The New Zealand Herald

Much hinges on clues from woman’s case

Results today of genomic sequencing will decide if alert level escalation is needed

- Derek Cheng analysis

The last thing Ardern wants is a Melbourne-like outbreak, where initial restrictio­ns were a few suburbs shy of where they needed to be.

Alot potentiall­y hinges on today’s results of the genome sequencing for the Auckland woman at the heart of New Zealand’s new mystery Covid-19 case.

If they show a link to a case in a managed isolation facility close to her workplace or home, the outbreak will be contained more easily and Auckland may well avoid any lockdown.

If the source remains elusive, branches of Covid-19 transmissi­on could be spreading in the city and even around the country.

In the meantime, 100,000 people in the Auckland CBD are essentiall­y being asked to be in quasi-level 3, minimising contacts and movements, and wearing a mask and keeping physically distant if they leave home.

The source remains the biggest missing piece of the puzzle, but others include the number of cases as yet undetected, and how far their movements might have spread the virus.

So far the woman is the only case and she has only three close contacts — a colleague and two friends.

She has a small circle of work colleagues, and while there are dozens of residents at the Vincent Residences, where she lives, she herself lived alone, as did one of her identified close contacts.

Locations of potential transmissi­on where the woman and her close contacts visited are all in the Auckland CBD.

For that reason, Covid-19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins said there was no evidence of “enhanced risk” outside the CBD, hence the localised quasi-lockdown.

That’s not to say there are no potential vectors for transmissi­on outside the CBD. The woman was in a customer-facing position at the A-Z

Collection­s store. Diners sitting near her at the Red Pig restaurant might have caught and taken Covid-19 to another region. Her Uber drivers might have become infected and passed the virus to other passengers.

And if any of the common areas in the Vincent turn out to be hotspots for infection, then the potential for the virus to have already spread in all directions is much greater.

The Government is counting on the chances of any of that happening to be slim to none. The last thing Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern wants is a Melbourne-like outbreak, where initial restrictio­ns were a few suburbs shy of where they needed to be.

Indeed Ardern pointed to Melbourne whenever a more localised lockdown was called for during the Auckland August outbreak, which had already spread across the city and into the Waikato by the time it was detected.

Back then, we only had about 20 per cent of cases in managed isolation and quarantine (MIQ) facilities genomicall­y sequenced — pretty poor in terms of shedding light on what remains an elusive source.

Now we are at 55 per cent. More importantl­y, recent cases in MIQ facilities close to the woman’s home and work have been sequenced.

So far the response has followed Ardern’s rapid response plan, with immediate and localised restrictio­ns while further informatio­n is sought.

The plan shows the likelihood of lockdown depending on what happens in the coming days.

If sequencing points to a source and there are only a few new cases, a move to level 2 or even staying at an enhanced level 1 is likely.

If not, and more cases and contacts pop up, level 3 lockdown looms — though it might remain very localised, depending on cases’ movements.

A harder call would be if the source remained a mystery, but very few new cases were found. What should happen if undetected transmissi­on is likely but there’s little evidence of it?

The call for CBD dwellers to wear masks has again raised the question of why it’s not compulsory for public transport and flights at level 1, as well as compulsory QR scanning.

Hipkins suggested doing so might see public compliance crumble, but now might be the time to move

He also helpfully indicated how we’ll tell if it’s good news or bad news by today’s update.

If there is a change to alert levels, the update will be fronted by Ardern.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand