ZB ZB
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

60 new Covid cases - is Govt considering level 4 'circuit breaker'?

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 18 Oct 2021, 12:32PM
(Photo / File)
(Photo / File)

60 new Covid cases - is Govt considering level 4 'circuit breaker'?

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 18 Oct 2021, 12:32PM

There are 60 new cases of Covid-19 in the community today.

Of those, 57 are in Auckland and three in Waikato.

It comes as Cabinet mulls a change in alert levels for Auckland, Northland and Waikato. That decision will be revealed in a press conference by the Prime Minister at 4pm.

As of 10am, 36 of those cases are linked and 24 had not yet been linked to a known source. Eighteen of the linked cases were household contacts of known cases.

One of the Waikato cases has been linked, while the sources of the two other cases remain a mystery and officials are still investigating.

Two Waikato cases reported yesterday and two others from last week have also not yet been linked.

Of yesterday's 51 cases, 25 have exposure events while 26 were in isolation while infectious.

There are a total 140 cases from the past fortnight that remain unlinked.

Thirty people are in hospital with the virus and five in intensive care.

On Sunday, 29,661 doses of the Pfizer vaccine were administered, including 6,253 first doses.

That included 11,259 jabs in Auckland - 2,005 of which were first doses.

Sixty-six per cent of eligible Māori have had a first dose of the vaccine, and 45 per cent have had their second dose. Eighty per cent of the eligible Pasifika population have had their first dose and 59 per cent are fully vaccinated.

Level 4 'circuit breaker'?

Auckland may be "tantalisingly close" to reaching the coveted 90 per cent Covid-19 vaccination target, but its border is likely to remain until jab rates in other parts of the country climb, the director general of health says.

Dr Ashley Bloomfield told Breakfast this morning a level 4 circuit-breaker had been proposed and "actively considered".

He said: "That's something that has been proposed ... it's something we've actively considered and importantly I've asked for advice from my team but also from the public health teams on the ground in Tāmaki Makaurau that's informed our advice to the prime minister."

Meanwhile a Remuera Gardens rest home worker has tested positive for Covid and was at work while infectious.

The worker is partially vaccinated and Auckland Regional Public Health Service say the risk posed is low.

The rest home is now arranging for all residents to have the opportunity to have a Covid test as a precaution.

It says 98 per cent of staff and 96 per cent of residents at Remuera Gardens are double vaccinated.

Auckland at 90% fully vaccinated in just over a month

Just under 90 per cent of Aucklanders have had at least one dose of the vaccine - with
9039 first jabs administered across the region during the "Super Saturday" vaccination push. But Bloomfield told RNZ that current modelling shows it will take Auckland just over a month before 90 per cent of the population is fully vaccinated with both doses.

While hitting 90 per cent for first jabs is a good milestone, Bloomfield told Newstalk ZB he prefers to see people fully vaccinated.

And even after the double-jab objective is met, those wanting to visit or leave Auckland will need to look at statistics outside the region, Bloomfield said, suggesting that other parts of the country will need to step up vaccination rates as well for the quarantine border to be removed.

Bloomfield told TVNZ's Breakfast he thought New Zealand was still doing "really well" in comparison with other countries, including Australia, but more work needs to be done.

He acknowledged that Super Saturday's event had seen many people who had been on the fence about vaccination finally come out to get their first jab.

Bloomfield said community leaders and community health providers in the Pacific and Māori promoting vaccination had helped hugely in boosting vaccinations in those communities over the weekend.

He also touted the Super Saturday turnout on Newstalk ZB but acknowledged to host Mike Hosking that first jab rates were a bit slower than expected. They are still going up, however, Bloomfield said.

Bloomfield said the areas of New Zealand currently under lockdown are different from Melbourne and Sydney, which are opening up at 70 and 80 per cent vaccination rates. Their rates were still coming down and hospitalisation rates weren't going up, however Bloomfield said that was because people were vaccinated.

The best way to stop people ending up in hospital is to get people vaccinated, he said, adding that he doesn't want hundreds and hundreds of cases.

Hosking said hospitals in Sydney and Melbourne were not being overwhelmed. However, Bloomfield said they were still under pressure.

Asked about Northland's lockdown, Bloomfield said they hadn't seen any cases in recent days which was good, but officials still aren't clear where the two uncooperative cases had been.

Meanwhile, Bloomfield described Waikato's lockdown as an "interesting" case, pointing out that there were new cases announced over the weekend. He said he has passed his advice on to Cabinet, which is set to discuss the options today, but he declined to elaborate.

The framework will be announced this afternoon for a new "traffic light" system to deal with the pandemic, he said.

On TVNZ, Bloomfield said a return to level 4 for Auckland, intended to act as a "circuit breaker", has been proposed by a number of people.

"It's something that we've actively considered and importantly, I've asked for advice from my team.

"But also from the public health teams on the ground in Tāmaki Makaurau and that's informed our advice to the Prime Minister.

"And Cabinet will be considering that this afternoon."

He said he would not go into any more detail about that particular aspect until Cabinet met and ultimately announced a decision later this afternoon.

Speaking about the large party held on Auckland's North Shore on Saturday night, breaching lockdown restrictions, he said although he was disappointed, it would be more disappointed for Aucklanders who had done the hard yards over the last two months.

He had a message for those people breaking lockdown rules.

"To those who are doing those things - just don't.

"It's not going to help and it's not going to help Auckland come down out of the alert level 3 restrictions sooner."

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is set to speak with the media about the latest developments at 4pm today during her weekly post-Cabinet press conference.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you