Hawke's Bay Today

What happened to most important line of defence?

Government’s failure to safeguard our border is astonishin­g

- Derek Cheng

The border, the border, the border. We were told ad nauseum this is the most important line of defence, given that Covid-19 had been eliminated and the only way in was through the border.

So it was comforting to be told on June 23 that the Health Ministry was including a “regular health check and asymptomat­ic testing of all border-facing workers” in its testing strategy. Excellent. They’re on top of it, then.

It was even more encouragin­g when new Health Minister Chris Hipkins, in his first solo press conference over a month ago with his Health hat on, said he had asked the ministry for more meaningful testing data.

The daily numbers, he said, should be broken down into tests of people staying in managed isolation or quarantine (MIQ) facilities, MIQ and border workers, and those in the wider community.

There has previously been yawning gaps in the Government’s rhetoric and what was actually happening, and such data would provide reassuranc­e that what should be done was being done.

For three weeks, the Herald has asked the ministry repeatedly for this testing breakdown with no response.

Newshub’s Michael Morrah was apparently similarly disappoint­ed with the lack of data, so he compiled his own through various channels. He reported on Thursday night that two-thirds of border workers in Auckland hadn’t been tested a week ago.

The Government’s overall Covid-response has yielded worldleadi­ng results, but it was astonishin­g to learn yesterday that the 6000 to 7000 border and MIQ workers — about half of whom are frontline workers — haven’t been regularly tested.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern defended the system, saying the workers had daily health checks and were tested if they have symptoms. But this is at odds with the testing strategy, which specifical­ly included “regular asymptomat­ic testing”.

If that had happened, it would have accounted for the Covidcarri­ers who don’t get symptoms, which is up to one-third of them, according to Otago University epidemiolo­gist Sir David Skegg.

Those who do have symptoms can be infectious for a few days before they get them.

That’s the point of regular testing. It captures the very real possibilit­y that someone without any symptoms can have Covid-19 and be spreading it.

It wouldn’t have been fail-safe — there can be false positives — but it’s another line of defence.

The Government’s reluctance to require mandatory testing of these workers may be down to a lack of clear-cut legal authority.

But there are avenues to address this. A new law, for example, was passed to implement MIQ co-payments for New Zealanders returning from overseas.

And there are Public Health Response orders. That’s how someone staying at an MIQ facility has to be considered low risk — and to test negative — before they can leave.

Such orders are exactly how the Government is now requiring testing of border and MIQ staff — but Hipkins couldn’t say whether it would be for everyone to be tested once, or for regular ongoing testing.

Pressed yesterday on the issue in general, he conceded: “I would have liked to have seen more testing earlier.”

There remains an abundance of public confidence in Ardern and the Covid response, but such shemozzles do the Government no favours and feed an increasing­ly louder narrative that the Government isn’t as competent as it makes itself out to be.

It is particular­ly disappoint­ing to have been told that such testing was going to happen, and then to have no response to media requests to ensure it was happening.

That suggests there was no such testing at all, or if there was, no one was keeping track of it.

A quick glance at Melbourne is all you need to see what’s at stake here. The Government has so far been good at beefing up the weak areas of its Covid response. Let’s hope that happens again here.

 ?? PHOTO / ALEX BURTON ?? Cars queue at a testing station in Auckland as people wait to hear news of lockdown.
PHOTO / ALEX BURTON Cars queue at a testing station in Auckland as people wait to hear news of lockdown.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand