News On Japan

Nobel winner Yamanaka frets over Japan's lax coronavirus fight

Apr 20 (Nikkei) - Shinya Yamanaka couldn't sit still as he considered the possibility of a major coronavirus outbreak in Japan.

To the 57-year-old cellular biologist, it looked as if Tokyo was a month or so behind New York, which was being ravaged by the deadly respiratory disease. People in the Japanese capital appeared to treat the coronavirus epidemic as something with little bearing on their lives.

Fearing a potential catastrophe, Yamanaka, who won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 2012, rushed to create a simple website in March to provide information to the public about the deadly virus -- what it is, how it spreads, how it can be contained, how it might be cured. The website, updated daily, offers readers statistics, news reports and academic journal articles relevant to the virus that causes COVID-19.

"I really hope that Japan will be spared a major outbreak, but the chances of one happening are actually growing," Yamanaka said in an interview via Zoom.

"I'm especially worried about Tokyo and Osaka," said the professor at Kyoto University, who also serves as director of the university's stem cell research institute. He cites the rising number of cases in those cities despite limited testing.

Yamanaka is not a virologist but said the more he learned about the novel coronavirus the more agitated he became. "I couldn't help doing something," he said. Yamanaka decided to share his scientific knowledge and experience through a new blog.

He covers topics ranging from social distancing to drug and vaccine development. In one recent post, he highlighted Google data to show how Tokyo and Osaka are engaged in less social distancing than big Western cities. Another entry deals with the efficacy of the Bacille Calmette-Guerin, or BCG, vaccine, which has been used against tuberculosis in Japan since the mid-20th century, in preventing respiratory infections.

One of Yamanaka's goals is to correct public misconceptions about the coronavirus. When, for example, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Feb. 28 that "the next one-to-two weeks will be key" after requesting a nationwide school closure, many people in Japan took that to mean that life would return to normal after a couple of weeks. People's eagerness to put the epidemic behind them contributed to a spike in infections in late March.

The sudden rise in infections prompted Abe to put heavier restrictions in place. He declared a state of emergency on April 7, asking people to reduce their contact with others by 70% to 80%. To keep the outbreak under control, epidemiologists say such restrictions will have to be maintained until a cure is found.

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