Top Story Replay: Tokyo 2020 Corona Hot Spot Warnings

(ATR) The Olympic Village is one of the high risks at the Tokyo Olympics says an epidemiologist with a background in sport.

Guardar

(ATR) The Olympic Village and a number of sports will be high risks to manage at the Tokyo Olympics says an epidemiologist with a background in sport.

Dr. Zachary Binney, a professor at Oxford College of Emory University spoke to Around the Rings about the dangers he sees for next year’s Olympics in Tokyo. Binney has written extensively about when U.S. professional sports leagues should consider cancelling their seasons.

The biggest challenge Binney said is the intrinsic difficulty in predicting the behavior of the Covid-19 virus.

"You can’t predict what this virus could do in two months," Binney said.

For the Olympics, Binney noted "it’s hard to draw a red-line for a go/no-go decision."

"The Olympics are a uniquely difficult and dangerous event to pull off," he told ATR.

"It depends on the time between cases, it depends on if you can connect the cases. If I saw five or six cases in the Olympic Village that spread in quick succession within the Olympic Village, that would alarm me very much.

"You need to do testing every day or at worst, every other day. Waiting for symptomatic cases to show up it’s already too late."

Merely having an Olympic Village is worrisome to Binney.

"Everyone is going to be at high risk from living in the Olympic Village. That is not an area where people limit their social contacts.

"In my mind the damage is already done once you’re there. The focus needs to be on stopping the virus getting into the Village."

Binney suggested Olympic Village social distancing strategies that would appear to be common sense, albeit likely logistically impossible. Multiple dining halls or setting times when teams could eat might be among those impractical solutions he says.

Binney says sexual contact could be another way for Covid-19 to spread in the Olympic village during the Games.

Binney says if the virus is suppressed enough in Japan "for several months" before the Olympics next July a limited number of spectators could attend events. But he says spectators should only be Japanese or other individuals who have resided in the country for a period of time.

Binney said "it makes no sense" for the IOC to cancel the Olympics now because of how unpredictable the Covid-19 virus has been.

"You would still have to make a decision very close to the event. You can’t predict what this virus would do in two months.

"Japan has done a substantially better job [than the United States]. If they can keep it under control for the next eight months or so, they can have some confidence."

Sports such as wrestling and handball, Binney believes, pose the highest risk for the disease to spread from competitor to competitor. Wrestling, judo, karate, tae kwon do and boxing are among other sports on the Tokyo program which involved extensive contact between competitors.

"I’m more worried about sports that have a lot of people in close contact for extended periods of time indoors--it’s just like everything else," he said.

Binney says team leaders from the world’s 206 NOCs have a duty to stay abreast on the coronavirus ahead of the Games.

"They certainly shouldn’t rely on the IOC for their sole source of information," he advised, urging them to also consult with their national health organizations.

Edited by Ed Hula.

Guardar

Últimas Noticias

Utah’s Olympic venues an integral part of the equation as Salt Lake City seeks a Winter Games encore

Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation chief of sport development Luke Bodensteiner says there is a “real urgency to make this happen in 2030”. He discusses the mission of the non-profit organization, the legacy from the 2002 Winter Games and future ambitions.
Utah’s Olympic venues an integral part of the equation as Salt Lake City seeks a Winter Games encore

IOC president tells Olympic Movement “we will again have safe and secure Olympic Games” in Beijing

Thomas Bach, in an open letter on Friday, also thanked stakeholders for their “unprecedented” efforts to make Tokyo 2020 a success despite the pandemic.
IOC president tells Olympic Movement “we will again have safe and secure Olympic Games” in Beijing

Boxing’s place in the Olympics remains in peril as IOC still unhappy with the state of AIBA’s reform efforts

The IOC says issues concerning governance, finance, and refereeing and judging must be sorted out to its satisfaction. AIBA says it’s confident that will happen and the federation will be reinstated.
Boxing’s place in the Olympics remains in peril as IOC still unhappy with the state of AIBA’s reform efforts

IOC president details Olympic community efforts to get Afghans out of danger after Taliban return to power

Thomas Bach says the Afghanistan NOC remains under IOC recognition, noting that the current leadership was democratically elected in 2019. But he says the IOC will be monitoring what happens in the future. The story had been revealed on August 31 in an article by Miguel Hernandez in Around the Rings
IOC president details Olympic community efforts to get Afghans out of danger after Taliban return to power

North Korea suspended by IOC for failing to participate in Tokyo though its athletes could still take part in Beijing 2022

Playbooks for Beijing 2022 will ”most likely” be released in October, according to IOC President Thomas Bach.
North Korea suspended by IOC for failing to participate in Tokyo though its athletes could still take part in Beijing 2022