NSW records 63,018 new Covid-19 cases, reports Victoria to use hotels for hospital patients

NSW records 63,018 new Covid-19 cases, reports Victoria to use hotels for hospital patients

Posted by : Frank Short Posted on : 14-Jan-2022

I continue to post stories of this nature in the hope that the seriousness of the Covid-19 virtually on the Solomon Islands doorstep is real, threating and a situation that I hope will encourage those who remain at home without having received two vaccinations to prevent getting the corona virus will do so to prevent their own Illness, to their loved ones, including family members and to those in their communities.

I am particularly mindful too of those government employees who run the risk of having their current employment and income source cut off by the end of the month if they remain unvaccinated by then.

Please, rethink one’s reluctance or refusal to be fully vaccinated. The vaccinations still being rolled out at home are all WHO approved, are safe to receive, and offer the best possible aid against getting Covid-19 should it reach Solomon Islands’ shores.

Quoting Radio New Zealand today, Friday, 14 January 2022.

NSW has once again sustained its deadliest day of the Covid-19 pandemic so far, with 29 deaths and 63,018 infections in the latest reporting period.

The number of people in hospital with the virus is now 2,525, of which 184 are in ICU.

Of the latest infection figures, 37,938 were from rapid antigen tests (RAT) and 25,080 were PCR tests.

NSW Health says 24,329 of the positive RATs were "from the previous seven days".

However, they were all logged in the 24 hours to 8pm yesterday.

It also advised some cases included in daily tallies were people who reported positive RATs on multiple days or had a positive PCR test during the same reporting period.

The Service NSW app feature which allowed for self-reporting of RAT positive results went live on Wednesday morning.

The NSW government anticipates higher total case tallies as people continue to register their historical test results.

Failure to report results will soon attract a $1,000 fine but the state government said it would give the community a one-week grace period before penalties came into effect on 19 January.

Customer Service Minister Victor Dominello conceded those health orders would be "very hard to police" and were ultimately about encouraging people to register their results faster.

The latest figures come after NSW Health issued a notice to Hillsong demanding the megachurch immediately cease singing and dancing at its youth camp near Newcastle.

The department said the camp's musical performances before a maskless crowd violated recently introduced public health orders covering events such as indoor and outdoor festivals.

"While the order does not apply to religious services, it does apply to major recreation facilities and this event is clearly in breach of both the spirit and intent of the order," Health Minister Brad Hazzard said.

It came after an outcry from music and entertainment industry figures lamenting the cancellation of live music events due to the latest outbreak.

The orders banned singing and dancing, and mandated mask wearing, for crowds at events held at hospitality venues and recreational facilities.

In a statement Hillsong claimed its event, which has drawn hundreds of teenagers, had not breached the rules and was "not similar to a music festival in any way".

NSW Police said it was liaising with Hillsong to ensure the camp complied with health orders after NSW Health deemed its location to be a "major recreational facility".

Victoria prepares to use vacant hotels to house Covid patients, ABC understands

Victoria's Covid-19 hospitalisations have risen to 976, as the state records 18 deaths.

Of those in hospital, there are 112 patients in intensive care, 30 of whom are on ventilators.

Authorities have said the vast majority of those in intensive care are unvaccinated.

The government has highlighted the number of critically ill patients is lower than previous waves, but the sheer volume of Omicron cases is putting dangerous pressure on the healthcare system.

ABC understands the government is preparing to use vacant hotels that have been part of the state's quarantine program to house patients, in an effort to ease some of the pressure on hospital wards.

There are now at least 239,396 active cases in the state, a day after the government announced Victorian teachers, truck drivers and other essential workers would be able to attend work, even if they are a household contact of a positive case.

The death toll of the current outbreak has risen to 835.

The state's overwhelmed testing network is currently unable to give a true indication of the number of new cases in the community, but recorded 34,836 new infections.

Those cases were reported from 19,396 PCR results and 15,440 at-home rapid antigen tests (RATs).

Victorians who are eligible for their third vaccine dose are being urged to book it immediately in a bid to slow transmission of the Omicron variant.

About 21 percent of Victorian adults have received three doses of a vaccine so far.

ABC

Copyright @ 2022, Radio New Zealand.

Yours sincerely

 Frank Short

www.solomonislandsinfocus.com

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