The Press

Isolation at home may be possible

- Bridie Witton bridie.witton@stuff.co.nz

People may be able to bypass a managed isolation and quarantine facility and isolate at home in the ‘‘longer term’’, Covid19 Response Minister Chris Hipkins says.

The Government was looking at longer-term ‘‘alternativ­e isolation options’’ which could include selfisolat­ing at home for people returning from overseas, but Hipkins could not put a time frame on any changes.

‘‘It’s not going to happen this year, I don’t think, and certainly in the early part of next year I imagine that things are going to continue much the same way as they have been,’’ he said during a vaccinatio­n update in Wellington yesterday.

It followed requests from people who wanted to isolate at home, rather than go into managed isolation and quarantine facilities, as well as businesses and universiti­es who said they could run their own isolation processes.

‘‘They haven’t suited us up to this point because of all the logistics involved and the increased risk involved in them, but as we look to a different kind of approach to Covid-19 risks, as the proportion of people vaccinated is higher [and] as the spread of Covid-19 around the rest of the world starts to turn down . . . all different kinds of possibilit­ies come back onto the table,’’ he said.

The Government was already setting up a nationwide community managed isolation and quarantine scheme, Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield said.

Taranaki and Nelson Marlboroug­h district health boards were advertisin­g for local co-ordinators, and work on the service began last July.

‘‘We have asked each DHB to look at what arrangemen­ts they could get in place locally to be able to safely isolate cases and contacts of cases, so that is what that advert relates to,’’ he said.

‘‘Different DHBs are putting in place contingenc­y plans, so if necessary they could isolate people safely in their local community without having to go into a managed isolation facility.’’

Hipkins said people in Tokoroa connected to the August outbreak isolated outside managed isolation and quarantine facilities.

A Ministry of Health spokespers­on said community managed isolation and quarantine would help people self-isolate at home, and address inequities which could be exacerbate­d by this.

Funding was also available for local accommodat­ion options if someone wasn’t able to self-isolate at home, and it wasn’t appropriat­e to moved them to a facility.

It was also a response to inter-family transmissi­on of Covid-19, which had resulted in extended periods of isolation and quarantine, but community cases and contacts whose needs were best met in an MIQ facility would continue to be transferre­d there, they said.

Bloomfield warned yesterday that the pandemic was far from over with cases rising across the world.

 ?? STUFF ?? Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield warned yesterday that the pandemic was far from over.
STUFF Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield warned yesterday that the pandemic was far from over.

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