Whanganui Chronicle

Urgent upgrade of NZ’s Covid response needed

- Nick Wilson and Michael Baker Nick Wilson, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago and Michael Baker, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

The global Covid-19 pandemic is intensifyi­ng, with more infectious variants of the virus, and more rapid spread, especially in countries such as the US and UK. This deteriorat­ion has meant a higher number of infected returnees arriving at New Zealand’s MIQ facilities — with 31 new cases in a recent three-day period.

This situation is a particular concern given we know hotels used as managed isolation and quarantine (MIQ) facilities are not designed for infection control due to problems with shared spaces and ventilatio­n.

Indeed, there have been eight border failures identified since early August 2020, with seven probably associated with failures at MIQ facilities. There have also been many rule breaches in these facilities.

The Simpson and Roche review of the testing and surveillan­ce regime also highlights multiple problems with the national response, although action is under way to address some of these deficienci­es and extra funding is being allocated.

Neverthele­ss, nursing staff at MIQ facilities recently reported persisting concerns with staff shortages.

Recent Covid-19 outbreaks and near-misses in Australia remind us that community spread is a real possibilit­y and could threaten the huge gains from New Zealand’s successful implementa­tion of an eliminatio­n strategy.

Reduce numbers of infected arrivals

There are multiple ways New Zealand could greatly reduce the number of infected travellers arriving and entering MIQ facilities, particular­ly those with more infectious virus variants.

Systematic pre-travel testing requiremen­ts have been phased in by many countries and New Zealand has added a requiremen­t for pre-travel PCR testing from January 15.

This process could be made more effective by using a combinatio­n of rapid antigen testing and a period of pre-travel quarantine prior to boarding flights (eg. a five-day stay at an airport hotel combined with rapid antigen testing on arrival at the hotel and just before boarding the flight).

Antigen testing has several advantages over PCR testing and can provide reasonable diagnostic performanc­e in a screening situation, particular­ly with repeat testing.

The Government should also consider a large reduction in travel numbers from high-incidence countries, as has just been implemente­d in Australia. New

Zealand is now accepting higher inbound traveller numbers (about 11,000 per month) than are allowed into all of Australia (about 10,000 per month for a country with five times the population).

Given the seriousnes­s of the current risk, the Government could suspend flights from the UK, US, and South Africa immediatel­y. This is what China has done for UK flights, and Japan has recently banned entry to non-resident foreigners from more than 150 countries.

Such a suspension could then potentiall­y be extended to other countries with out-of-control pandemic spread — especially if preflight testing and pre-flight quarantine is not feasible in such countries.

These measures should substantia­lly reduce numbers of infected people boarding flights, the risk of infections on flights to New Zealand (which is well documented), and ultimately the number of infected people arriving and the risks of outbreaks in the community.

The booking system that travellers are using to arrange a space in MIQ facilities as part of their travel planning could be used to help manage these precaution­s. In the medium term, pre-travel vaccinatio­n will become possible and should provide a further way of reducing the risk of importing infection.

Tighten processes at border facilities

Some strengthen­ing of MIQ facility processes has recently occurred (eg. by the NZ Defence Force) but the Government could still consider the following:

Close MIQ facilities in Auckland (to protect such a key economic centre), or reserve Auckland-based MIQ facilities for relatively low-risk travellers (such as those from Australia), eliminate shared-space use in MIQ facilities, at least until the first test returns a negative result (exercising in rooms only, provision of nicotine patches for smokers), prosecute those who break MIQ rules. Despite many instances of rulebreaki­ng within these facilities, no one has yet been prosecuted.

Fast-track vaccinatio­n of border workers

Waiting for a vaccine to arrive in March is too long in our view. The Government could explore a fasttrack process for vaccinatin­g border control workers. This process would require expedited MedSafe approval and fast-tracked delivery of the vaccine into the country.

Given Australia plans to start vaccinatin­g in February it might be possible to come to a joint arrangemen­t with them. This interventi­on assumes that vaccinatio­n provides some protection against transmitti­ng the infection to others, which is likely but not yet confirmed.

There is a range of other measures that can help New Zealand sustain its Covid-19 eliminatio­n status until such time as the population is protected by high vaccine coverage:

Learn about Covid-19 vaccinatio­n roll-out strategies from countries that seem to have done it well so far (eg. Israel). Unfortunat­ely, many European countries have had a slow start to their programmes.

Upgrade the alert level system so it maximises risk reduction while minimising economic damage.

Mandate that MIQ facility workers and returnees use digital technologi­es, such as the bluetooth function on the NZ Covid Tracer app, to facilitate contact tracing in the event of a border failure. Returnees could be required to use such technologi­es for two weeks after leaving MIQ facilities.

Consider using rapid antigen tests for community testing — which may help counteract the declining number of community tests which are currently far below optimal levels for early detection purposes.

In summary, the global Covid-19 pandemic situation is still deteriorat­ing and may continue to do so for some months. New Zealand’s response needs to be urgently upgraded in the ways outlined here. Failure to adapt to evolving realities puts our successful eliminatio­n strategy at risk.

 ??  ?? New Zealand has added a requiremen­t for pre-travel PCR testing from January 15 to reduce number of infectious people arriving.
New Zealand has added a requiremen­t for pre-travel PCR testing from January 15 to reduce number of infectious people arriving.

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