From a tiny N.L. outport to a sprawling Vietnamese city, here's how this woman is enduring COVID - Action News
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NLFar From Home

From a tiny N.L. outport to a sprawling Vietnamese city, here's how this woman is enduring COVID

In the second segment of our Far From Home series, Sabrina Pinksen shares what it's like to live in a densely populated Southeast Asian country that has managed to keep COVID-19 relatively at bay.

Sabrina Pinksen says Vietnam's proactive measures have kept it largely COVID-free

Sabrina Pinksen, who's originally from the small town of Wild Cove, N.L., moved to Hanoi in late 2017. (CBC)

A woman from a small town near the Baie Verte Peninsula says life in Vietnam is largely COVID-free.

Sabrina Pinksen, who is originally from Wild Cove, lived in South Korea before moving to Hanoi at the end of 2017 a city of about 10 million people, in a country of 90 million that's geographicallysmaller than Newfoundland and Labrador, she notes.

Despite the vast difference in population, both of Pinksen's homes have one thing in common: their low infection rates.

"I don't even think about COVID, going out into my daily life," Pinksensaid.

"It's almost like it wasn't real."

As of Wednesday, Vietnam has had1,351casesand 35 deathssince the pandemic began, according to the World Health Organization. That includes a handful of positive cases this week and thefirst locally transmitted case in nearly three months.

Even with Hanoi's high population density, says Pinksen, Vietnam has largely been able to keep its COVID-19 numbers low by focusing on community transmission and contact tracing. (Submitted by Sabrina Pinksen)

Pinksen credits Vietnam's low COVID-19 caseloadto its swift response.

"We have a very porous border with China.... They closed the borders almost immediately [at the start of the pandemic]," Pinksen said, noting that Vietnam went into a countrywide lockdown for three weeks in April.

She says the country has been extremely proactive in its handling of the pandemic.

"They really focused on community transmission and contact tracing, and stuff like that. There were tests available for anyone who thought they might need one," she said.

"This is a massive tourist destination. So everyone that was still coming into the country they were brought into government quarantine camps that were erected all around the country. And that went on for quite a while."

Vietnam shares its northern border with China. (CBC)

A second wave struck in July, in the city of Da Nang, in the central part of Vietnam and Pinksen happened to be there on vacation.

"I think there were 50,000 people [from Hanoi] that were in Da Nang during that outbreak, and everyone that came back to Hanoi, 50,000 of them, they had us tested in a matter of a couple of weeks," she said.

When it comes to daily life in Hanoi, Pinksen said,it's like COVID-19 doesn't exist.

"This is a mask-wearing country anyway. So even before COVID, a lot of people would wearmasks," she said.

Living away when a pandemic strikes

When the pandemic struck, Pinksenrecalls feeling uneasy.

"It was scary being a foreigner in a country that's not your own and not really knowing what is going on," she said.

"[But] it never really got that bad here during the first wave."

WATCH: See the second episode of our Far From Homeseries:

Far From Home - Vietnam

4 years ago
Duration 6:04
In the second segment of CBC N.L.'s "Far From Home" series, Sabrina Pinksen speaks with the CBC's Jen White about what it's like to live in a densely-populated country that has managed to keep COVID-19 at bay.

Pinkseninitially tried to get back to Newfoundland and Labrador, but her plansdidn't pan out. She called the Canadian Embassy, which put her in touch with a travel agency.

"[The travel agent] said, 'Well, we're going into lockdown tonight. So it's going to be a lot more difficult to leave. And there's a flight leaving tomorrow, but it's full. Give me your contact information, and I'll put you on a list,'" she recalled.

"But my passport was at Immigration waiting for a visa extension, so I couldn't get on a plane [at the time] if I wanted to. So I accepted that I wasn't going anywhere."

Teaching English online

The pandemic has had a positive effect on her work life.

Pinksen is employedas an online ESL teacher for a Chinese company. Since people are spending more time at home, her skills are more in demand.

"Normally, I can work [from] about 3 p.m. until 8 p.m. during Monday to Friday. But [now] I could teach 12 hours a day if I wanted to," she said.

"Meanwhile, all of my friends here were out of work, so I was the only one with a steady job, which is strange."

Pinksen, an artist, has been painting and drawing portraits for the last five years. She painted this portrait of a security guard at a local bank. (Submitted by Sabrina Pinksen)

Grateful for N.L.'s low numbers

Pinksen said she had hoped to be home for the holidays, but that's not going to happen this year.

"I'd like to return in the spring. But if the situation is the same in the rest of Canada, I don't know why I would trade in the freedom that I have right now to come home," she said.

Sabrina Pinksen (left) said she's missing her family, especially her father (middle) and her grandmother (right). (Submitted by Sabrina Pinksen)

Pinksen said she will see what the situation is like in six months, but, in the meantime, she's dealing with homesickness.

"[It's been about] 15 months since I've been home, and I usually come home every year. So I definitely missed it this summer," she said.

"I speak to my parents usually once a week, and I get concerned my dad has COPD, and my nan is 92, so I definitely get concerned. But I'm very grateful that everything in Newfoundland is OK right now."

Far From Homeis an ongoing series about Newfoundlanders and Labradorians who areliving in other parts of the world during the COVID-19 pandemic.


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