Otago Daily Times

Onesizefit­sall Covid entry rules not working

New Zealand needs a ‘‘traffic light’’ system to stop Covid19 creeping in at the border, write Nick Wilson and Michael Baker, professors of public health at the University of Otago.

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❛ New Zealand should evaluate the experience in countries already using pretravel Covid19 testing to determine the most feasible approach

FOLLOWING the sixth Covid19 incursion in three months, New Zealand needs to shift from a onesizefit­sall strategy to a riskbased approach to border management.

Two staff have recently tested positive after coming into contact with internatio­nal seafarers in the course of their duties at a managed isolation facility in Christchur­ch, where 31 mariners with Covid19 remain in quarantine.

Mandatory testing of internatio­nal mariners, who may be only briefly in the country to join their vessels, is being introduced from this week.

This latest incursion follows five earlier border failures since early August. One of these led to the recent outbreak in Auckland.

We propose an urgent shift to a trafficlig­ht approach to border control.

This system would facilitate travel to New Zealand from places that are free of Covid19 (some Australian states and

Pacific islands), while reducing the risk associated with travellers from jurisdicti­ons with uncontroll­ed spread.

Keeping Covid19 at the border

One of the recent border failures led to the relatively serious outbreak in Auckland, with 179 cases, three deaths and major social and economic impacts.

Two other outbreaks, including one from a returnee infected in a quarantine facility and the latest from port workers infected by incoming seafarers, were controlled at an early stage.

The others involved infections of border facility workers: health workers on two occasions and a maintenanc­e worker.

These six events represent system failures — the goal should be to have complete containmen­t of infection at the border and no cases in the community.

Contributi­ng factors include the use of hotels for quarantine (for which they are not designed) and poor system design, including the lack of testing of seafarers flying into the country to join their ships.

Such failures could increase if the proportion of infected travellers coming to New Zealand increases as many parts of the world experience resurgence­s and rising infection rates. Given the marked difference in the intensity of the Covid19 pandemic in different regions and countries, we propose a trafficlig­ht system of risk stratifica­tion for jurisdicti­ons from which travellers arrive in New

Zealand.

New Zealand has much of the infrastruc­ture already in place to support this shift, including a booking system that could help to manage it. We would also get very rapid data on whether it is working, based on the rate of positive cases detected at the border.

Green: quarantine­free travel with precaution­s

A growing number of countries in the AsiaPacifi­c region have eliminated Covid19, notably most states of Australia. Some Pacific island jurisdicti­ons have never had cases.

Quarantine­free travel should be possible from these jurisdicti­ons, provided an assurance programme is in place to ensure eliminatio­n requiremen­ts are being met, including adequate levels of testing.

Since there is always a small risk of outbreaks from border control failures (Australia also uses hotels for quarantine, which failed in Victoria), we would need to consider retaining some controls, such as:

Rapid testing (using PCR methods) on arrival in New Zealand, or rapid antigen tests once these are considered reliable enough and are available in New Zealand.

Digital tracking for the first three weeks in New Zealand (via a traveller’s smartphone and with government­provided phones for those who don’t have their own).

Paying a bond (e.g. $NZ1000) to be returned after three weeks if the traveller has adhered to the digital tracking system.

Amber: current border quarantine and testing

These could be states with evidence of ongoing pandemic spread, but where it is relatively well controlled (for example, Japan, South Korea and Singapore).

For this zone, the current measures (facilityba­sed quarantine for 14 days and testing twice during that period) could apply, albeit with some refinement­s.

Facilityba­sed quarantine periods could be shorter and replaced with home quarantine.

The isolation period at home could be combined with the usual PCR testing, digital tracking, mask use and heavy fines for any breaches.

Various East Asian jurisdicti­ons, including

Taiwan, have successful­ly used home quarantine.

As above, a bond could be used to encourage adherence to the conditions.

Red: additional measures or no travel

Jurisdicti­ons with uncontroll­ed pandemic spread (including the US, UK, Russia and India) would fall into this category.

For New Zealanders returning from these places, the government could require pretravel measures in addition to the current quarantine.

The form of these measures needs careful developmen­t, but could include evidence of both pretravel home quarantine (for three days or more) and negative pretravel test results.

New Zealand should evaluate the experience in places already using pretravel Covid19 testing to determine the most feasible approach. At present, Cyprus, the Bahamas,

Bermuda, Hawaii, Hong Kong and Italy require proof of a negative result on arrival.

Such measures add to the burden these travellers face, but can be justified. They reduce the risk of outbreaks on incoming aircraft as well as the load on the isolation/ quarantine facilities.

Quarantine facilities for these travellers could be restricted to those outside Auckland, for example at the Ohakea air base, ideally in purposebui­lt facilities with properly designed ventilatio­n and no shared spaces.

If all these measures still resulted in high numbers of infected travellers arriving in New Zealand, we would need to consider suspending travel from these redzone jurisdicti­ons.

New legislatio­n could empower the Government to allow for such constraint on the right of citizens to return to

New Zealand from highrisk countries during a global pandemic. — theconvers­ation. com

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? A recent border failure led to a Covid19 outbreak in Auckland.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES A recent border failure led to a Covid19 outbreak in Auckland.

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