Saturday’s press conferences
The coronavirus blog brought readers all three press conference this morning, several of which clashed.
Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese was first up at 9.45am.
Then the prime minister and Victorian health authorities will be giving an update at the same time.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison will visit the Collaroy SLSC in New South Wales at 10am.
And Victorian Minister for Health Martin Foley and Chief Health Officer Professor Brett Sutton will give a coronavirus update at 10am in the St Kilda Botanical Gardens.
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Virus detected in sewage network at Auburn, NSW
By Michaela Whitbourn
NSW has recorded no local coronavirus cases for the 34th day in a row, but health authorities are asking residents in the Auburn sewage catchment to be on alert for symptoms.
“Fragments of the virus that causes COVID-19 have been detected at a sewage network site at Auburn. People who are recently recovered from COVID-19 can sometimes continue to shed virus fragments into the sewerage system for several weeks even after they are no longer infectious,” NSW Health said on Saturday.
“NSW Health is aware of previous recent COVID-19 cases, including in returned overseas travellers who live in this catchment but is asking everyone in the area to be vigilant in monitoring for symptoms, and if they appear get tested and isolate immediately until they receive a negative result.”
The state recorded one new overseas-acquired case of COVID-19 in the 24 hours to 8pm last night. The total number of confirmed cases in the state to date is 4,957.
Ignore ‘fervent’ anti-vaxxers, says Sutton
By Danielle Militec
Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton has asked people to ignore the anti-vaccination movement, saying vaccination is the ‘way out of this’.
As Australia prepares to roll out the first round of vaccinations on Monday, anti-vaccination protesters are set to converge on capital cities and regional towns across the nation.
Organisers say they are “against mandatory COVID vaccinations” but health experts have already rejected calls for mandatory vaccinations.
Professor Sutton said that having virtually no community transmission in Australia offered a false sense of security. However, he said without a vaccination roll out the alternative would be to have a formal hotel quarantine system in place forever.
“I think people will, over time, see that the vaccine is working and that it is protecting individuals and that we are not seeing issues of quality and safety and there will be an increase in confidence,” he said.
During the state’s morning COVID-19 update on Saturday, Professor Sutton also revealed a new study in Israel had shown ‘early signs’ of vaccines, especially Pfizer, significantly reducing transmission.
Professor Sutton urged Australians with questions about vaccines to seek out trusted health information.
“It is legitimate to ask questions and I would encourage all those individuals who have seen information that they are unsure about the legitimacy of that information to go to trusted individuals, go to your GP ... go to trusted information sources.”
As Victoria prepares for vaccine rollout, questions linger over whether it will stop spread
By Aisha Dow
Vaccinations will begin in Victoria from Monday but the big question remains how much of an impact it will have preventing people from passing on the virus, and therefore stopping the persistent leaks we have seen out of hotel quarantine.
There is clear evidence the Pfizer vaccine provides significant protection for those who are vaccinated, but it hasn’t yet been established if it stops them from passing on the virus to others.
Victorian chief health officer Brett Sutton pointed to encouraging early evidence from Israel this month suggesting that the vaccine may indeed reduce transmission.
We believe he is probably referring to this research preprint (which means it is yet to undergo a peer review) which found that people who had the Pfizer vaccine had a significantly lower viral load after undergoing the jab compared to unvaccinated patients.
“These reduced viral loads hint to lower infectiousness,” the researchers said.
However Professor Sutton said that health authorities would not be relying on the vaccination to put a halt to the leaks out of hotel quarantine.
“The risk cannot be made zero,” he said.
The chief health officer said authorities had made changes off the back of the recent outbreaks, including ensuring neighbouring returned travellers didn’t open their doors at the same time and introducing buffer rooms.
Remain alert for COVID-19 symptoms, says Victorian CHO
By Aisha Dow
Victoria’s Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton is asking Victorians to remain alert for coronavirus symptoms, after the virus was unexpectedly detected at a number of sewage sites around Melbourne.
It could be the result of a recovered case still shedding the virus, or it may be a sign of something more concerning.
“When we get detection in sewage it might mean that it is recovered case, but it can also mean that we have missed someone because they are positive, because they haven’t yet been tested,” Professor Sutton said.
These are the locations that the virus has been detected in wastewater:
- Wantirna South, Boronia and parts of Bayswater, Ferntree Gully, Knoxfield and Tremont (February 13/15),
- St Kilda East, Caulfield North, Caulfield, Balaclava and Elsternwick (February 13/16),
- Carrum Downs, Langwarrin and Skye (February 13/17).
“These last locations, Carrum Downs, Langwarrin and Skye, there has been a detections for a second-consecutive day so [it is] really important especially for those listed area if there are any symptoms please get tested and you will get a result very quickly,” Professor Sutton said.
‘The numbers are positive’: Victorian Health Minister
By Daniella Miletic
Victorian Health Minister Martin Foley has confirmed the state has recorded no new locally acquired cases of coronavirus and no new cases in hotel quarantine.
There were 17,701 tests processed on Friday and there are now 25 active coronavirus cases across the state.
There are now 25 active cases in the state and now more than 3000 primary close contacts linked to the Holiday Inn outbreak, he said.
“The numbers are positive, the numbers are indicating that we are getting on top of this,” he said. “But it is not over yet.”
Two women in Florida ‘dressed up as grannies’ to get vaccinated, health official says
By Meryl Kornfield
The coronavirus vaccine is so coveted that two women in Florida went to extremes this week to get inoculated: They dressed as if they were elderly, health officials said.
The women, both younger than 45, wore bonnets, gloves and glasses to disguise themselves as older than 65, the age cut-off to be prioritised to get the coronavirus vaccine in Florida, according to Raul Pino, the director of the health department in Orange County, where Orlando is located.
He attributed the deception to growing interest in the vaccine, giving the example of the women while explaining how high demand is in the area.
“This is the hottest commodity that is out there right now so we have to be very careful,” Pino said.
The geriatric guise on Wednesday was the latest instance of people trying to cut the line to get vaccinated from the deadly virus.
Last month, authorities identified a wealthy Canadian couple who had posed as locals in a remote Indigenous community to take doses meant for elders.
Perspective: I’ve dreamt of going home for a year. Now Australia’s further out of reach than ever
By Amelia Lester
Australia is closed to me. I’ve spent the better part of a year, and most of my spare moments therein, dreaming about how to get back from the US, where I live. When the Prime Minister announced that Australians needed to come home now, in the early days of the pandemic, or else they might not be able to later, I was extremely pregnant – beyond the time any doctor would allow me to fly, and, as it happens, on the verge of giving birth early.
Had I heeded ScoMo’s call and ignored the doctor’s, my baby might have arrived in an economy-class loo, somewhere over the Pacific Ocean. When my baby was a newborn, and I spent my days pacing around coaxing her to sleep, I would work through various escape scenarios in my head. The pandemic was worsening and borders were closing. Qantas had grounded its jets in the middle of the desert and that image stuck with me, a symbol of my utterly immovable fate.
I counted the days until my baby was old enough for her first round of immunisations – the time at which we would not be wantonly irresponsible parents for taking her on a long-haul flight. But then she got her shots, and she was still so small. I couldn’t comprehend embarking on that journey.
Not yet. Not, also, with a toddler in tow. Summer arrived, and COVID became a fact of life. It seemed impossible to imagine that I had one day in the not-too-distant past hopped on a flight across the Atlantic to attend a friend’s wedding. She is a close friend, and it was a fabulous wedding. We danced in the rain – and then I got pneumonia. But still.
Shops, cafes allowed to make COVID vaccination a condition of entry
By Nick Bonyhady and Rachel Clun
Shoppers and diners may have to be vaccinated before entering stores or restaurants after the workplace safety regulator allowed businesses to require their customers to show proof of immunisation.
The advice from Safe Work Australia, released on Friday, emphasises employers will generally not be able to compel their staff to get vaccinated and workers cannot use their colleagues’ failure to do so as an excuse to stay home.
But industries where workers are at particular risk, such as hotel quarantine, and where they are caring for people vulnerable to the virus, may be able to compel vaccinations under existing laws that allow businesses to issue reasonable directions to their staff.
No new cases of coronavirus in Victoria
No new cases of locally or internationally acquired COVID-19 were recorded on Saturday.
The department of health received 17,701 test results as Victoria still battles 25 active cases throughout the state.
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2021-02-20 00:12:56Z
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