No Community Cases; 5 New Cases Of COVID-19 In Managed Isolation; Viking Bay Update
There are no cases of COVID-19 to report in the community in New Zealand today.
There are 18 cases of COVID-19 to report at the border since the Ministry’s last update yesterday – five in recent returnees and 13 from the Viking Bay vessel, announced earlier today.
Eight previously reported cases have now recovered and the number of active cases in New Zealand is 43.
Three previously reported cases, from 25 and 26 June, have now been deemed as historical.
Since 1 January 2021, there have been 90 historical cases, out of a total of 614 cases.
The seven-day rolling average of new cases detected at the border is four.
Our total number of confirmed cases is 2,430.
New border cases in New Zealand
Arrival date | From | Via | Positive test day/reason | Managed
isolation/ quarantine location |
25 June* | Philippines | Singapore | Day 0 / routine | Hamilton |
25 June** | Philippines | Singapore | Day 12 / routine | Hamilton |
26 June* | Russia | United Arab Emirates | Day 0 / routine | Hamilton |
8 July | Malaysia | Singapore | Day 3 / routine | Auckland |
9 July | Indonesia | Singapore | Day 0 / routine | Auckland |
12 July*** | N/A | N/A | Day 0 / Viking Bay vessel surveillance testing | Wellington |
*All three cases are historical.
**As is our standard protocol, any cases detected after day 3 are investigated further, which has determined the case is historical.
***This refers to 13 positive cases detected in surveillance testing of mariners who arrived in Wellington on the Viking Bay vessel on 12 July 2021.
Update on the Viking Bay
This morning, the Ministry of Health reported confirmation of an additional 13 positive tests to COVID-19 for crew from the quarantined fishing vessel Viking Bay.
Two crew had previously been reported as confirmed with the virus.
All 15 affected crew have now been transferred to an onshore quarantine facility in Wellington.
Five crew members remaining on board to maintain the safety of the vessel have returned negative test results to date. They will be subject to additional testing in coming days.
The All of Government response team advise that Maritime Safety provided a dispensation to the vessel to have only five crew on board to meet minimum safety requirements. Contingency planning is underway for any further changes in crew numbers.
Further information is in the Ministry’s update published this morning:
https://www.health.govt.nz/news-media/media-releases/viking-bay-crew-transferred-quarantine-facility-13-confirmed-covid-19-cases-border
Update on the Playa Zahara
The All of Government response confirmed the Spanish flagged shipping vessel the Playa Zahara applied for permission for a change of crew at Port Taranaki.
There have been reports of a flu-like illness on board, so testing of the ship’s crew members is underway by health authorities following its berthing this morning.
Once testing is complete, the ship will then depart from the onshore quarantine place of inspection and will remain offshore until test results are available tomorrow.
If the results show there is no evidence of COVID-19 onboard, then the vessel will be granted pratique for a crew change.
Health authorities have assessed this situation as having a low risk to public health.
Travel from New South Wales
Quarantine-free travel from New South Wales (NSW) remains paused and managed return flights from Sydney begin today. All travellers on these flights will have to go into managed isolation for 14 days when they arrive in New Zealand. Because of this, travellers from NSW will not be required to return a negative pre-departure test before flying.
Travellers who have been in NSW on or after 10.30pm on 26 June are not permitted to travel back to New Zealand from other parts of Australia. Travel histories will be checked at the airport before flying.
Information about priorities for return flights from NSW and access to managed isolation facilities has been published by United Against COVID-19. It can be found
here
.
Travellers from all other parts of Australia – who haven’t been in NSW since 26 June – must have returned a negative pre-departure test to be allowed to enter New Zealand. All travellers must complete a
travel declaration
.
Testing update
The total number of COVID-19 tests processed by laboratories to date is 2,357,445.
On Monday, 3,478 tests were processed across New Zealand.
The seven-day rolling average is 5,575.
For all testing locations nationwide
visit the Healthpoint website
.
This testing data does not include the number of tests processed by Waikato DHB. The Waikato data continues to be recorded manually and monitored. The data is expected to be added to the tally in the near future.
The manual data shows Waikato has been processing around 300 tests a day over the last 7 days.
NZ COVID Tracer
NZ COVID Tracer now has 2,894,696 registered users.
Poster scans have reached 304,275,332 and users have created 11,855,843 manual diary entries.
There have been 587,728 scans in the past 24 hours to midday yesterday.