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Sylvia Park closes food court after visit from South Korean case; no new Covid cases

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Fri, 31 Jul 2020, 1:31PM
Sylvia Park. Photo / Supplied
Sylvia Park. Photo / Supplied

Sylvia Park closes food court after visit from South Korean case; no new Covid cases

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Fri, 31 Jul 2020, 1:31PM

Auckland's Sylvia Park mall food court was closed this morning after it was revealed it was visited by a South Korean man who later tested positive for Covid-19.

The news came as the Ministry of Health revealed there are no new cases of Covid-19 today.

Tens of thousands of shoppers visit Sylvia Park each weekend.

General manager asset management Linda Trainer said at 10.45am today, the mall was contacted by the Ministry of Health and advised the man had visited the food court on Thursday, July 16, between the hours of 11am to 1pm.

"The Ministry has advised this event, which took place over two weeks ago, poses a very low risk.

"The health and safety of our customers, tenants and employees is our top priority, so as a precautionary measure and to help give people piece of mind, we immediately closed the food court and undertook a deep clean of the area. We will conduct an additional deep clean of the entire Sylvia Park shopping centre overnight.

"We will continue to monitor this situation closely and provide updates as required."

But at 1.25pm, management said the clean had finished and the food court had reopened.

The 22-year-old man from South Korea, who was living in Auckland, was in the Manurewa and Takanini areas of South Auckland between June 20 and July 20.

He was also in Queenstown from July 1 to 4. He also took a bus tour to Milford and joined a boat cruise during that time.

He was in and around Christchurch Airport on July 20 and 21 before flying out of the country and testing positive for Covid-19 after arriving in South Korea on July 22.

The Ministry said today there continued to be no evidence of transmission in New Zealand involving the traveller.

"All domestic contacts of this case tested to date have returned negative results.

"While these results reinforce that the public health risk from this case continues to be low, further contact tracing is taking place around their travel within New Zealand, including their visit to the Queenstown area in early July, the South Auckland area where they were based and Christchurch where they departed from."

Earlier today it was announced that anyone who was in Queenstown town from July 1 to 4 and had since developed Covid-19 symptoms should get tested immediately.

Southern District Health Board medical officer of health Susan Jack said anyone who was in Queenstown on those days and had since developed Covid-19 symptoms should call 0800VIRUS19 if in the southern district, or contact their GP to arrange a test.

Contacts from the man's travel in Queenstown and Fiordland had been identified and were being followed up by health board and ministry contact-tracers.

Public health staff were contacting staff working at businesses in the area at the time the man had visited them, and any contacts experiencing symptoms were being asked to self-isolate until their test results came back, Dr Jack said.

Health authorities believe there was a low risk of community transmission from the case, but health authorities are contact-tracing and encouraging testing to be "absolutely sure"

Targeted testing

This weekend district health boards will have a targeted testing surveillance programme in the Queenstown, South Auckland and Christchurch – locations all connected to the case in South Korea.

The Ministry said DHBs and public health units would be providing community-specific information around where and when testing can take place. Information would be provided on their websites and on social media.

"If you have, or may have had symptoms, please contact Healthline or your GP for an assessment for testing..

"People who may have been in those areas around those dates but have now moved elsewhere can also call Healthline for further advice about getting tested.

"We want to thank all contacts who have been tested around this case and we continue to encourage everyone who is offered a test to take this up. These negative test results provide us with confidence that New Zealand has no community transmission of Covid-19."

No new virus cases

The Ministry of Health says there are no new Covid-19 cases today.

It has been 91 days since the last case was acquired locally from an unknown source.

There are 20 active cases in New Zealand with 1210 confirmed Covid-19 cases to date since the pandemic broke out.

Yesterday our laboratories completed 2476 tests of which 2,022 swabs were taken in the community, and 454 were taken in managed isolation and quarantine facilities.

That brings the total number of tests completed to date to 465,066.

So far this week there have been four new cases of Covid-19 detected at the border.

Two of those infected tested positive on day 12 after returning a negative test on their day three test.

The director general of health Dr Ashley Bloomfield. Photo / Mark Mitchell
The director general of health Dr Ashley Bloomfield. Photo / Mark Mitchell

None are being treated in hospital but have been transferred to quarantine facilities.

Patient leak

Yesterday an Australian man was caught just 100m from an Auckland managed isolation facility after tailgating a worker off the barricaded premises in the CBD. He had arrived in the country the day before and was yet to be tested. He has been summonsed to appear in court.

Health Minister Chris Hipkins yesterday urged anyone who was symptomatic to get a test.

He remained concerned community testing remained well short of the target of 4000 a day. There were 2523 tests in the previous 24 hours.

Thursday also saw the release of the Heron report into a privacy breach of Covid-infected patients.

It found disgraced National MP Hamish Walker and former National Party president Michelle Boag were each responsible for the unauthorised disclosure of the sensitive information.

The inquiry was critical of the pair and found the Ministry of Health could have kept patient details more secure.

As a result, the Ministry of Health had reviewed the list of organisations and people who would receive this information in the future and would look at using passwords to send out similar sensitive information in the future, and the use of encrypted forms of communication.

Walker gave a list of patients sent to all emergency services, including rescue helicopters, at the peak of the crisis, to media claiming his judgment was impaired after being called racist.

Boag, the former acting chief executive of the Auckland Rescue Helicopter Trust, sent the highly sensitive information to Walker in an attempt to help clear his name.

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