NSW Virus Cluster Been Sourced Back to an International Case

NSW Virus Cluster Been Sourced Back to an International Case
Police in the southern New South Wales (NSW) border city of Albury check cars crossing the state border from Victoria on July 8, 2020. William West/AFP via Getty Images
AAP
By AAP
Updated:

A COVID-19 cluster in Sydney’s northern beaches has been sourced back to an international case, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian has confirmed.

Health authorities are racing to contain the mystery cluster which on December 17 numbered 17 people.

The peninsula has entered a quasi-lockdown, with NSW Health asking residents to stay home and not leave the area for the next three days.

Locals should avoid non-essential visits to aged care facilities and hospitals, and steer clear of high-risk venues like gyms and restaurants.

Berejiklian has confirmed the outbreak was on Thursday night sourced to an international case.

“Somehow that’s obviously gotten out into the community. The original source is an overseas strain and the genomic testing will give us more details, I’m hoping later today,” the premier told the Nine Network on Friday morning.

“All of us in broader Sydney have to be on high alert... We may have been in contact with someone from the northern beaches.

“We’re also concerned that some people who may have had the virus on the northern beaches may not know it, may have been infectious while they visited other parts of Sydney.”

Berejiklian confirmed more cases linked to the cluster would be announced later on Friday.

The reason for the virus’ proliferation across the northern beaches is unclear, with sewage testing last week uncovered no COVID-19 fragments in the area.

Two northern beaches cases were announced on Wednesday evening, with three more described by health authorities at a press conference on Thursday morning. News of 12 further infections came on Thursday afternoon.

Authorities believe interactions at Avalon RSL on December 11 and Avalon Bowlo on December 13 may have acted as super-spreader events.

One of the new cases is an aged care worker at the Pittwater Palms facility.

Berejiklian on Thursday said northern beaches nursing homes would be locked down until the outbreak is contained.

The Pittwater Palms facility is closed to visitors, while those in contact with the infected worker are being tested and are self-isolating.

Health alerts have now been issued for almost 30 venues across Sydney, while multiple northern beaches community facilities have shut.

“The temporary closures we are announcing for the next three days are in the interest of everyone’s health and safety and really important while the contact tracers continue to do their work and NSW Health get more of a sense on where we stand,” northern beaches mayor Michael Regan said in a statement.

On Thursday evening, WA’s premier Mark McGowan ordered anyone who entered his state from NSW to self-isolate for 14 days.

Anyone already in WA who has been in NSW since December 11 must self-quarantine in a suitable premise and get tested as soon as possible.

The Queensland government announced anyone arriving from Sydney on Friday, and who has been to the northern beaches since December 11, must get tested and self quarantine for 14 days.

Those measures will toughen further from 1am on Saturday, when travellers from Sydney who have been to the region will be forced into hotel quarantine.

Northern Territory authorities said anyone from Sydney’s Northern Beaches Council area travelling to the NT will need to undertake 14 days of mandatory, supervised quarantine in either Alice Springs or Darwin.

Tasmania elected on Thursday to ban entry to anyone who had visited the venues on NSW’s health alert list.

Victoria told entrants to the state from the northern beaches that they must get tested and quarantine in their home or accommodation for 14 days.

Sydney
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