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Sydney's coronavirus cases could hit 3,000, disease expert claims - Daily Mail

Grim warning Sydney's coronavirus cases could surge to 3,000 by January unless one unpopular decision is made - here's why the next 24 hours could decide how we spend Christmas

  • Sydney reported 30 new cases of coronavirus on Sunday, 28 with confirmed links to northern beaches cluster
  • Infectious disease expert Professor Raina MacIntyre said Sydney needs to go into lockdown if cases rise
  • She warned about the dangers of Christmas and New Year's, predicting cases could hit 3,000 by January 8 
  • Prof MacIntyre said NSW needed to improve its digital contact-tracing and efficiency of testing clinics
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Sydney's northern beaches coronavirus cluster could surge to 120 cases by Christmas Day and 3,000 by January 8 unless the entire city goes into lockdown until Thursday, a leading infectious disease expert has warned.

Professor Raina MacIntyre from the University of New South Wales said Christmas Day and New Year's Eve could act as 'super-spreader' events if residents are allowed to travel freely across Sydney this week.  

The Professor of Global Biosecurity also said it was crucial NSW improved its testing capacity and digital contact-tracing methods if the state wanted to get on top of the beaches cluster before it spread across the state. 

New South Wales reported another 30 coronavirus cases on Sunday, with 28 linked to the Avalon RSL and Avalon Bowlo and the other two believed to be connected to the same cluster.

The total number of known cases in NSW has now risen to 70 but health authorities are encouraged by the fact there hasn't been any evidence of massive seeding outside the northern beaches community.

NSW Health sent out two urgent coronavirus health alerts on Sunday, listing 25 new venues exposed to Covid including a string of popular pubs in Manly, a coffee shop in inner-city Double Bay and Cronulla Mall in the south.

Prof Macintyre said Christmas could act as a 'ticking time bomb', explaining half of people carrying the virus will have no symptoms and may not even realise they're infected by the time December 25 rolls around. 

'People infected today and tomorrow may travel half-way across Sydney for the family Christmas lunch and maybe to another household for dinner, possibly infecting a minimum of 360 new people,' she wrote for the SMH.

'The 360 people infected on Christmas Day will be at their peak infectiousness on New Year’s Eve, and could infect more than 1000 others. We could be looking at 3000 cases by January 8. You could not plan a disaster more perfectly if you tried.' 

A leading infectious diseases expert has warned Sydney could be sent into lockdown if coronavirus cases surge on Monday. This map shows the spread of disease with confirmed cases visiting venues in Cronulla, Riverwood and Homebush

A leading infectious diseases expert has warned Sydney could be sent into lockdown if coronavirus cases surge on Monday. This map shows the spread of disease with confirmed cases visiting venues in Cronulla, Riverwood and Homebush

Professor Raina MacIntyre from UNSW said Christmas and New Year's Eve (tourists from last year's celebrations) could act as 'super-spreader' events if the northern beaches cluster is not contained quickly

Professor Raina MacIntyre from UNSW said Christmas and New Year's Eve (tourists from last year's celebrations) could act as 'super-spreader' events if the northern beaches cluster is not contained quickly

Professor MacIntyre predicted New South Wales could see more than 3000 cases by January 8 without radical decisions, including a full lockdown of Greater Sydney from Monday to Thursday
Professor MacIntyre said NSW's digital contact-tracing and testing clinics need to be rapidly improved to deal with the cluster if it grows outside of the northern beaches

Professor MacIntyre (left) predicted New South Wales could see more than 3000 cases by January 8 without radical decisions, including a full lockdown of Greater Sydney (right, testing clinic) from Monday to Thursday

Prof MacIntyre said the northern beaches cluster could not have come at a worse time, with two 'super-spreading' events just around the corner.  

'The combination of silent infections, exponential growth and the calamitous timing of New Year’s Eve being within one incubation period of Christmas Day is a tinder-box,' she wrote. 

'I think the problem is there is very little time left, these two events are going to happen, they are fixed dates,' she told news.com.au. 

If numbers increase again on Monday, Prof MacIntyre suggested a short, sharp lockdown until Thursday across Greater Sydney to prevent a 'worst case scenario'. 

'If we see 100 cases on Thursday we are going to have to cancel Christmas. We may also be forced to abandon all plans for New Year's Eve if we take a softly, softly approach,' she said.

Prof MacIntyre said the lockdown on the northern beaches 'may or may not work' as growing clusters in the rest of Sydney may not be apparent for up to another two weeks. 

Despite the grim outlook, Prof MacIntyre said it's still possible to prevent a Victorian-style second wave in the Harbour City if two steps are taken to improve the state's covid response. 

'Firstly, testing capacity must be increased – reports of people waiting in line for up to six hours means many may leave without testing,' she said.

'Secondly, we need to rapidly improve digital contact-tracing methods so that if the epidemic gets too large to track manually, we will not fall behind, as they did in Melbourne.' 

Some northern beaches residents reported waiting all day in drive-through COVID-19 testing clinics at St Ives and Manly. 

Prof MacIntyre also said making face masks mandatory across Sydney will make a difference, particularly as people flood malls to do Christmas shopping. 

Prof MacIntyre said by Christmas Day, daily cases could balloon to 120, with those people then going on to potentially infect 300 or 400 others through gatherings

Prof MacIntyre said by Christmas Day, daily cases could balloon to 120, with those people then going on to potentially infect 300 or 400 others through gatherings

GYM AT CENTRE OF COVID OUTBREAK

Health authorities are investigating a theory that positive coronavirus cases may have visited Anytime Fitness in Avalon as far back as November 23 - weeks before an elderly couple tested positive on December 16.

Hundreds of people who visited the gym on December 8 and after have already been forced into 14-day self-isolation over the Christmas period. 

Now authorities are calling on anyone who visited the gym from November 23 to December 7 to get tested and isolate until they get a negative result  

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NSW Health on Sunday evening announced a list of new venues in Sydney's northern beaches, lower north shore, southern and eastern suburbs visited by confirmed COVID-19 cases. 

Patrons who visited Manly Wharf Bar on Saturday December 12 between 2:45pm and 3:15pm should get tested immediately and isolate until they receive a negative result. 

NSW Health also advised anyone who was at the Steyne Hotel on the same day between 3pm and 3:30pm to get tested and isolate at home. 

Shoppers who attended Woolworths at Riverwood Plaza in Sydney's south on Wednesday December 9 between 3pm 3:35pm should get tested immediately and isolate.     

Among the other new venues now on a public health alert is Cronulla Mall, Old Manly Boat Shed, BoThai restaurant in Crows Nest and Mona Vale Golf Club. 

Health authorities are also investigating a theory that positive coronavirus cases may have visited Anytime Fitness in Avalon as far back as November 23 - weeks before an elderly couple tested positive on December 16.

Hundreds of people who visited the gym on December 6, 7, 8, 11 and 12 have already been forced into 14-day self-isolation over the Christmas period. 

A second health alert sent out late on Sunday night listed seven more venues exposed to coronavirus, including Anytime Fitness in Mona Vale, G Fitness in Freshwater, 4 Pines Newport and Twenty-One Espresso in Double Bay.

Almost all coronavirus cases identified in NSW have been linked to two events in Avalon on the Northern Beaches last week thanks to the state's contact tracing system. 

As a result, Premier Gladys Berejiklian has imposed some restrictions on the whole of Greater Sydney but only the northern beaches has been locked down. 

With another 30 cases recorded on Sunday, Prof MacIntyre believes a quick, heavy lockdown of all of Sydney is the only viable option to evade disaster

With another 30 cases recorded on Sunday, Prof MacIntyre believes a quick, heavy lockdown of all of Sydney is the only viable option to evade disaster 

Chief health officer Dr Kerry Chant has urged everyone across NSW to get tested as soon as they notice the mildest symptoms. Pictured: Testing at Bondi Beach on Sunday

Chief health officer Dr Kerry Chant has urged everyone across NSW to get tested as soon as they notice the mildest symptoms. Pictured: Testing at Bondi Beach on Sunday

The rapid contact tracing stands in stark contrast to the early days of Melbourne's outbreak in June and July where cases were recorded around the city with little or no information released about how the patients may have caught the virus. 

Health Minister Brad Hazzard has described the state's contact tracing system as 'diamond standard' and thanked officials for their hard work.

What are Sydney's new rules from 11.59pm? 

· Household gatherings will be limited to 10 visitors (until 11:59pm Wednesday 23 December).

· The one person per four square metre rule will be re-introduced for all indoor settings including hospitality venues and places of worship.

· A cap of 300 people will apply for hospitality venues and places of worship.

· Singing and chanting at indoor venues will not be allowed.

· Dancefloors will not be permitted, except for weddings, when a maximum of 20 from the bridal party will be permitted. 

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He said New South Wales does not require a state-wide lockdown like Victoria's because the system gives politicians enough confidence to take a 'risk-balanced' approach. 

'Everything that has occurred in New South Wales has been a risk balance and we will continue with that,' he said.

'You can safely say that New South Wales leads the country in keeping jobs and keeping the economy moving and keeping people safe. 

'I am confident that we have diamond level health tracers and I think the work that we have done over that period has been a very balanced way of approaching this.'

Minister Hazzard said he expected outbreaks to happen and that immediately shutting the economy down was not a viable option.  

'We are in a worldwide pandemic and every day for the last few weeks there have been 3,000 people die in America, many thousands more dying in other countries across the world and until we get a vaccine, we do not have a solution to the problem. 

'We can manage the problem... risk management is what we are doing.'

Masks have been mandatory when leaving home in Victoria since the state suffered a deadly second wave with a four-month lockdown over winter.

Asked why she has not recommended mandatory mask-wearing in NSW, chief health officer Dr Kerry Chant stressed the importance of individual responsibility. 

'We all have a part to play in how we respond to this and often the actions we adopt require people to co-operate and I must just express my gratitude to the population of New South Wales,' she said.

'Ultimately it is also in the hands of the individuals within New South Wales.' 

Federal chief health officer Professor Paul Kelly also said forcing people to wear masks was not necessary. 

He noted the cluster was 'quite localised' in the northern section of the northern beaches but he said 'we won't know for another week' whether the outbreak has been confined to that area. 

Premier Berejiklian urged residents to wear masks on public transport and in spaces where social distancing is not possible such as shops and supermarkets. Pictured: Queues for testing at Bondi

Premier Berejiklian urged residents to wear masks on public transport and in spaces where social distancing is not possible such as shops and supermarkets. Pictured: Queues for testing at Bondi

As the northern beaches cluster swelled to 68, Premier Berejiklian tightened restrictions for Greater Sydney.

From 11.59pm on Sunday until 11.59pm on Wednesday all Greater Sydney residents will be allowed a maximum of 10 people in their homes. 

There are also new restrictions for venues including a 300 person cap, a one person per four square metre rule and a ban on singing and dancing. 

Health Minister Brad Hazzard said singing and dancing were 'one of the most dangerous exercises you can do'. 

Elsewhere on Sunday, thousands of Sydneysiders flooded airport terminals in a desperate bid to leave the Harbour City before harsh new border restrictions come into play.

Check-in terminals were packed with tourists, with most wearing face masks, as the growing outbreak threatens to ruin holiday plans for families across the country.

Holidaymakers rushed to Sydney Airport to flee the Harbour City on Sunday as the northern beaches coronavirus cluster continues to grow

Holidaymakers rushed to Sydney Airport to flee the Harbour City on Sunday as the northern beaches coronavirus cluster continues to grow

Most travellers wore face masks in the terminal, with the growing outbreak threatening Christmas plans for families across the nation

Most travellers wore face masks in the terminal, with the growing outbreak threatening Christmas plans for families across the nation

Western Australia has banned all NSW residents from visiting from midnight on Sunday, while South Australia, ACT, the NT and Tasmania have similar rules requiring Sydneysiders to quarantine for 14 days.

Victorians are allowed to return home without mandatory hotel quarantine until 11.59pm on Monday, but will be required to self-isolate. 

Queensland's premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced similar restrictions on Sunday afternoon, banning those from Greater Sydney from her state from 1am on Monday - when the city becomes an official hot spot.

For Queenslanders returning home from Greater Sydney, they have until 1am on Tuesday to cross the border and will have to take a test and self-isolate if they arrive on Monday.

South Australia is requiring anyone arriving from Greater Sydney after 11.59pm on Sunday to self-quarantine for 14 days.

Anyone who has entered on Friday, Saturday or Sunday will be asked to get tested but does not have to self-isolate for two weeks. Both states have already banned Northern Beaches residents. 

Full list of Sydney hotspot venues

Anyone who has visited the following venues on the stated dates and times should get tested immediately and isolate for 14 days regardless of symptoms.

Avalon: Anytime Fitness, Avalon Parade

Tuesday 8 December 

Monday 23 November to Monday 7 December

Avalon: Avalon RSL Club  

Friday 11 December All day until closed

Monday 14 December 5pm to 10:30pm

Tuesday 15 December12pm to 5pm

Wednesday 16 December4pm to 12am (midnight)

Avalon Beach: Avalon Bowlo (bowling club), 4 Bowling Green Lane

Sunday 13 December 5pm to 7pm

Tuesday 15 December 3pm to 5pm

Avalon Beach: Bangkok Sidewalk Restaurant

 Monday 14 December 7pm to 8pm 

Avalon Beach: Barramee Thai Massage and Spa

 Monday 14 December 2pm to 3:30pm 

Avalon Beach: Oceana Traders – Seafood Merchants

Monday 14 December

Tuesday 15 December

Wednesday 16 December

Thursday 17 December

Avalon Beach: Sneaky Grind Café

Monday 14 December 9:30am to 11am

Avalon Beach: Sunset Diner

Friday 11 December 6:30pm to 8pm 

Cronulla: Cronulla RSL

Wednesday 16 December 5pm to closing 

Cronulla: Pilgrims Vegetarian Café

Wednesday 16 December 11:30am to 2:30pm 

Erskineville: Rose of Australia

Tuesday 15 December 7pm to 8:45pm

Forster: Café Toscano (outdoor verandah area)

Wednesday 16 December 6pm to 7:45pm 

Kirribilli: Kirribilli Club

Monday 14 December 12pm to 3pm 

Lane Cove: Hair by Erika, Village Shopping Centre

Friday 11 December 3:30pm to 5pm 

Mona Vale: Fitness First Mona Vale, Pittwater Place Shopping Centre

Sunday 13 December 2pm to 4pm

Monday 14 December 10:30am to 12:30pm

Wednesday 16 December 8:30am to 10am

Narrabeen: The Sands

Tuesday 15 December 6pm to 8pm

Newport: 4 Pines Newport

Tuesday 15 December 6pm to 10pm

Newport: Rusti Fig

Saturday 12 December 9am to 10am 

Palm Beach: Palm Beach female change rooms 

Sunday 13 December 9am to 9:15am

Palm Beach: Coast Palm Beach Café

Sunday 13 December 10am to 11am 

Penrith: Penrith RSL Club

Sunday 13 December 1pm to 6pm

St Peters: Sydney Trapeze School

Tuesday 15 December 10am to 12pm 

Surry Hills: Nomad Restaurant 

Wednesday 16 December 12:45pm to 2pm 

Surry Hills: Strawberry Hills Hotel

Wednesday 16 December 3:30pm to 6pm

Turramurra: Salon of Hair

Tuesday 15 December 10am to 3pm

Wednesday 16 December 9:30am to 3:30pm

Thursday 17 December 9:30am to 3:30pm

Friday 18 December 9:30am to 3:30pm

Woolloomooloo: Sienna Marina

Friday 11 December 12pm to 2pm 

NEW VENUES ANNOUNCED ON SUNDAY NIGHT: 

Manly Skiff Club, Corner of East Esplanade and Stuart Street, Manly: Saturday 12 December, 12pm – 2.30pm

Donny's Bar, 7 Market Place, Manly: Saturday 12 December, 3:15pm – 9pm

Old Manly Boat Shed, 40 The Corso, Manly: Saturday 12 December, 9pm – 12:30am

Rusti Fig, 3/363 Barrenjoey Road, Newport: Saturday 12 December, 9am – 10:30am

Café Junior, Woolworths Neutral Bay Village, 1-7 Rangers Road, Neutral Bay: Sunday 13 December, 12:45pm – 2.30pm

BoThai, 16 Willoughby Road, Crows Nest: Sunday 13 December, 4:30pm – 5:30pm

Pearly Nails, 2/6 Waratah Street, Mona Vale: Monday 14 December, 4:30pm – 5:30pm

Salon X, 86 William Street, Paddington: Wednesday 16 December, 9am – 6pm and Thursday 17 December, 9am – 8pm

Mona Vale Golf Club (bar and function room), 3 Golf Avenue, Mona Vale: Wednesday 16 December, 5pm – 10pm

Garfish Seafood Restaurant, 39 East Esplanade, Manly: Thursday 17 December, 6:45pm – 8:30pm

Anyone who attended the following venues on the dates and times below is considered a casual contact and should get tested immediately and isolate until they receive a negative result:

Woolworths, Riverwood Plaza, 247 Belmore Road, Riverwood: Wednesday 9 December, 3pm – 3:35pm

Nourished Wholefood Café, 17 Avalon Parade, Avalon Beach: Saturday 12 December, 7.15am-7.30am

Manly Wharf Bar, East Esplanade, Manly: Saturday 12 December, 2:45pm – 3:15pm

The Steyne Hotel, 75 The Corso, Manly: Saturday 12 December, 3pm – 3:30pm

Cronulla Mall, 6 Cronulla Street Cronulla: Tuesday 15 December, 8pm – 9pm and Wednesday 16 December, 3pm – 6pm

Navy Bear Café, RAN Sailing Association, 1C New Beach Rd, Darling Point: Sunday 13 December, 10.30am – 4.45pm

Restaurant Lovat, G04/316-324 Barrenjoey Rd, Newport: Saturday 12 December 2:15pm – 2:25pm and 4pm – 4:15pm

Mona Vale Golf Club, 3 Golf Avenue, Mona Vale: Wednesday 16 December, 11am – 5pm

Anytime Fitness, 7 Taronga Place, Mona Vale, on Thursday 17 December between 9.50am and 12.45pm

G Fitness, 72/80 Evans Street, Freshwater, on Tuesday 15 December between 11am and 12.45pm

4 Pines, 313 Barrenjoey Rd, Newport, on Wednesday 16 December between 4.30pm-9pm

Twenty-One Espresso, 21 Knox Street, Double Bay: Any staff working on Tuesday 15 December, and patrons seated in the indoor section on that day for more than 1 hour between 7.10pm and 8.15pm and 8.25pm and 9.10pm.

 

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMib2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTA3MjQ4MS9TeWRuZXlzLWNvcm9uYXZpcnVzLWNhc2VzLWhpdC0zLTAwMC1kaXNlYXNlLWV4cGVydC1jbGFpbXMuaHRtbNIBc2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtOTA3MjQ4MS9hbXAvU3lkbmV5cy1jb3JvbmF2aXJ1cy1jYXNlcy1oaXQtMy0wMDAtZGlzZWFzZS1leHBlcnQtY2xhaW1zLmh0bWw?oc=5

2020-12-20 15:20:00Z
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