Otago Daily Times

Staying ahead of Covid

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WE must stay vigilant. It looked as though New Zealand had another narrow escape from the clutches of Covid19 but there was another flutter of fright last night when two more people were urgently retested after being released from quarantine and posting ‘‘weak positive’’ tests.

New Zealand’s epidemiolo­gists should not be followed blindly. They know their speciality and lead on the science. But the politician­s and the authoritie­s are ultimately responsibl­e.

Neverthele­ss, New Zealand is fortunate in receiving levelheade­d advice from the likes of Michael Baker, from the University of Otago. It is neither shrill nor, usually, unrealisti­c.

Prof Baker is calling for harder new measures, predicting more incursions of the virus before vaccines can be introduced. The crucial wider point he, and others, are making is that continuous improvemen­t and revision is necessary. We have to “get ahead” of the changing situation and constantly upgrade. Standing still will lead to failure.

Cited are soaring overseas transmissi­on, a rise in cases at the border, including higherrisk variants and the ongoing potential for breaches in New Zealand’s system.

It would seem a matter of time before another outbreak. How disastrous that would be.

Prof Baker and his colleagues have called for the Government to “turn down the tap” from massinfect­ed countries. Prof Baker has also advocated a fiveday preflight hotel quarantine, at least two preflight tests and a reduction in the number of MIQ spaces.

The Government, and the Ministry of Health in particular, have a history of reacting late rather than proactivel­y. That damning report from Sir Brian Roche and Heather Simpson, finally released just before Christmas, outlined bungles, missteps and bad communicat­ions.

It took many months to respond to the Opposition’s call (which also came from epidemiolo­gists) for predepartu­re tests from most countries. The delay from outside expert advice mask use being promoted and, in some cases, mandated was even longer.

All of Dr Baker’s suggestion­s might not be possible. But the numbers of incomers from highrisk countries should be reduced, and they should be in separate facilities to those from the likes of Australia.

The MIQ facilities, which after the bad start largely do a good job, also need regular auditing and regular improvemen­t, not just after a failure.

New Zealand, despite being told it was at the front of the queue, seems to be down the vaccine list, and reports yesterday of vaccine supply problems are concerning. The border screen must do its job for most of this year.

Human error, on top of system error, is everpresen­t. Clearly, there is no place for complacenc­y from the authoritie­s or the public at large.

The overwhelmi­ng of Northland testing stations this week did not reflect well on those authoritie­s or the populace. Was there a problem with communicat­ing priorities for testing? Why was Healthline advice inconsiste­nt? Were the authoritie­s too slow to put in sufficient testers at short notice? Could the systems better sort those with symptoms or those who were “contactplu­s” from the worried well?

And are too many of the people swinging too easily from being lackadaisi­cal to panicking?

One ongoing issue is in part the way the minister Chris Hipkins and the Directorge­neral of health Ashley Bloomfield are communicat­ing.

There was a time when reassuranc­e was vital. But the credibilit­y of soothing words from both these men, and about the way officials are supposedly doing everything possible and everything well has worn thin.

That report last year showed how hollow some assurances were. Please, give it to us straight. We do not, or at least should not, expect perfection from the Government and the ministry. But “spin” is counterpro­ductive.

It would seem the Government and the Ministry of Health and we the public all need regular wakeup calls so that our guard can be kept up and continuous­ly made better.

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