) announced on Friday that he has been diagnosed with Ramsay Hunt syndrome, a condition that causes facial paralysis.

Wakayama City has decided to tackle the stray dog issue in Japan's Amalfi with a firm approach, setting up early morning patrols and dog traps.

An ancient multiplication table, believed to be the oldest in Japan, has been discovered at the ruins of Fujiwara Palace in Nara Prefecture.

The Emperor of Japan carried out the annual rice harvest on Wednesday afternoon in the paddy fields of Tokyo's Imperial Palace, wearing rubber boots and holding a sickle, carefully harvesting the ripened rice stalks one by one with practiced hands.

Approximately 860 kilograms of Kujo negi, a traditional Kyoto vegetable, have been stolen from the fields of Kuse, Kyoto Prefecture, as police investigate a string of leek thefts in the surrounding area.

A man experienced numbness Monday after being bitten on his big toe by a Redback spider that had been hiding in his sandal left on the balcony of his apartment in a residential area of Osaka Prefecture.

The former wife of the wealthy businessman known as the 'Don Juan of Kishu,' who is accused of murdering him, has been sentenced to three years and six months in prison for defrauding another man out of a large sum of money.

Rescuers were unable to save an elderly couple after a local fisherman reported seeing a car plunge into the sea off Nagoya's Minato-ku on Sunday.