The New Zealand Herald

Lift your game

Goff’s message to Ports of Auckland

- John Weekes

An epidemiolo­gist is warning the Covid-19 alert levels “desperatel­y” need revision, due to new mutations and the fact New Zealand’s four-tier system is almost a year old.

New Covid-19 varieties, some believed to be more infectious than earlier strains, have emerged independen­tly in Brazil, South Africa and the United Kingdom.

Dr Michael Baker said New Zealand’s alert level system worked well when introduced but was in need of revision, and an integrated national facemask policy could be considered.

He said a new alert system could have more than four tiers.

It was crucial, he said, that security measures for people leaving managed isolation and quarantine were enforceabl­e but not draconian.

Baker said current regional rule variations, such as Auckland’s public transport facemask mandate, could be confusing.

Auckland’s Pullman Hotel is emptying out as the Government works to decommissi­on it temporaril­y and determine how a guest was infected with a mutant strain.

One man called the Herald to say a relative about to leave the Pullman worried she was putting herself and others at risk by flying south to Wellington to self-isolate.

Rules for the Pullman changed after a guest with a new South African strain left the hotel and visited more than two dozen Northland locations not knowing she had the virus.

Since Thursday, Pullman guests leaving managed isolation have been asked to get a day-five, post-departure test and stay home until returning a negative result for Covid19.

Microbiolo­gist Dr Siouxsie Wiles said Pullman guests flying to other cities for self-isolation were not posing a greater risk if mask-wearing on flights was adhered to.

The Ministry of Health has said guests leaving the hotel for their five days of self-isolation can wear a mask while using public transport to get home.

Wiles said airlines should not serve food and drink on domestic flights as the short duration of domestic flights made it feasible not to do so.

The Pullman will soon have no guests but other hotels in the system are full. Not one vacancy before May 31 was listed on the official MIQ website yesterday.

Meanwhile, the roll-out of vaccines has given hope to some wealthy countries in recent weeks.

But the World Heath Organisati­on has voiced concern about wealthy countries securing vaccine stocks while some poorer nations struggle to do so.

“It’s not acceptable that the Global South is going to have to wait another year or two,” Wiles said yesterday.

Apart from possible ethical issues, it was impractica­l for wealthy countries to allow poorer ones to fall behind in vaccinatio­ns, she said.

Wiles believed countries such as New Zealand, Australia and Taiwan – which achieved eliminatio­n – could be at risk if huge outbreaks involving new strains emerged elsewhere.

An Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce study found “vaccine nationalis­m” could cost the global economy up to $12.8 trillion dollars.

That cost, many times higher than the price of supplying poor countries with vaccines, derived from projected shocks to global trade and economic production.

Wiles said hoarding was not necessaril­y a funding or foreign aid issue, but related to vaccine supply.

She said India and South Africa had asked the World Trade Organisati­on to temporaril­y suspend intellectu­al property rights so poorer countries could access Covid vaccines.

But some wealthy countries rejected that, saying IP systems were needed to incentivis­e new inventions of vaccines and treatments.

No new Covid-19 cases were reported yesterday and New Zealand had 69 active cases.

By yesterday afternoon, more than 97 per cent of people who had left managed isolation at the Pullman between January 9 and 24 had tested negative.

The Ministry of Health awaits results from five other Pullman guests.

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Dr Michael Baker
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Dr SouxsieWil­es

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