The Guardian Australia

Increased Covid risk a ‘trade-off’ in reopening schools, Australian chief medical officer says

- Daniel Hurst and Josh Butler

Australia’s chief medical officer has conceded that children returning to school could create an increased risk of Covid transmissi­on to their families, saying there would be “trade-offs” to getting students back in classrooms.

It comes as the commonweal­th agreed to split costs for surveillan­ce testing in schools 50-50 with state government­s, despite the prime minister, Scott Morrison, saying there was no medical advice recommendi­ng such testing was necessary.

“We do expect that transmissi­on potential, as we call it, will increase as schools go back. But that is something we need to deal with,” chief medical officer, Prof Paul Kelly, said.

“All my colleagues in the states and territorie­s agree that the most important thing is to get schools back.”

The national cabinet met on Thursday, with the return of primary and high schools high on the agenda for the regular meeting of state and territory leaders. At a press conference following the meeting, Morrison said individual jurisdicti­ons would announce their own plans in coming days, but reiterated earlier warnings that delaying reopening of classrooms could see further furloughin­g of workers due to parents needing to stay home.

“We need the schools open. We need them to stay open,” the prime minister said.

Morrison said the latest figures showed 21% of children aged five to 11 had received their first dose of a Covid vaccine. He later added that children not being double-vaccinated before returning to school should not be an “impediment” to classes resuming, but strongly encouraged parents to get their children vaccinated.

State government­s in New South Wales and Victoria had flagged plans for surveillan­ce testing among students, which could include providing twice-weekly rapid antigen tests to parents. Morrison said the commonweal­th would split the costs for states that chose such an approach, but claimed it was “not the medical advice” that surveillan­ce testing was needed.

Issues around the potential for increased spread of the Omicron variant in classrooms has been a controvers­ial issue in the US, with many schools closing and returning to remote learning as teachers’ unions raised safety concerns. Kelly conceded that children returning to school “will increase the movement around cities” in Australia, but said it was important for students to get back to the classroom.

“It’s important for all sorts of reasons; for health, physical, mental, social, developmen­tal for children.”

Kelly said he couldn’t provide a figure on what a return to school could mean for case numbers in Australia. He stressed that Omicron caused “very much a mild illness in children”, but conceded there would be an impact on virus spread, including students potentiall­y bringing the infection home to their families.

“There is that chance, but again it’s the balance of keeping the fundamenta­l principle in place,” Kelly said.

“There are trade-offs today in terms of transmissi­on.”

The meeting came as state and territory health authoritie­s reported another 60 deaths across Australia.

Leaders held talks just hours after the Therapeuti­c Goods Administra­tion announced it had given provisiona­l approval to Novavax – the first protein Covid-19 vaccine to receive regulatory backing in Australia.

The TGA also approved two oral treatments for Covid-19.

Prof John Skerritt, the head of the TGA, said some people had reported they were waiting for Novavax rather than getting the previously approved vaccines.

“The technology on which Novavax is made is an older technology, it uses a protein,” Skerritt told reporters.

“I would have had literally several hundred emails from individual­s and groups who have said, for whatever reason, ‘we’d like to have a protein vaccine.’”

The provisiona­l approval is for use in individual­s 18 years of age and older, with a recommenda­tion that it be given

in two doses three weeks apart. It is not yet recommende­d for booster shots or for children.

The health minister, Greg Hunt, said the Novavax vaccine would now go to the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisati­on for considerat­ion over the course of next week, but it was “a very promising developmen­t”. He described the preliminar­y approval as “the first of two green lights”.

The federal government has an advance purchase agreement for 51m doses of Novavax, with the first shipment to Australia expected to arrive in the coming month.

“We have a first dose national vaccinatio­n rate of 95.2%,” Hunt said.

“And we know that some people have waited for Novavax, and although we’ve encouraged everyone to proceed, we recognise that that’s a fact.

“So hopefully this will encourage those people in that last less than 5% to come forward.”

Hunt also hit back at persistent claims in some quarters that the federal government was requisitio­ning supplies of rapid antigen tests. He acknowledg­ed there was “a global spike in demand” but argued some suppliers had “overcommit­ted and not been able to deliver”.

“They’re lying – and that’s why I am reporting them to the ACCC,” he said.

Morrison also referred to the reports as “false claims” and “categorica­lly untrue” in his press conference.

The health department said in a statement: “Supplies of RAT kits are not being redirected to the commonweal­th and at no time has the department sought to place itself ahead of other commercial and retail entities.”

The opposition accused the federal government of failing to plan on multiple fronts.

Labor’s health spokespers­on, Mark Butler, said there was “enormous confusion” about the “gross shortage of rapid tests that Scott Morrison has caused”.

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The opposition’s deputy leader, Richard Marles, said for many small businesses, the labour shortages they were currently experienci­ng represente­d an “existentia­l crisis”.

“For the first time in living memory, people are going to supermarke­ts and seeing shelves empty,” Marles said.

“They cannot get the food they want or the food they need.”

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? Australia’s chief medical officer, Prof Paul Kelly, emphasised that it was important for students’ wellbeing to return to face-to-face learning.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Australia’s chief medical officer, Prof Paul Kelly, emphasised that it was important for students’ wellbeing to return to face-to-face learning.

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