The Cairns Post

LAST STITCH EFFORT

Curtain makers hang hopes on face masks for health workers

- DANIEL BATEMAN daniel.bateman@news.com.au

SMALL businesses are changing gears to help back up Far Northern health workers battling COVID-19 on the frontline.

A Cairns curtain manufactur­er is preparing to make face masks, while a craft distillery has started bottling up to 250 litres a week of medical-grade hand sanitiser.

It comes as health officials brace for the first severe cases of the novel coronaviru­s in FNQ, with health workers told to start rationing their personal protective equipment.

Chief Health Officer Dr Jeannette Young and Health Minister Steven Miles, in Cairns, warned of early signs of community transmissi­on.

A CURTAIN manufactur­er is planning on changing gears to start making face masks and gowns for health workers as Cairns Hospital prepares for the Far North’s first severe COVID-19 cases.

Health workers have been rationing personal protective equipment as the number of confirmed cases of novel coronaviru­s in the region remains the highest outside of the state’s southeast.

It comes as the Cassowary Coast recorded its first cases, of two, yesterday, bringing the total to 26 cases of the fastspread­ing virus in the Cairns health district.

Hill MP Shane Knuth said he had heard from a senior Queensland Health official that two people had tested positive to the coronaviru­s.

A Cairns local patient has fully recovered and is remaining self-isolated at home.

Health officials, however, have started contact tracing a cluster of three cases of COVID-19 that emerged following a March 14 wrestling match at Edmonton PCYC.

State chief health officer Dr Jeannette Young said it showed there were “very early signs” of community transmissi­on of the infection in Cairns.

She said despite all confirmed coronaviru­s cases being well-managed in the Far North, there would still be cases ending up in Cairns Hospital’s intensive care unit.

“We know that will happen, because we know that there’s a certain percentage of patients, particular­ly in the more vulnerable categories, who will need the ICU,” she said.

“But we have a fantastic ICU here and I have worked with them as long ago as the pandemic for H1N1, the swine flu, and they did a fantastic job.

“A lot of the same staff are still here.”

While the Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service has assured there are adequate supplies of PPE for its staff, the health department has still asked staff to ration face masks, gowns and eye protection.

Bungalow-based InStyle Curtains and Blinds, one of only a handful of curtain manufactur­ers in the Far North, has approached state and federal government representa­tives to help boost local PPE supplies.

Owner Janice Wicks said she and her staff of 15 workers would be able to start pumping out medical-grade face masks and gowns within the next two weeks.

“We just thought if all the smaller regional areas that are able to do this, being put into service for the government, obviously it keeps our business going, and we actually provide a vital service for the community,” she said. “We can start straight away.

“We’re not a big business, able to make millions (of PPE) in a day or anything like that, but we’ll just have to see how we go.”

Health Minister Steven Miles, who was in Cairns yesterday with Dr Young, announced $152 million in extra funding to ramp up COVID-19 preparatio­ns in the Cairns health district. “That will allow (the health service) to expand their fever clinics as required, to deliver more health services in the home and into aged care facilities, and to expand intensive care ward and emergency department capacity,” he said.

 ?? Picture: BRENDAN RADKE ?? NEW DESIGNS: InStyle Curtains and Blinds owner Janice Wicks with sewers Feleena Geddes and Peta McDowell at the company's Bungalow workshop.
Picture: BRENDAN RADKE NEW DESIGNS: InStyle Curtains and Blinds owner Janice Wicks with sewers Feleena Geddes and Peta McDowell at the company's Bungalow workshop.
 ?? Picture: BRENDAN RADKE ?? TEAM EFFORT: Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service chief operating officer Tina Chinery, medical services executive director Don Mackie, Queensland chief health officer Dr Jeannette Young, and Health Minister Steven Miles.
Picture: BRENDAN RADKE TEAM EFFORT: Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service chief operating officer Tina Chinery, medical services executive director Don Mackie, Queensland chief health officer Dr Jeannette Young, and Health Minister Steven Miles.
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