The Gold Coast Bulletin

TOP DOCTOR’S NSW BORDER BLOCK REMEDY

- EMILY TOXWARD

“IF you want the borders to reopen, then get tested for coronaviru­s.”

That’s the blunt message from Dr Roger Halliwell, the Gold Coast Primary Health Network’s board chairman, who said the Queensland Chief Health Officer won’t recommend opening the borders until 1000 Gold Coasters are tested for COVID-19 daily.

About 400 people with respirator­y symptoms present for testing. “Until everyone with respirator­y symptoms is tested and levels hit 1000 a day, (the Government) is not going to open the borders,” he said.

“The people who don’t want to get swabbed or don’t want their children to get swabbed, they are the people delaying a decision about reopening the border.”

Dr Halliwell said extra testing was needed to ensure community transmissi­on of the virus was detected early and contact tracing could start immediatel­y.

Yesterday, the network sent out a flyer to 146,000 Gold Coast households and to GP practices and pharmacies stressing the importance of COVID-19 testing, testing locations and why people should keep visiting their GP.

Dr Sonu Haikewal, who runs a respirator­y clinic in Upper Coomera, said her clinic was only doing one-third of the testing it should be. She feared Gold Coasters had become complacent.

“We on the frontline are nervous, particular­ly as people who arrive back from NSW and Victoria return here. That is what I fear. Just recently a lady came home from NSW after three months and said no one asked her any questions as she crossed the border but she took it upon her self to get a test and quarantine.

“People are slipping through the net and the best policing system is educating the public about the importance of testing and stay at home if they’re sick. We need to keep our hands on the wheel and unless we test we can’t be sure that we are safe.”

Dr Vicki Slinko, from the Gold Coast Public Health Unit, said working men aged between to 20 to 65 were under-represente­d in testing figures, as were First Nations peoples and children. Working-age women were the best at getting tested.

“A child might just have a common cold but you don’t know that until they’ve been tested for coronaviru­s. This winter season, it is very important that you do get your child tested. Little people are very important too.

“It’s not the most pleasant test in the world, but it’s not having a blood test, just rubbing a little swab around the back of your throat and nose.”

Dr Halliwell said a global pandemic was not the time to become complacent because coronaviru­s mimicked sinusitis, conjunctiv­itis, a chest infection and many other illnesses.

“If we get a second wave and it becomes significan­t then the shutdown we just experience­d will be a walk in the park compared to the next shutdown that could last for months and months. I know people are hurting, businesses are losing money, but I fear if we slip the effects of a longterm shutdown will be far worse.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia