Australia COVID LIVE updates Cases continue to grow across the nation as states and territories set sights on vaccination targets
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Itâs been a busy morning, so here are the key points you might have missed:
NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard addresses the Saturday morning COVID-19 briefing.Credit:Anna Kucera
Huge lines of people wanting to get vaccinated against COVID-19 are seen at Melbourne Town Hall on Swanston Street on Friday.Credit:Paul Jeffers
Queensland has recorded two new virus cases on Saturday, as the state keeps a watchful eye for any resurgence of the Delta strain. One of the cases was detected in hotel quarantine, and the other was a four-year-old girl already announced on Friday evening, who was a close contact of a truck driver who previously tested positive.
Victorian health authorities have identified a number of new COVID-19 exposure sites, including supermarkets and service stations.
Bostik Australia at Thomastown in Melbourneâs north was declared a tier-1 site on Monday, August 30 between 2pm and 10.30pm, and on Tuesday, August 31 between 12.30pm and 2pm.
Assetinsure at Wheelers Hill in the cityâs south was declared a tier-1 site on Wednesday, August 25 between 8.30am and 6pm.
Anyone who attended either of those sites during the specified timeframes has to immediately get tested for COVID-19, and quarantine for 14 days from their exposure date, regardless of whether they receive a negative test result.
The remainder of the new sites are tier-2. Anyone who attended them during the specified timeframes has to urgently get tested for COVID-19, and isolate until they receive a negative test result.
The new tier-2 sites are:
A full list of Victorian exposure sites can be found here.
Victoriaâs Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton says he wants to see more private sector residential aged care workers vaccinated against COVID-19, in light of a staff member testing positive for the virus in Melbourneâs south-east.
A staff member at Japara Bayview Aged Care Home at Carrum Downs is among Saturdayâs new local cases. Professor Sutton said 62 per cent of the staff there were fully vaccinated against COVID-19, and 82 per cent had received at least one dose.
Huge lines of people wanting to get vaccinated against COVID-19 are seen at Melbourne Town Hall on Swanston Street on Friday.Credit:Paul Jeffers
âI would like to see it at a much higher rate,â Professor Sutton said during Saturdayâs COVID-19 update.âThe Commonwealth has responsibility for our private sector aged care staff vaccination [and we] will support it in whatever way we can.
âWeâve obviously opened up our hubs at different times for all aged care staff and weâve really pushed for them to get vaccinated.
âWeâre moving to mandating vaccination for aged care staff as well, but for anyone whoâs holding out for that mandate, [we urge them to] come through when they can get protection now for themselves.
âOur public sector aged care vaccination rates are very high, in the high 80s, but ... I want it to be at the highest possible rate, thatâll be close to 100 per cent.â
Victoriaâs Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton says he thinks itâs entirely possible the state can plateau with high vaccination coverage and a relatively lower COVID-19 caseload.
Speaking during Saturdayâs COVID-19 update, he said while Victorians were all âfed upâ with being stuck at home and not being able to see their friends and family, âthere is really only one way to protect yourself, and thatâs following the rulesâ.
A deserted Bourke Street Mall during Melbourneâs 6th lockdown.Credit:Jason South
âThereâs no question that itâs hard, [however], the alternative is too awful to contemplate,â he said.
âTens of thousands of cases could be our reality if we donât maintain ... those really tricky constraints on our life, [and] thatâs just the awful dilemma that weâve had right through.
âWeâve held a tsunami of cases back for 20 months. Itâs come to us in waves, weâve beaten it back in waves [and] weâve got maybe the biggest challenge that weâve ever faced.
âBut weâve also got a proper pathway out of here with vaccination, so hold the line in these last weeks and months until we get the high vaccination coverage that means that we can have greater confidence about seeing people ... initially outdoors, initially in those ventilated settings, and in smaller numbers, but we will get there.â
Victoriaâs Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton has urged people in the state to take advantage of click and collect at supermarkets if they can, saying âmany thousands of Victorians will shop alongside those who are not yet diagnosed with COVID-19â³.
Brett Sutton has urged people in the state to take advantage of click and collect at supermarkets.Credit:Janie Barrett
He said authorities had seen transmission between people âgoing through the same checkout within a couple of minutesâ, and while supermarkets werenât inherently high-risk, they were high volume for coronavirus contacts.
âSo, a reminder that itâs one member for each household, once a day,â Professor Sutton said during Saturdayâs COVID-19 update.
âIf you can click and collect for your shopping, please do so - go less frequently.
âCheck in with the COVID-safe QR code, wear a mask and keep your distance, including when reaching over someone to get something on the shelf.
âWeâve all seen masks not worn properly and, a mask on a chin does bugger all.â
Victoriaâs Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton has just provided a breakdown of the stateâs new 190 local coronavirus cases. They are:
Professor Sutton said there had been one new case at the Japara Bayview Aged Care Home at Carrum Downs. He said 62 per cent of the staff there have been fully vaccinated, and 82 per cent have had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
The positive case at the aged care facility was vaccinated.
âThereâs in-reach testing being done there today and thereâs a local GP to vaccinate additional residents and staff and coming days,â Professor Sutton said.
Victoriaâs Minister for Industry Support and Recovery Martin Pakula has just announced another $2.34 billion in support for businesses affected by the latest COVID-19 lockdown extension.
He said that will be doled out to 175,000 businesses over a four-week period, taking the state through to the end of September.
The support package is being jointly funded by the state and Commonwealth governments.
The $2.34 billion in support will be spread across various programs, with $289 million going to the licensed hospitality venue fund in the form of grants up to $20,000 per week.
The small business COVID hardship fund is getting an additional $448 million added to it, and the grant amount under that fund will increase from $14,000 to 20,000. The number of businesses supported by that fund will also increase from 18,000 to 35,000.
Money from the new package will also go to the Alpine Support Program - another $11.2 million - as well as the business costs assistance program, which supports some 132,000 businesses.
Under that scheme, businesses generally get a grant of $2800 per week.
There are 76 people in hospital with COVID-19 in Victoria.
Of those people, 23 are in intensive care, and 14 are on a ventilator.
Victoria currently has 1301 active coronavirus cases and of them, 205 are aged between zero and nine. Another 213 are aged between 10 and 19, 316 are in their 20s, and 224 are in their 30s.
New Zealandâs health ministry recorded 20 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday and one death from the virus.
There was no media conference today.
In a statement, the Health Ministry said a woman in her 90s who was a confirmed case of COVID-19 died in North Shore Hospital in Auckland last night.
On Friday 28 cases in the community were confirmed, 27 of which were in Auckland and one was in Wellington. On Thursday the total was 49, while on Wednesday it was 75.
The city of Auckland remains under strict stage 4 lockdown, but the rest of the country is on slightly relaxed level three restrictions, which allow some childcare and the purchase of take-away food.
On Thursday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern defended New Zealandâs approach to combating coronavirus against criticism from Australia that trying to eliminate the fast-spreading Delta variant was âabsurdâ.
Asked during a daily update on coronavirus, what she thought of criticism from Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg that the Delta variant canât be âeliminatedâ, Ardern insisted elimination was the most sensible strategy until New Zealand is fully vaccinated.
Victorian year 12 students, along with their teachers and examiners, can from Monday start booking priority COVID-19 vaccine appointments at state-run clinics.
The stateâs Health Department said in a tweet on Saturday there would be 50,000 appointments on offer for people in that cohort.
Authorities announced earlier this week a vaccination âblitzâ for final year students in Victoria would run from Tuesday, September 7 through to Sunday, September 17.
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