Mercury (Hobart)

NEW COVID OUTBREAK

- JAMES HALL

SOUTH Australia has been rocked by its first case of community transmissi­on of COVID- 19 since April after a woman in her 80s tested positive to the virus. She was among three cases detected in Adelaide yesterday in a “troubling” outbreak. Two of the woman’s family members, a female in her 50s and a man in his 60s, have also tested positive in the cluster thought to be linked to a worker at a medi- hotel.

SOUTH Australia has recorded its first community transmitte­d coronaviru­s cases since April, with three infections reported on Sunday.

The source of the new infections are not known, with health authoritie­s fearing hundreds of people in the city’s northern suburbs could have been exposed to the deadly virus.

The next 24 hours will be crucial in identifyin­g the source of the “potentiall­y disastrous” outbreak.

A woman in her 80s was diagnosed at Adelaide’s Lyell McEwin Hospital emergency department on Saturday after visiting on Friday night, leading to 90 staff and patients being ordered to quarantine.

Two of the woman’s family members, a female in her 50s and a man in his 60s, have also tested positive.

South Australian Chief Health Officer Nicola Spurrier described the new cases as “very troubling”, revealing the woman had visited a suburban shopping centre, Parafield Plaza Supermarke­t.

SA Health has issued a contact tracing alert for anyone who was at the Lyell McEwin Hospital between 5.30pm on Friday and 4am Saturday, as well as the Parafield Plaza Supermarke­t between 10.30am and 11.30am on Thursday.

Professor Spurrier said the cluster was the worst outbreak in South Australia yet and she fears that multiple public venues may have been visited by family members yet to be confirmed as infected patients.

“I’m expecting that we will have more cases,” Prof Spurrier said Sunday.

The woman’s relatives work in a range of vulnerable industries, including health care, aged care and correction­al services.

Anyone who visited Parafield Plaza or any other venue in the area and is showing symptoms is being urged to get tested immediatel­y.

“I am expecting we will have more cases, which is why I am absolutely warning South Australian­s: this is a wake- up call — if you have respirator­y symptoms, you’ve got to get tested,” Prof Spurrier said.

Health authoritie­s are now scrambling to contain the cluster by setting up temporary testing stations in the northern suburbs and contact tracing will focus on the medi- hotel where the family member works.

“Obviously, this is where we’re considerin­g the source to be,” Prof Spurrier said. “This is a very close- knit family and they do spend a lot of time with each other.”

The woman in her 80s has been shifted to the Royal Adelaide Hospital and is reportedly in a stable condition.

A fourth case was reported in South Australia but this patient was already in hotel quarantine, taking the state’s active cases to 19.

Chaos followed at Adelaide’s airport as Western Australia immediatel­y imposed restrictio­ns on South Australian travellers, requiring them to complete 14 days in selfquaran­tine.

Anyone arriving from South Australia at Perth Airport will now be tested for COVID- 19 on arrival ( or within 24 hours of arrival at another COVID clinic) and on subsequent quarantine days.

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