Sydneysiders 'sitting ducks'

Sydneysiders have been described as "sitting ducks" as Gladys Berejiklian is warned by one health expert to "face up to reality" and put the city in lockdown or risk a greater COVID-19 outbreak.

The NSW Premier admitted this was "perhaps the scariest period" the state has been through since the start of the pandemic but did not enforce a lockdown as the city's cluster grew to 36 yesterday.

Strategic Health Consultant Professor Bill Bowtell said Sydney had adopted many restrictions associated with a lockdown - like travel restriction and mask wearing - but that health authorities needed to go further while the vaccination uptake was so low.

READ MORE: Testing ramped up 650km from Sydney after virus found in sewage

Bondi Beach drive-through COVID-19 Clinic, Sydney.

"We should face up to reality. The longer we avoid going into lockdown, the longer we will take to come out of it," Professor Bowtell told Today.

"You can call it a lockdown or a lockout. People in Great Sydney can't leave the area yet this has now spread to Melbourne and is clearly spreading around the Greater metropolitan area.

"The failures in vaccination, the failures in quarantine have unfortunately left Sydneysiders at sitting ducks for what's coming.

READ MORE: Testing ramped up 650km from Sydney after virus found in sewage

"So let's get real. Let's forget about whether it's a lockdown or a lockout or restriction of movement... the plans of even in Sydney have been greatly disrupted at the beginning of the school holidays by what's going on.

"I think we have to get a grip on what's going to have to happen."

Professor Bowtell said the Delta variant was far more contagious than the strain Sydney had previously battled and urged health authorities to take a new strategy.

"The Delta variant is really transmissible, and we did not upgrade our quarantine arrangements at Sydney airport and that's a big fail," he said.

"The virus is now spreading in the community where the overwhelming majority of people are not vaccinated when, really, they ought to be.

https://twitter.com/NSWHealth/status/1408048605206749200?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet

If this were Tel Aviv today, 57 per cent of people in Tel Aviv are vaccinated. In Sydney, 3 per cent.

Another 11 new cases were announced yesterday, which took the number linked to the Bondi cluster to 36.

The list of exposure sites is getting longer, with more than 30 alerts announced since 5pm yesterday.

NSW Parliament itself became an exposure site after Minister Adam Marshall tested positive, while the outbreak has stretched its tentacles to Melbourne after a visitor picked the virus up before travelling home.

READ MORE: Needle-free coronavirus vaccine trial begins in Australia

Fears cluster could spread

Testing is already being ramped up hundreds of kilometres north-west of Sydney after coronavirus was detected at the sewage treatment plant in Bourke, raising fears how far the cluster may have already spread beyond the state capital.

Health authorities said it was the first time the virus had been detected at the plant, which serves about 2000 people.

Locals were urged to watch closely for the onset of symptoms as health authorities sought to "urgently" boost testing capacity in the remote area, more than 600 kilometres north-west of Sydney.

Two workers at a dry cleaners in Melbourne have now tested positive.

"I do want to stress that my level of concern is medium to high across New South Wales but at the same time, a couple of things that we are pleased about is that all the new cases but one are linked and that one is under investigation," Ms Berejiklian said.

"We do expect more cases in the coming days but we also please expect everybody to do the right thing."



from 9News https://ift.tt/3jc1zva
via IFTTT

Post a Comment

0 Comments