COVID-19 pandemic in Indonesia | |
---|---|
Disease | COVID-19 |
Virus strain | SARS-CoV-2 |
Location | Indonesia |
First outbreak | Wuhan, Hubei, China |
Index case | Kemang, Jakarta |
Arrival date | 2 March 2020 (4 years, 4 months, 3 weeks and 1 day) |
Confirmed cases | 6,812,127[1] |
Active cases | 8,245[1] |
Suspected cases‡ | 1,624[1] |
Recovered | 6,642,003[1] |
Deaths | 161,879[1] |
Fatality rate | 2.38% |
Territories | 510 regencies and cities in 34 provinces[1] |
Vaccinations | |
Government website | |
National: covid19 covid19 covid19 Local: see cases by province | |
‡Suspected cases have not been confirmed by laboratory tests as being due to this strain, although some other strains may have been ruled out. |
The COVID-19 pandemic in Indonesia is part of the worldwide pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). It was confirmed to have spread to Indonesia on 2 March 2020, after a dance instructor and her mother tested positive for the virus. Both were infected from a Japanese national.[3][4]
By 9 April 2020, the pandemic had spread to all 34 provinces in the country at that time. Jakarta, West Java, and Central Java are the worst-hit provinces, together accounting more than half of the national total cases. On 13 July 2020, the recoveries exceeded active cases for the first time.[5]
As of 3 July 2023, Indonesia has reported 6,812,127 cases, the second highest in Southeast Asia, behind Vietnam. With 161,879 deaths, Indonesia ranks second in Asia and ninth in the world.[6] Review of data, however, indicated that the number of deaths may be much higher than what has been reported as those who died with acute COVID-19 symptoms but had not been confirmed or tested were not counted in the official death figure.[7]
Indonesia has tested 76,062,770 people against its 270 million population so far, or around 281,501 people per million.[8] The World Health Organization urged the nation to perform more tests, especially on suspected patients.[9]
Instead of implementing a nationwide lockdown, the government applied "Large-Scale Social Restrictions" (Indonesian: Pembatasan Sosial Berskala Besar, abbreviated as PSBB), which was later modified into the "Community Activities Restrictions Enforcement" (Indonesian: Pemberlakuan Pembatasan Kegiatan Masyarakat, abbreviated as PPKM).[10] On 30 December 2022, the restrictions were lifted for all regions in Indonesia since satisfied population immunity exceeded the expectation, although it did not lift the pandemic status.[11][12][13]
On 13 January 2021, President Joko Widodo was vaccinated at the presidential palace, officially kicking off Indonesia's vaccination program.[14] As of 5 February 2023 at 18:00 WIB (UTC+7), 204,266,655 people had received the first dose of the vaccine and 175,131,893 people had been fully vaccinated; 69,597,474 of them had been inoculated with the booster or the third dose.[15]
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