Source: NSW Health
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The reason NSW isn’t defeating deltaAaron PatrickSenior correspondent
Jul 26, 2021 – 2.09pm
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NSW Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant has urged people to stop visiting other households. Nick Moir
One month into the great Sydney coronavirus lockdown the number of daily infections is stubbornly consistent.
On Monday, 76 new COVID-19-carriers were reported circulating in society, up from 62, 71, 70, 70 and 60 in the previous five days.
In Victoria, the same figures were, in reverse chronological order: 0, 2, 3, 2, 6, 4.
Why is the NSW lockdown,
at an estimated cost of $1 billion a week, spinning its wheels like a car on blocks?
The answer is: rulebreakers.
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Too many Sydneysiders, particularly from working-class suburbs in south-west Sydney, are disobeying a ban on visiting relatives.
“We are seeing that transmissions at the moment are being driven by two factors,” chief health officer Kerry Chant said on Monday, after delivering the unhappy news that four weeks of severe limitations on basic freedoms haven’t tamed the delta variant. “One is ongoing contact between households.”
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The politicisation of pandemic punditry“I think sometimes people define what they see as their household as a bit broader,” she said. “They see their aunts, uncles, the next-door neighbour family as almost as safe.”
Visits verboten
The rules are strict. Visiting another household is only allowed for compassionate reasons, or by individuals responsible for a resident’s care. Family social visits are verboten.
Even after extra movement controls were imposed on south-west Sydney a week ago, including mandatory testing, 70 per cent of infections reported Monday were from the area and Western Sydney.
Chant sounded apologetic to call out the selfish behaviour, presumably conscious that it required her to single out a landlocked slice of a city that defines social status by harbour views.
“Can I express my deep understanding of how it is so important; people’s extended family and friends,” she said. “But at this time when we’re in such a crisis, it’s really important that people only stay within the household unit.”
Double inoculations
The other reason the lockdown isn’t succeeding, according to Chant, doesn’t actually cause infections.
Monday’s main message from the NSW government, which took up far more press conference time than family fraternisation, was frustration at the pace of vaccinations.
Queues at the NSW Vaccination Centre in Homebush, Sydney, in early July. Getty
If NSW embraced the AstraZeneca vaccine, Chant said, some 350,000 people could be inoculated a week, more than double the 156,760 injections in the state last week, reported by the NSW health department.
Such are the challenges consumer preferences pose to policymakers.
The NSW government is working on a plan to inoculate what it has realised are the truly essentially pandemic workers: truck drivers and other cogs of the logistics chains which keep the economy running.
Because transport and warehouses employ young people, they haven’t been a vaccine priority. A lot of the workforce lives in South-West Sydney too, and moves around the city, spreading a virus their young bodies don’t realise they are carrying.
Targeting them sounds like a sensible plan, except that vaccines don’t become effective for two-to-three weeks, according to Chant.
Slowing COVID-19 transmission next month doesn’t offer much solace to some one million schoolchildren locked out of their playgrounds and class rooms by a virus that doesn’t kill them.
Maybe it is time to put comfort visits to aunty Olive on pause?
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