Rotorua Daily Post

Mandate proposal shows lack of trust

- Luke Kirkness

They say old habits die hard, and that’s why I think Professor Michael Baker recommends mandating isolation for the flu. He called for the Government to look at legislatin­g stay-at-home orders for the flu, treating the illness the same as Covid.

Not everyone was on board, with one Tauranga cafe co-owner saying such a mandate would be “smacking us in the face once again”.

But maybe Baker has spotted something in the nation’s public health response.

In the Bay of Plenty, there’s been a recent gastro outbreak as well as the flu, and much of the country is experienci­ng the same.

Some people have been forced to take leave with the flu, too, and cases have filled GP clinics and clogged emergency department­s.

Covid’s not going anywhere soon, either, with nationwide daily community cases averaging 6825 over the seven days to Saturday — up more than 2000 from the previous week.

At the same time, some people have become pretty complacent about Covid and the precaution­s to keep it at bay.

Mask use has crashed in places such as supermarke­ts and retail, while social distancing is basically non-existent.

I’ll hazard a guess that plenty of people aren’t staying home, either, when they’re ill.

Continuing to work and doing other things such as grocery shopping while ill was the way of the world for lots of workers and employers pre-pandemic, and I fear that bad habit is returning.

Mix that in with the fact more than 1.3 million Kiwis have had the virus and the number is bound to be higher, potentiall­y leaving them with three months or so of immunity and possibly affecting their awareness.

I wonder if this is why Baker came out with those comments.

Brew Bar and Croucher Brewing co-owner Paul Croucher highlighte­d the issue well, too, saying society was “just not willing to be mandated at the moment”.

“It’s a little bit frustratin­g because those mandates are set to protect the greater good.”

No one should need to be told to stay at home, and plenty of comments on social media say so, but the rise in Covid and flu cases might suggest they do.

If someone doesn’t care to follow public health precaution­s any more, that’s up to them but that’s a very self-centred way of looking at things when we should be looking out for one another.

No one likes being sick and plenty of us are sick of the mandates, but they are there for a reason, as is the public health advice we are taught as children.

Ultimately, people need to take responsibi­lity for keeping themselves and others safe if they want to avoid the health and financial costs of being sick.

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