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Coming to an end? PM on Covid mandates, vaccine passes

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Thu, 17 Mar 2022, 11:24AM

Coming to an end? PM on Covid mandates, vaccine passes

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Thu, 17 Mar 2022, 11:24AM

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said mandates and vaccine passes were unlikely to be used as widely as before and Cabinet would review traffic light settings next week. 

The PM said Omicron may well have already peaked in Auckland. 

But hospital case numbers would show how much of a lag was happening. 

"Cases come first, hospitalisations follow, sadly." 

On Russian sanctions after the invasion of Ukraine, Ardern said more was underway on which individuals these sanctions would apply to. 

The Government was moving on individuals and assets linked to Putin's regime. 

Ardern suggested expelling Russia's ambassador was not realistic, because doing so would likely spark retaliation, meaning New Zealand would lose diplomatic representation in Russia. 

Returning to Covid-19 issues, the PM said healthcare employees were facing a very strenuous workload. 

"We know our health workers are working extremely hard but they're also affected by Covid personally." 

That was one reason some public health restrictions were still needed, the PM said. 

Ardern said Covid-19 vaccine passes were likely to become less important soon, but might still be needed as a back-up in case a new coronavirus variant emerged. 

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern launches new history curriculum 

Ardern said formal enactment of the new curriculum would start next year. 

Associate education minister Hon Jan Tinetti said today is a big day because it signals a review of the wider curriculum framework. 

The history and social studies curricula are first up in what Tinetti said was "a vision for young people created by young people." 

"One of the things that just got me was walking around the school and hearing the children speak with such confidence and pride," Ardern said. 

The PM referred to Tuia – 250, a a commemoration in 2019 marking 250 years since the first onshore encounters between Māori and Pākehā. 

Ardern said in recent years there'd been a shift toward learning more about those encounters, and early Māori navigators. 

"Some of these conversations did bring out the different views that people had," Ardern added. 

She said history in schools gave people a better understanding of one another. 

Tinetti said she was looking at how the National Library and Archives could help teachers too. 

Ardern said no country had a perfect history, but at least New Zealanders were willing to learn "from every part of out stories". 

High hospitalisation rates mean no shift from red setting as Auckland reaches its peak 

New Omicron infections across Auckland are starting to drop but the increasing number of patients in hospitals with Covid may not see the city shift out of the red traffic light restrictions just yet. 

Director-general of health Ashley Bloomfield said this morning that Auckland had seen the peak of infections but, when it came to shifting down a level in the Covid protection framework, he told Newstalk ZB's Mike Hosking what is taken into account are positivity rates and hospitalisations. 

He said they were reviewing the red light settings every two weeks. 

There were currently nearly 1000 people in hospitals with Covid. 

Bloomfield rejected any claim the health system was in crisis but said health staff were feeling under pressure with 15 to 20 per cent of the workforce at down with Covid. 

He said two-thirds of those in hospital with Covid-19 were there because of virus symptoms or because it had impacted an underlying illness. 

The other third were presenting under other circumstances, such as for injuries or maternal care. 

That meant around 750 people were in hospital mostly because of Covid. 

"Remember, that's 750 people in hospital who otherwise wouldn't have been." 

It meant other care like elective surgery and planned care couldn't always be carried out. 

Meanwhile, Pfizer has talked about a fourth dose of the vaccine for over 65s. 

Last week, Bloomfield asked health officials to look into a fourth dose for older folk because there was waning immunity and because older people were more vulnerable. 

Nurses are being paid an extra $500 per night shift as hospitals grappled with staffing issues, especially in Auckland, Bloomfield confirmed. 

A Waitematā District Health Board document, seen by the Herald, showed a Covid-19 remuneration arrangement became effective on March 4 and remained in place until March 18. 

All nurses, midwives and other hospital support staff employed by Auckland, Waitematā or Counties Manukau DHB, who worked a full eight-hour night shift had been given an extra $500 allowance on top of the amount they would usually get under the multi-employer collective agreement. 

As case numbers in the city drop, it would be interesting to see if hospitalisations across all three of its hospitals declined. 

For the rest of the country, the peak of the Omicron outbreak was still to come as case numbers continued to increase. 

Bloomfield would be putting advice to the Government about whether a booster will be a new requirement for vaccine passports. 

"We would like to get above 90 per cent" of the population boosted, he said. 

On tourists returning, Auckland University Covid modeller Dr David Welch said New Zealand is not really prepared to sequence Covid cases from travellers coming into the country. 

He wants to see incoming travellers' swabs sequenced if they test positive. They could send their swab in an envelope to a local laboratory. 

This would help give New Zealand a "heads up" if new variants were arriving, he told RNZ. 

"If we can detect something at the border it would still have to grow inside in New Zealand and spread - spotting it at the border ... could give us a 2-4 weeks' heads up." 

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