The New Zealand Herald

NZ united behind Covid strategy

We accept Ardern’s decisions for now, but Govt and bureaucrac­y must lift their game

- Matthew Hooton matthew.hooton@excetium.com Matthew Hooton is an Aucklandba­sed public relations consultant.

This week’s NZ Herald-Kantar poll shows a nation united behind our current Covid strategy. Fully 85 per cent of us agree with Jacinda Ardern, Judith Collins and everyone else who matters that we should stick with the eliminatio­n objective — as Ardern puts it — “for now”. Just 13 per cent of us are ready to start living — and some dying — with the virus today.

Prominent University of Auckland science communicat­or Siouxsie Wiles says she is relieved by the results, claiming unnamed domestic and internatio­nal pundits have been “screaming” for New Zealand to drop eliminatio­n. She must watch more Fox News and read more obscure blogsites than I do.

Across every party in Parliament and the entire New Zealand media — North Island and South Island, rightleani­ng and left, populist and more scholarly — there has been universal public support, all things considered, for Ardern’s bold but well-signalled move to put the whole country into level 4 the very day Delta was detected. No one in the New Zealand media disputes that Auckland must remain at level 4 for the time being, and probably for a good couple of weeks of zero community transmissi­on.

This national consensus means New Zealand is on track to eliminate Delta this month. Our chances of success are most threatened by those fuelling division when none exists. Such efforts seem to be about creating a false stab-in-the-back narrative to shift blame from Ardern to her critics if this lockdown fails.

The more surprising part of the NZ Herald- Kantar poll is that a slim 52 per cent majority believes we should move away from eliminatio­n once more than 70 per cent of us are fully vaccinated.

That vaccinatio­n rate seems a bit low. Even those most eager to see borders return to normal talk more about 80 per cent, or higher. Vaccinolog­ists seek over 90 per cent.

The good news is that polling by UMR suggests 82 per cent of us plan to be vaccinated, and over 70 per cent of those eligible have already at least booked.

Moreover, it will surely not be long before the age of vaccinatio­n is reduced further, from the current 12 years to 5. As someone who happily had my 8- and 10-year old daughters jabbed against every conceivabl­e exotic disease to take them backpackin­g in India, the sooner the better.

With the polling suggesting just 6 per cent of New Zealanders are staunchly opposed to vaccinatio­n, there’s hope we could get above 90 per cent early in 2022. After all, according to the Ministry of Health, New Zealand’s vaccinatio­n rates for pneumococc­al, polio, hepatitis B, haemophilu­s influenzae type b, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles, mumps and rubella are all at or above 90 per cent.

The high throughput at the new drive-through vaccinatio­n centres, establishe­d by the local health authoritie­s and iwi in Auckland, also doesn’t suggest vaccine hesitancy is much of a problem.

Criticism of Ardern is not that she again locked down the country on August 17. Everyone accepts she had no choice, given the circumstan­ces. The criticism is why those circumstan­ces prevailed.

The circumstan­ces include inexplicab­le delays in vaccinatio­n procuremen­t, the failure to vaccinate border and other frontline workers, the lack of saliva testing, the absence of Bluetooth tracking and tracing, mishaps at MIQ facilities, the nonexpansi­on of ICU capability, and the brutality of the booking system for New Zealanders abroad needing to get home and towards those dying and their loved ones.

Being angry about the Ardern Government’s operationa­l failures is not the same as opposing her objective, strategy or individual decisions. In fact, it is essential those failures be highlighte­d and those responsibl­e be held to account — in real time by the media, promptly by the Auditor-General and Brian Roche’s continuous monitoring committee, and ultimately by the inevitable Royal Commission into New Zealand’s Covid response and — if necessary — by the judiciary.

Strong support for the eliminatio­n strategy “for now” is also compatible with wanting to face up to what follows it, and when. In this, Ardern is guided by New Zealand’s most distinguis­hed epidemiolo­gist, Sir David Skegg, and his expert committee. Insiders say is she is less swayed by those who prefer to give their advice through the media, whether academics or pundits.

Skegg stands with Ardern, every other party in Parliament, the media and the overwhelmi­ng majority of New Zealanders in backing eliminatio­n “for now”. He foretold the arrival of Delta and the need for a tough lockdown just before both happened.

Equally, he said the eliminatio­n strategy would need to be further considered “in the coming months”.

That considerat­ion, he said, would need to take into account the “global situation and all the emerging evidence about Delta and new variants of the virus, as well as about the immunity conferred by vaccinatio­n”. New Zealand’s vaccinatio­n coverage, “including in particular regions and population groups, will influence our options”.

Skegg is also clear that considerat­ions other than epidemiolo­gy are inevitable but avoids pronouncin­g on issues of human rights, the value of liberty or the social, educationa­l and economic impacts of various options. He accepts that Ardern has alternativ­e experts on such matters, and that it is her unenviable job to weigh them up.

In reality, New Zealand is — as on pretty much everything, despite our national conceits — much more a policy-taker on Covid than a policymake­r.

Except for Australia and New Zealand, almost every other country has failed to eliminate Covid. In Australia, the Federal and New South Wales government­s have now both given up. Victoria has just followed. Queensland seems to have succeeded in eliminatin­g the current outbreak, with us likely to join them. But Covid will soon become endemic in Australia, along with Europe, Africa, Asia and the Americas.

As the NZ Herald-Kantar poll indicates, a majority of New Zealanders has already recognised — even based on too low a vaccinatio­n rate — that the eliminatio­n strategy must eventually come to an end here. It is not treasonous to accept that. Nor to think we should start confrontin­g and discussing it.

Most importantl­y, academics, the media, the Opposition and the public have a responsibi­lity to continuall­y put the blowtorch on Ardern to ensure her Government prepares for the end of the eliminatio­n era a hell of a lot better than it did the arrival of Delta. Cheerleadi­ng any government is the most likely way to make it lazy and sloppy. With Covid, that risks costing people their lives.

Academics, the media, the Opposition and the public have a responsibi­lity to continuall­y put the blowtorch on Ardern to ensure her Government prepares for the end of the eliminatio­n era a hell of a lot better than it did for the arrival of Delta.

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 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ?? We’ve queued to get tested and queued to get vaccinated — suggesting hesitancy won’t be much of a problem.
Photo / Brett Phibbs We’ve queued to get tested and queued to get vaccinated — suggesting hesitancy won’t be much of a problem.

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