Apology for false hope
Officials review language used to describe patients as ‘stay home’ message reinforced
Officials are reviewing the language they use to speak about Covid-19 patients after a family was inadvertently given false hope. And police have given a stern caution to anyone considering sneaking away for the long Anzac weekend.
“This is not a time for complacency,” said police chief Andrew Coster.
“If you are planning to visit the beach . . . you need to change your plans and stay home . . . everyone needs to play their part.”
There were just three new cases of Covid-19 yesterday but there were also two more deaths.
One was Invercargill woman Jocelyn Finlayson, 62, who died after a two-week battle with the virus.
But her family say they had been given the impression her condition had improved.
Finlayson’s daughter Nicole watched Tuesday’s press conference and said she was initially elated after hearing her mother was “stable” in intensive care instead of “critical”.
“I rang my dad to see if he had received a further update from the hospital, he hadn’t. I rang the hospital and they confirmed she was still critical. This was a little heartbreaking,” she said.
Director general of health Ashley Bloomfield yesterday gave the family a sincere apology for any upset caused and said by “stable” he meant there’d been no change in her condition.
“But I am very sorry because I think . . . that did create some anxiety and concern for the family.
“So I am sorry that happened and I am certainly happy to be in touch with them personally if they would like to.”
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said officials were looking at changing the language used to describe the condition of patients.
“No one wants to create any kind of extra additional distress for families, as has obviously been caused in this case.”
The Ministry of Health has previously had to apologise for accidentally naming two individuals infected with Covid-19 on its website.
The second new death was a man in his 70s from Christchurch’s Rosewood rest home who died on site, where eight others have died.
Yesterday’s daily tally of three cases was one of the lowest since the first Covid-19 case was confirmed in New Zealand on February 28.
But the total number of cases — 1451 — remained the same, as three infections announced on Wednesday have now been included in Uruguay’s statistics as the people had been tested there.
The number of people who’ve recovered was 1065, meaning there were fewer than 400 active cases.
There were 6480 tests on Wednesday, bringing the total tests processed to more than 101,200.
And as New Zealand draws closer to the end of lockdown at 11.59pm on Monday, Coster said most Kiwis had responded well to it.
But there had been 4452 breaches — 423 in the past 24 hours — and 477 prosecutions, 3844 warnings issued and 131 youth referrals made.
Coster reminded Kiwis they were still under lockdown this Anzac weekend, and warned there’d be checkpoints for anyone who planned on going to the beach.
Concerned residents of Muriwai on Auckland’s west coast are calling for police blockades as the lockdown lifts. The community of 1000 residents, many of those retirees, are worried at the looming influx of Aucklanders.
Under alert level 3, there would be looser restrictions on movement but it would be a high-trust model, Coster said. But police would act on clear breaches, like public gatherings.
There was also more information about health services available under alert level 3.
,, I am sorry that happened and I am certainly happy to be in touch with them [family] personally.
Ashley Bloomfield
Dentists would be able to provide “urgent face-to-face appointments” under alert level 3 but not routine dental care.
Bloomfield said community midwives could continue “the fantastic work they do with pregnant women out in the community, using virtual means where possible but also face-to-face”.
There would be some allowances for face-to-face physiotherapy, podiatry and optometry, where urgent care is required. But they would continue to provide services virtually.
Community mental health care would be done by virtual means or phone but face-to-face appointments could be done “if necessary”.
Family visits to aged residential care facilities for palliative and compassionate reasons would be considered on a case-by-case basis, Bloomfield said.
Hospitals, GPs and community pharmacists would remain open as they were during the lockdown.
Hunting will also be permitted under alert level 3, as Ardern said it was an important part of providing food for families in parts of the country.
But there were restrictions — hunting was only allowed if done safely, on private land, within your region and bubble and done on foot.
Duck hunting season has been pushed out for a couple of weeks.
Embattled media companies were also thrown a short lifeline with a $50 million support package which included cutting transmission fees for broadcasters for the next six months and Government departments bringing forward advertising spend.
There was also an $11 million fund established for “specific targeted assistance to companies as and when needed”.
And Health Minister David Clark has ordered a rapid stocktake of the Health Ministry’s personal protective equipment ( PPE) distribution to ensure it was getting to frontline workers in a timely way.
Meanwhile, Air New Zealand announced its international air crew and airport staff would be tested for Covid-19 in an effort to minimise the possibility of importing the virus from overseas.
The announcement followed concerns that the border exemptions for air crew were a weakness that could open the door to an imported case of the deadly virus.