Sunday, June 7, 2020

New Zealand is now free of coronavirus

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Auckland, New Zealand — There are no known novel coronavirus cases in New Zealand for the first time since COVID-19 was first confirmed in the country on Feb. 28, the government announced Sunday afternoon local time.

The big picture: Shaun Hendy, who heads Te Pūnaha Matatini, a scientific body advising the government on COVID-19, said locking down early with some of the world’s toughest measures was “crucial” to NZ’s success, as other countries struggle with slowing the virus’ spread and rising death tolls.


  • “This arrested the virus before it was widespread amongst essential service workers and meant that our contact tracers had fewer people to trace when new cases were found,” Hendy told Axios.
  • “We ramped up testing early which led to very effective case isolation.”

Of note: New Zealand is set to declare the coronavirus eradicated on June 15.

  • This is based on two full cycles of COVID-19 transmission (28 days) passing since the last community transmission case ended self-isolation, per a Ministry of Health statement to Axios.
  • The ministry said the final remaining case had been symptom-free for 48 hours and is regarded as recovered.

By the numbers: NZ has confirmed 22 deaths from COVID-19 and 1,154 cases from almost 292,000 tests. It has reported no new cases for 17 days.

  • Enforcement has played a key role during lockdown. From March 25 when the most restrictive measures (level 4) were imposed to May 29 after two weeks on level 2, police reported 7,127 breaches and launched 336 prosecutions.

Background: On March 19, with 28 cases and no deaths, gatherings of over 100 people were banned and borders closed to all foreign travelers.

  • On March 23, non-essential businesses closed, events and gatherings were canceled and schools shut to all but essential workers’ children as lockdown level 3 began.
  • That gave Kiwis 48 hours to prepare for level 4, when all schools closed, food delivery services halted, only essential local travel was permitted, and water activities like swimming were banned.
  • New Zealanders had to stay home at night and in their household “bubbles,” socially distancing from all others.
  • Jogging, walking and visiting local supermarkets, drug and grocery stores became a popular past-time for almost five weeks before non-essential businesses and schools reopened at level 3.

For the record: Three barbers and a cafe drew crowds when they resumed service in Auckland at 12:01 a.m., as NZ moved to level 2 on May 14.

  • Barbershop customer Brad Ross enjoyed the warm fall weather and visiting the beach. “But then I lost my grandpa,” he said.
  • A travel ban prevented him from making the 90-minute trip to where his grandfather lived.
  • Ross and friend Oliver Steel think Kiwis got on with lockdown without protests like those in the U.S. because of the laid-back culture. “We don’t make too much fuss,” Steel said.

What’s next: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was meeting with her Cabinet on June 8 to discuss moving to level 1, when “few restrictions” will remain. But border controls and public hygiene measures would “remain critical.” All new border arrivals will be tested.

What to expect: Hendy said it’s “inevitable” there’ll be more COVID-19 cases when the border eventually reopens or if there’s a winter “flare-up.” Effective testing, quarantine and contact-tracing strategies will help “spot any outbreak before it gets too large.”

  • “The lockdown was very effective but also very hard on many people and businesses, so we should be doing everything we can to avoid another one,” Hendy said.
  • “Only as a last resort would we recommend locking down again, but we have the advantage now that we know a short, sharp lockdown is very effective against COVID-19.”

Go deeper: Australia and New Zealand reopen after coronavirus cases plummet

Source: https://www.axios.com/new-zealand-no-coronavirus-cases-covid-19-free-1f209ae3-46e5-4343-b076-189bde8c3953.html
Droolin’ Dog sniffed out this story and shared it with you.
The Article Was Written/Published By: Rebecca Falconer



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