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Friday, April 26, 2024

Crunch time as NSW government plots virus future

The NSW government will begin the task of plotting Greater Sydney’s COVID-19 settings for the coming months, with some restrictions potentially eased and others tightened.

NSW Health also believes it could vaccinate more than 350,000 people per week – if it had the requisite supply of the Pfizer jab.

With the city’s lockdown scheduled to end on Friday, NSW recorded 145 new local COVID-19 cases in the 24 hours to 8pm on Sunday.

Of those, 51 were in the community for the entirety of their infectious period and 25 were in the community for part of their infectious period.

Monday’s tally came from more than 98,000 tests.

The NSW crisis cabinet met on Monday to work out a strategy to deal with the evolving COVID-19 crisis, and begin workshopping the restrictions to remain in place in Sydney over the coming months.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the government would this week settle on its post-July plans. Some restrictions may be tightened while others could be eased where transmission risk is minimal.

This may involve tightened or more targeted measures in southwest and west Sydney, where the virus is prevalent, as well as changes to testing requirements.

However, some restrictions would remain until the majority of the NSW population was vaccinated, regardless of daily infection numbers.

The future of homeschooling is yet to be determined but construction activity, which has been paused for two weeks, will resume in some form from Saturday.

“We might need to go harder in some areas and release some settings in others … please know our government is always looking at the best options we have,” Ms Berejiklian told reporters.

“Our mission is to allow our citizens to live as safely and as freely as possible.”

Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said Greater Sydney’s success rested on three factors – compliance with a tight lockdown, increased vaccination rates and the support and patience of the community.

She reiterated stronger lockdown measures would have a marginal impact given the prevalence of transmission among critical workers who cannot stay home.

“The people of southwestern Sydney and western Sydney are the people that keep our city running. They do a lot of the work in distribution centres, food, logistics, transport,” Dr Chant told reporters.

“We should all reflect on that.”

Dr Chant also indicated the NSW government would on Tuesday enable all people to walk up and receive the AstraZeneca vaccine at some locations, particularly those deemed vulnerable.

She echoed updated expert immunisation advice that locked-down residents should “strongly consider” taking the AstraZeneca jab.

While Pfizer supplies remain constrained, the NSW government says it has plentiful AstraZeneca, which is effective in preventing hospitalisation or death.

Dr Chant also suggested NSW Health could administer more than 350,000 vaccines per week if its supplies of Pfizer were enhanced. This is separate from the federal government’s vaccine program.

“We have to make really hard choices and what we’re doing is looking at the best evidence to look at available supply,” Dr Chant said.

“Ultimately, if we had more vaccine, we could do more … but we do have a good vaccine, which is AstraZeneca.”

There are currently 44 COVID-19 patients in NSW in intensive care, and 18 of these people are ventilated. Eight people have died during the latest outbreak, which began in Sydney on June 16.

This includes a Sydney-based Brazilian student in her 30s – the youngest woman to die of COVID-19 in Australia.

The fate of three local government areas in regional NSW areas due to exit a lockdown on July 28 is also unclear.

Frustration over lockdowns boiled over on Saturday when about 3000 people marched through Sydney’s CBD in protest. Some 57 people have been charged to date.

AAP

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