Taranaki Daily News

How Ma¯ori will pay the price of abandoning level 4

- Dr Rawiri Taonui Rawiri Taonui (Te Hikutu¯, Te Kapotai, Nga¯ti Taonui) is an independen­t writer, researcher and adviser. He was New Zealand’s first Professor of Indigenous Studies.

With a record 102 new cases announced on Thursday, the City of Sails has passed the threshold of a runaway Delta event.

Key risk indicators are off the scale. This is the second record in three days.

The average number of daily cases is six times higher than the average during week one of Delta alert level 3, cases with exposure in the community are four times higher.

Daily unlinked cases are 12 times higher, fortnightl­y unlinked cases 20 times higher and hospitalis­ations four times higher.

The Ministry of Health is no longer tracking unlinked clusters because it no longer knows where or how many there are.

The 891 positive cases in isolation exceeds quarantine capacity, many are in less secure isolation units.

This year’s data shows 11 breaches from managed isolation and quarantine (MIQ) occurred when there were more than 30 active cases in MIQ.

Breaches happen because each active case has multiple points of contact, more cases equal more points of contact and that leads to more breaches. There have been six breaches during the current outbreak, of which four were escapes, including three in one evening.

With managed active cases set to pass 1000, there will be further breaches, and eventually more chains of transmissi­on complicati­ng an already out-ofcontrol Delta.

The upward curve of Delta cases has steepened. Delta will go exponentia­l. We will see more record days. Cases will exceed 150 then 200 per day over the next week.

To the week ending October 12, the weekly total of Delta cases increased 44.9 per cent. To the week ending October 19, they jumped 53.4 per cent. The current week increase is 37 per cent and rising.

If the Delta increase continues at 37 per cent over the next two weeks (more likely it will be higher), there will be 4000 cases by November 2. And if the Government does not take decisive action, Delta could reach 10,000 to 15,000 cases by the end of November.

Auckland Ma¯ori are vulnerable. Ma¯ori are 16.7 per cent of the population. We were 5.7 per cent of all cases on September 1.

On Thursday, Ma¯ori were 45.1 per cent of the new 102-case record, 44.9 per cent of all Delta level 3 cases, 29.8 per cent of all cases in the outbreak, 44.2 per cent of all active cases, 23.5 per cent of all those hospitalis­ed and 50 per cent of deaths.

The proportion of Ma¯ori cases has steadily increased. Ma¯ori had the highest cases on Thursday for the 18th day in a row. Four of the highest number of new Ma¯ori cases have come in the last eight days.

According to the unreliable ministry HSU vaccinatio­n index, which undercount­s Ma¯ori by 7 per cent, just 50 per cent of Auckland Ma¯ori are fully vaccinated.

With Delta exponentia­l, there will be 1300 to 1500 Ma¯ori cases by November 2, and unfortunat­ely deaths.

If unchecked the Delta runaway will breach the Auckland and Waikato borders into Northland, the Lakes District, Bay of Plenty, Whanganui and Taranaki, the five district health boards with the lowest Ma¯ori vaccinatio­n rates. The result will be carnage on a scale not seen since 1918.

The Director-General of Health, Dr Ashley Bloomfield, said the record number of cases reiterated the ‘‘vulnerabil­ity of the unvaccinat­ed and the importance of getting vaccinated’’.

While vaccinatio­n is important, the vaccinatio­n narrative is also a smokescree­n for the Government’s premature decisions on September 20 to drop from level 4 to level 3, and on October 1 to relax level 3 restrictio­ns. While we will need to live with Covid-19, attempting to do so when vaccinatio­n rates were as low as they were was a huge mistake that only fed the rapacious Delta outbreak.

Europe, the United Kingdom and the United States initiated the restrictio­n reduction, live-withCovid-19 strategy weeks ago. Their vaccinatio­n rates are about the same as ours now.

Last week the World Health Organisati­on reported that the United States (583,000) and United Kingdom (283,000) had the highest weekly Delta cases in the world, and Europe the highest cases (1.4 million) and deaths (18,000) of all regions.

The paradox is that the rich, higher vaccinated, live-with-Covid West has increasing cases, while the lower vaccinated, poor, and developing world, which is maintainin­g ongoing guarded protocols, has declining cases – Africa down 18 per cent, Latin and South America down 14 per cent and Southeast Asia down 13 per cent.

What will stop Delta? Alert level 4. Had we stayed at alert level 4 in Auckland for a further three to four weeks we would have already beaten Delta. Contrary to the Government narrative that no-one has beaten Delta, other lessprivil­eged countries are pushing Delta numbers down.

Will the Government invoke level 4? They will hesitate because doing so will be to admit the vaccinatio­n and live-with-Covid strategy is flawed.

Like deer in the headlights, the Government succumbed to political pressure from the National Party and ACT, the rantings of former prime minister John Key, and idiot Brian Ta¯maki.

It also over-read a small decline in the September Colmar-Brunton Poll, over-estimated the threat of a freedom anti-vax rebellion, and underestim­ated the resolve of the majority of New Zealanders to do the right thing.

Delta is not about politics. Delta is about making decisions that save lives.

What will it take for the Government to do the right thing? Hundreds of cases and multiple deaths, a considerab­le number of which will be Ma¯ori.

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