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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Caitlin Cassidy

Covid cases double in NSW and Victoria in a fortnight as fourth wave surges across eastern states

Covid cases, hospitalisations and deaths are continuing to surge, according to the latest official data.
Covid cases, hospitalisations and deaths are continuing to surge, according to the latest official data. Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian

Covid cases are continuing to surge, doubling in New South Wales and Victoria in just a fortnight.

Hospitalisations and deaths have also risen sharply, prompting NSW health authorities to mandate a limited return to mask-wearing to curb the rise in cases.

NSW Health updated its Covid risk rating to amber on Friday, requiring masks in all areas of public hospitals and health facilities along with limited visitor numbers.

NSW Health deputy secretary, Deb Willcox, said the changes were largely due to the increasing number of health staff off work with Covid or awaiting a test result.

“As of 16 November, there were 1,089 health care workers in isolation up from 645 the previous week,” she said.

“This is an important indicator for our health system that we need to find the right balance with simple measures that can help us avoid more significant changes.”

NSW and Victoria recorded a combined 48,267 new infections on Friday, up from 22,676 two weeks ago.

In its latest reporting period until 18 November, NSW Health reported 27,869 new cases up from 12,440 on 4 November.

In Victoria, the story was similar, with 20,398 new cases reported on 18 November, compared to 10,226 cases two weeks ago.

Hospitalisations were also beginning to reflect the increase in cases.

Hospitalisations in Victoria jumped by 28.5% compared with a week ago, sitting at a seven-day rolling average of 352 admissions. There were 46 deaths recorded and eight people in ICU.

In NSW, there were 1,148 people admitted to hospital, with 39 deaths and 37 people in ICU

Emergency department presentations also shot up from 169 to 248.

Queensland’s cases nearly doubled in seven days. The state reported 10,106 new cases in the seven days to midnight 15 November, compared to 5,828 the previous week.

In Queensland, 15 additional people had died with the virus in the past seven days. There were 245 people being treated in hospital and five in ICU, compared with 202 the previous week.

The state’s traffic light system had moved to “amber”, with recommendations for the wearing of masks in some indoor settings and for the old and vulnerable.

NSW Health said there were several emerging subvariants of the virus circulating, including Omicron strains BA.2.75 and BQ.1 sub-lineages.

It recommended a return to mask-wearing indoors in places unsafe to physically distance and on public transport to limit the spread of the virus.

“The current wave of Covid-19 cases continues to grow,” it said in its latest surveillance report, while acknowledging testing rates had significantly dropped.

“On 14 October the mandatory reporting of positive rapid antigen tests in NSW was removed,” NSW Health said.

“PCR testing rates have almost halved from what they were at the beginning of the Omicron BA.4/5 wave … the changes in Covid-19 testing and reporting means that notification numbers no longer reflect the level of community transmission.”

While it had become difficult to measure accurate levels of Covid-19 in the community, the proportion of positive PCR tests had also jumped from 14% to 16% in NSW, while testing increased by 17.7% on the previous week.

The state’s sewage surveillance program, which tests for fragments of Sars-CoV-2 – the virus that causes Covid – tested positive across all catchments.

Similarly, all catchments tested in Victoria recorded a “strong” or “very strong” detection of the presence of Covid-19.

It comes amid a wind-back of the state’s vaccination centres. Other states and territories, including the ACT, Queensland and Western Australia, have all done the same.

On Wednesday, 4Cyte pathology shut its Covid PCR tests at drive-in locations throughout Victoria due to “changes in government policies”. The independent pathology provider still operates in Queensland and New South Wales.

Of 169 Covid testing centres listed on the Victorian government’s website, 77 were closed as of Friday. Rapid antigen tests are listed as the “preferred means” of testing in the state.

The federal health minister, Mark Butler, told 3AW he expected the new wave of the virus to continue to rise, but hoped it would peak by Christmas.

“I don’t think there’s any question case numbers and hospitalisations are going to increase for a little while,” he said.

“The advice I’m getting is this is likely to follow the trajectory of Singapore … and their wave in the words of the technical advisers we receive advice from was ‘short and sharp’ and it’s come down very quickly.”

The chief medical officer, Prof Paul Kelly, said the new Covid wave was largely being driven by community transmission of Omicron variants XBB and BQ.1.

“While evidence is still emerging, the experience to date with these two variants overseas is that they do not appear to pose a greater risk of severe illness and death – and that the Covid-19 vaccines provide good protection,” he said.

“These new variants have driven increases in case numbers – and hospitalisations at a rate proportionate to these increases – because of their ability to evade the immunity provided by prior infection and vaccination.”

A spokesperson from the Department of Health and Aged Care said the government had increased public health messaging in light of the current wave consistent with Queensland’s “amber” traffic light system.

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