New Zealand records 75 new COVID-19 cases, with all but one found in Auckland

The new infections reported on Wednesday are up from 49 on Tuesday and 53 on Monday, but still below a peak of 83 on Sunday.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. Source: AAP

New Zealand has recorded another 75 coronavirus cases, with all but one of them found in Auckland.

The new infections reported on Wednesday are up from 49 on Tuesday and 53 on Monday, but still below a peak of 83 on Sunday.

Prior to announcing the figure, Director General of Health Ashley Bloomfield predicted that cases would continue to fall but some "bouncing around" would be likely, as occurred during New Zealand's last outbreak.

Of the new cases, 74 are from Auckland and one, likely to be a historical case, is from Wellington.

The new cases take the overall outbreak to 687. Hospitalisations remain steady at 32, with eight in intensive care units and three requiring ventilation.
Dr Bloomfield told television station Three "it does look like we hit the peak a few days ago" when cases reached 83 on Sunday.

"People shouldn't worry if it does go up again. The key thing is we're on our way down," he said.

Experts share Dr Bloomfield's optimism - but caution against weak spots among New Zealand's current settings.

Nick Wilson, a professor of public health at the University of Otago, called recent drops "encouraging", noting the lower proportion of transmission in the community.

However, he notes with concern recent reports of three infections at an Auckland chicken-processing factory.

"The Delta variant is very infectious and so you could have a problem with an essential worker, causing infection in a workplace, so we could still have a super spreading event," he told AAP.

"We've seen very big outbreaks in meat processing plants in the US with atmospheric conditions in these factories and people being in close proximity."

He recommends an upgrading of workplace mask-wearing rules.
On the weekend, Ms Ardern also foreshadowed a tightening of workplace restrictions, but on Wednesday COVID-19 Minister Chris Hipkins said the government was happy with its current settings.

"We review information every day ... we haven't made further decisions on that yet," he said.

Dr Wilson cautioned against complacency.

"The government has been very slow on masks and it hasn't still hasn't mandated at the alert level four for masks in factories and office workers who are essential workers. That is one of its biggest mistakes, unfortunately," he said.

Among Dr Wilson's other suggestions are prioritising vaccination of essential workers and reducing worker numbers at businesses allowed to operated.

Respected COVID-19 modeller Shaun Hendy, a physics professor at the University of Auckland, said he was pleased to finally see a downwards trend in this outbreak, predicting "ups and downs" in case numbers this week.

Dr Hendy agreed workplaces remain a risk. 

"It's where people are routinely in close contact and it poses the most risk. Compliance at level four could still be an issue," he told AAP.

Also on Wednesday, Ms Ardern's government reduced restrictions for many New Zealanders.

After a fortnight at level four lockdown, the government lowered all places south of Auckland to level three, allowing most Kiwis the luxury of takeaway food.

Health officials also confirmed another bumper day of vaccinations, with 84,971 doses administered - around 1.6 per cent of the population.


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3 min read
Published 1 September 2021 1:06pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:53pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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