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The Canberra Times
The Canberra Times
National
Lanie Tindale

ACT cases stay high, as Qld toddler dies from COVID-19

Is this year's flu season worse than other years? | June 30, 2022 | Cosmos Magazine

As the ACT has maintained high cases of COVID-19, Queenslanders have been shocked by the death of a toddler with the virus.

There were 141 people with COVID-19 in hospital in the 24 hours to Tuesday 8pm. That's a drop of 10 on the day before.

Of those, one patient is in the ICU and none are on ventilation. This is unchanged

The ACT recorded 1104 new COVID-19 cases, with a rolling average of 960, slightly down on 965 the day before.

There are currently 5604 active cases in the ACT, and 89 deaths.

Tuesday's new cases by age group

  • 0-4 years: 48
  • 5-11 years: 94
  • 12-17 years: 74
  • 18-24 years: 131
  • 25-39 years: 271
  • 40-49 years: 176
  • 50-64 years: 190
  • 65+ years: 120
  • Total: 1104

A Queensland toddler has died from COVID-19.

The child, a month away from turning two, died at Queensland Children's Hospital on Sunday night, but the death was only confirmed late on Tuesday.

The state's Deputy Premier, Steven Miles, offered his condolences to the family.

"The death of a child is awfully sad," he told reporters on Wednesday.

"My heart just goes out to that family, and of course to our health workers who would have done everything that they could to take care of that little child."

Around Australia

Almost half of adult Australians are estimated to have contracted COVID-19 since the pandemic began in early 2020.

Sydney's Kirby Institute says a 46.2 per cent prevalence of the virus is almost triple that reported in its previous serosurvey of antibody tests, which estimated about 17 per cent of the population had been infected by late February.

"While we know there is a lot of virus circulating in the community, we can't rely on testing data alone to understand how many people have been infected," the institute's Dr Dorothy Machalek said.

"Some may experience only mild symptoms, or none at all, and they may not always have a test to detect the virus.

"There is also high use of rapid antigen tests, which don't always get reported."

Dr Machalek said the serosurveys provide a more complete picture of how much COVID-19 is out there.

They measure antibodies to the virus, created when the body's immune system responds to infection, which remain present for months afterwards.

NSW

  • Deaths: 20
  • New cases: 16,173
  • Hospitalisations: 2275
  • ICU: 56

Victoria

  • Deaths: 32
  • New cases: 12,653
  • Hospitalisations: 872
  • ICU: 33

Queensland

  • Deaths: 19
  • New cases: 8209
  • Hospitalisations: 1023
  • ICU: 26

Tasmania

  • Deaths: 4
  • New cases: 1313
  • Hospitalisations: 170
  • ICU: 3

Northern Territory

  • TBA

Western Australia

  • WA no longer publishes daily updates

South Australia

  • SA no longer publishes daily updates

-With AAP

Our coverage of the health and safety aspects of this outbreak of COVID-19 in the ACT is free for anyone to access. However, we depend on subscription revenue to support our journalism. If you are able, please subscribe here. If you are already a subscriber, thank you for your support. You can also sign up for our newsletters for regular updates.

Cam Wheaton has his Covid booster shot by registered nurses Pri Rimal and Ayako Ishigamori. Picture: Karleen Minney
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