Oberon enters lockdown as NSW records its deadliest day of COVID-19 pandemic

New South Wales has recorded 863 new locally acquired cases of COVID-19 and 15 further deaths.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian. Source: AAP

The Oberon local government area in the Central Tablelands of New South Wales has entered a seven-day lockdown. 

NSW Health said the decision was made due to an "increased COVID-19 public health risk" in the area.

The stay-at-home order from 6pm Wednesday applies to anyone who has been in the Oberon LGA since 20 September.

It comes after NSW recorded 863 new locally acquired cases of COVID-19 and 15 further deaths - the state's highest number of fatalities since the start of the pandemic.

The deaths reported in the 24 hours to 8pm on Tuesday include seven women and eight men, with their ages spanning from in their 40s to 90s. Nine of the individuals were not vaccinated. 

Two people died at home, including a fully vaccinated woman in her 70s from Batemans Bay who had only recently received a second vaccine dose.

The second was a man in his 40s from Lake Macquarie who was not vaccinated, had underlying health conditions and was receiving care in the community.
Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant said there are 1,082 people in hospital, including 212 patients in intensive care. 

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said overall hospitalisation figures remain below the projected modelling.

"We are tracking under what we envisaged we would, but there is certainly no time for complacency," she said on Wednesday. 

More than 86 per cent of NSW residents have received at least one dose of a vaccine, with 61.7 per cent fully vaccinated.

Restrictions to be eased for aged care facilities

With vaccination rates due to reach 70 per cent double-dose coverage within weeks, Ms Berejiklian announced visits to aged care homes would be allowed from 11 October. 

Two fully vaccinated people will be able to visit a resident per day. 

"So long as you are fully vaccinated, two [people] at a time - and [a maximum of] two per day - are able to visit a loved one in an aged care facility," she said, adding that she looked forward to visiting her own parents. 

"This is welcome news and we ask people to exercise a degree of caution. If you have symptoms or you are not well, don't do it. We don't want to compromise the safety of your loved ones and those around you."
NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard issued a warning about  arising from a COVID-positive truck driver who travelled around regional NSW and in Greater Sydney.

The locations include Tweeds Head, Byron Bay, Ballina, Coffs Harbour, Taree, Newcastle, Narrabeen, Manly, Freshwater, Brookvale.

The truck driver is now in a special health accommodation facility.

Earlier back-to-school date considered

Ms Berejiklian said 25 October remains the official return to school date for students, although the government is reviewing options to potentially bring that forward. 

"We are carefully considering the options to get kids to school earlier if we can," she said. 

She said NSW Health will soon release advice on contact tracing protocols and strategies to contain outbreaks in hospitality and school settings.

'Onus on individuals'

A suite of other restrictions are also due to lift on 11 October, with the fully vaccinated able to dine out, go to the gym and have five visitors in their homes. 

But the government faced questions on Wednesday about plans to enforce the rules, which at that point, prohibit the unvaccinated from taking part. 

Ms Berejiklian said business owners should be reassured that obligations to check vaccination status won't be too onerous - with an onus placed on individuals to comply. 

"I want businesses to be assured that what they will be asked to do is not very different to what they were doing pre-Delta," she said.

"Not much has changed. The onus will be on individuals to prove their vaccination."

She warned that authorities would not hesitate to issue fines to those who breach the health orders. 

The premier said Service NSW has been granted access to the federal government data on vaccination status, with hopes its app is ready by 11 October. 

"We hope the app will be ready for the 11th. But if it isn't, there is proof of vaccine through Medicare app and checking in through QR codes," she said.
Dr Chant said businesses should be focused on ensuring the safety of their staff. They need to protect themselves, by being vaccinated, she said. 

"The main issue is keeping your staff safe. Most of the outbreaks in business settings - what happens is if your staff become unwell, staff infect other staff and that amplifies things. We minimise that by having fully vaccinated staff members," she said. 

Dr Chant said with greater vaccination coverage in the population, localised lockdowns could still be deployed to contain outbreaks in settings like workplaces.

However, tools like vaccination and testing responses will also be used to manage outbreaks among vulnerable populations such as residents in social housing.

"We have to reflect what is a proportionate response locally when we have increasing cases," she said. 

Dr Chant said the state is on track to achieve 90 per cent single-dose coverage by next week.

"I want to edge it up to 93 per cent [double dose vaccination coverage], I think NSW can do it," she said. "The question for us as a community is how hard and how high we can go [with vaccination rates]."

With AAP. 


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5 min read
Published 29 September 2021 11:11am
Updated 29 September 2021 6:00pm
By Biwa Kwan
Source: SBS News



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