No New Community Cases; No New Cases Of COVID-19 In Managed Isolation
There are no new cases of COVID-19 to report in the
community in New Zealand today.
There are also no
new cases to report in recent returnees in managed isolation
facilities since the Ministry’s last update
yesterday.
The seven-day rolling average of new
cases detected at the border is one.
Four
previously reported cases have now recovered.
The
total number of active cases in New Zealand today is
13.
Our total number of confirmed cases is
2,317.
Since 1 January 2021, there have been 65
historical cases, out of a total of 501
cases.
Update on travellers from
Victoria
Of the 4,539 people who flew from
Melbourne Airport to New Zealand between May 20-25, the
Ministry’s contact tracing team has now contacted all but
five travellers. The remaining five people have been
referred to people-finding services.
All of these
travellers are being instructed to get a test and
self-isolate at home or in the accommodation they are
staying in until they have a negative
result.
Anyone who has been in Victoria since May
11 needs to keep checking the Victorian Government website
as locations of interest are being continually added. If
they have been at a location of interest, they should call
Healthline on 0800 358
5453 for further information. Locations of interest can
be found here: Victoria
exposure sites
All testing for people who have
been in Melbourne is free under the Section 70 notice,
regardless of whether or not people are symptomatic. This
includes for visitors to New Zealand. For testing locations
in Auckland, visit Auckland
Regional Public Health Service (ARPHS). For all testing
locations nationwide visit
theHealthpointwebsite.
As of this
morning, 2,350 travellers and 178 air crew had returned
negative tests. Officials are continuing to follow-up those
travellers without test results.
As we’ve
previously said, not everyone in this group will be tested
in New Zealand. We have now identified around 1,200
individuals we know to have already returned to Australia,
while others are infants who are not required to be tested.
We are now matching testing records with passenger
departures.
We expect to be able to provide a
fuller picture on testing numbers tomorrow.
Under
the current Section 70 notice, travellers wanting to return
to Melbourne are not permitted to do so until they have
returned a negative test result.
The Melbourne
cluster reinforces the critical importance of everyone in
New Zealand keeping a record of where they have been by
scanning QR codes or keeping a manual diary of their
movements. It can help contact tracers quickly find
potential close and casual contacts if there is a positive
COVID-19 case in New Zealand.
Possible
symptoms of variant being found in
Melbourne
The variant of COVID-19 being
found in Melbourne is the B.1.617.1 variant which was first
reported in India. It is considered more infectious than the
original variant.
The typical symptoms to look out
for include:
· a new or worsening
cough
· fever (at least 38C)
·
shortness of breath
· a sore throat
·
sneezing and runny nose
· and temporary loss of
smell.
Some people may present with atypical
symptoms, with or without typical symptoms. These include
new onset of:
· fever
·
diarrhoea
· headache
· myalgia (muscle
pain)
· nausea/vomiting
· or
confusion/irritability.
Testing
information
The total number of tests
processed by laboratories to date is
2,143,395.
Laboratories processed 3,055 tests
yesterday. The seven-day rolling average is
4,499.
For all testing locations nationwide visit
theHealthpointwebsite.
NZ COVID
Tracer
NZ COVID Tracer now has 2,838,420
registered users.
Poster scans have reached
277,778,451 and users have created 10,456,092 manual diary
entries.
There have been 447,315 scans in the last
24 hours to midday
yesterday.