5 New Cases Of COVID-19
There are five new cases of COVID-19 to report in New
Zealand since our last media statement on Sunday. There are
no new cases in the community.
- One case arrived on 10
December from the United States. This person tested positive
due to the onset of symptoms around day 9 and has been
transferred to quarantine in a facility in
Christchurch.
- One case arrived on 10 December from the
United States. This person tested positive due to the onset
of symptoms around day 9 and has been transferred to
quarantine in a facility in Christchurch.
- One case
arrived on 16 December from South Korea. This person tested
positive at routine testing around day 3 and has been
transferred to the Auckland quarantine facility.
- One
case arrived on 16 December. The country of origin is not
yet available. This person tested positive at routine
testing around day 3 and has been transferred to the
Auckland quarantine facility.
- One additional case
arrived on 18 December from Russia via Singapore, and was
tested on arrival. This result is regarded as indicating
previous infection – referred to as an historical case.
This person was tested on arrival before transiting to a
fishing vessel in Lyttleton on the same day. The vessel left
New Zealand shortly after the crew’s arrival and is now in
international waters. It will not be returning to New
Zealand for some months. The person had a previous
infection, consistent with COVID-19, reported in Russia and
their latest test result is interpreted as reflecting that
previous infection. The person is not regarded as
infectious. The Ministry is still determining whether this
case should be reported against our country’s tally (as it
has been today) or whether it should be reported as a case
in Russia.
One previously reported case has now
recovered. The total number of active cases in New Zealand
is 59. Our total number of confirmed cases is 1,765.
The
total number of tests processed by laboratories to date is
1,374,050.
Note: A case we reported yesterday as having
arrived from Australia is incorrect. This person arrived
from the United Kingdom via the United Arab
Emirates.
UK COVID-19
variant
Health authorities in the United Kingdom
are in communication with other authorities around the world
including New Zealand about the emergence of a new COVID-19
strain in the United Kingdom, known as the B.1.1.7
strain.
The specific strain identified in the United
Kingdom has not been seen in New Zealand cases to
date.
The Ministry of Health is confident New Zealand’s
current use of PPE, testing strategy and 14-day managed
isolation for all arrivals is appropriate. The Ministry
continues to review these tools in light of any new and
emerging evidence.
The Ministry of Health maintains that
our most important protection at the border is the 14 days
in isolation and/or quarantine, together with daily symptom
checks and testing at day 3 and day 12 (with additional
testing if symptomatic).
We are also confident our
current PCR testing would detect this and any new
strains.
New South Wales
Ministry of
Health officials continue to liaise with health officials in
New South Wales following an increase in COVID-19 cases in
the Australian state.
The specific genome identified in
New South Wales has not been seen in New Zealand cases to
date.
Tightening of border
requirements
A range of amendments to Border
Orders come into effect from today to further strengthen and
fine-tune New Zealand’s frontline defences against
COVID-19.
Changes to the Air and Isolation &
Quarantine Orders, via the COVID-19 Public Health Response
(Air Border and Isolation and Quarantine) Amendment Order
(No 2) 2020, include:
· an amendment to the definition
of ‘aircrew’ to include aircrew who are not working,
coming back from an overseas leg;
· exclusion from
managed isolation for a small number of additional people,
where the health risk is deemed very low;
· amendments
to the restrictions for New Zealand-based aircrew operating
international flights.
Changes to the Maritime Border
Order, via the COVID-19 Public Health Response (Maritime
Border) Amendment Order 2020, include:
· improved
clarity on the requirements for foreign ships seeking
exemption from the Order to enter New Zealand for the
purposes of repair, refit or refurbishment;
· mandating
personal protective equipment (PPE) be used in specific
high-risk scenarios on ports and ships.
Some other
minor changes and technical amendments are being made.
Further details and links to the amendments are on the
Ministry’s website.
The air
and isolation & quarantine changes come into effect
immediately. The maritime
changes come into effect on Wednesday 23rd
December.
We are constantly adjusting our border settings
to reflect new information, our knowledge of how the virus
works and operational experience.
We need to balance
maintaining health requirements with minimising economic
impact and operational efficiency. We also need to be
cognisant of the impact on workers and
travellers.
NZ COVID Tracer
and Bluetooth update
NZ COVID Tracer now
has 2,414,100 registered users.
Poster scans have reached
142,042,068 and app users have created 5,722,190 manual
diary entries.
We can now also report that approximately
390,000 app users have turned on Bluetooth tracing.
The
Ministry is pleased by this level of uptake and continues to
encourage people to start using the Bluetooth function. As
we prepare for the summer holiday break, the Ministry would
like to remind all New Zealanders to keep each other safe
and use the COVID Tracer app to scan QR codes and turn on
Bluetooth functionality.
This will allow you to receive
an alert if you have been near another app user who tests
positive for COVID-19. Find out more here.
Ministry
of Health updates over the holiday period
The
Ministry will continue through the holiday period to provide
updates about cases and actions taken in response.
The
frequency of reporting continues to reflect the routine
nature of the cases appearing at the border in recent
returnees in managed isolation facilities.
Upcoming
scheduled reporting dates will be: Wednesday 23 December;
Sunday 27 December; Tuesday 29 December; Thursday 31
December; Sunday 3 January; Tuesday 5 January; Thursday 7
January and Sunday 10 January.
The Ministry's website
will be updated with case numbers in line with these media
updates.