Lots of confusion about quarantine vs isolation. Quarantine = the period when you may be incubating illness or the period following exposure before you may develop illness. This period applies to close contacts and international travellers who may have been exposed overseas. 1/x
Quarantine is 14 days (REGARDLESS of test results) because someone in quarantine could become positive at ANY POINT in this timeframe. A negative test is no guarantee that you won't become positive later in the 14 day period. You may. You may not. 2/x
Isolation = the period required for a confirmed case to be away from others because they are infectious or potentially infectious. People with COVID-19 are understood to be infectious from 1-2 days before symptoms until a maximum of 10 days after, if symptoms have resolved. 3/x
Some individuals who are hospitalised or have immune compromise are potentially infectious for longer and are therefore isolated for longer. The main criterion to clear these people is that they are free of symptoms. A negative test also helps those with persistent symptoms. 4/x
But why isn't a negative test a REQUIREMENT for release from iso? Because for those people, the test can remain positive for days, or weeks, or sometimes months. That means virus is detectable but it doesn't mean the individual is infectious. They almost certainly aren't. 5/x
The new variant strains of COVID (B.1.1.7 and others) - now famously in the UK - have made us take a really precautionary approach to isolation. So individuals with concerning variant strains will now be in isolation for 14 days. Is it really required? We don't know. Maybe. 6/x
Until it's clearer, we're going to be ultra-cautious and require the 14 days isolation. We'll test before the end of isolation to help determine risk - based on viral load, trend of viral load, antibodies, etc. We expect some individuals to be positive; but not infectious. 7/x
The B.1.1.7 lineage does appear to be more infectious (but not more severe), so we'll do everything to ensure that it's only ever in quarantine and not in the community. The best insurance against this and other concerning lineages is to have the strongest quarantine. /End

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More from @VictorianCHO

27 Nov 20
This is rightly worthy of celebration. After the toughest year for many Victorians, it’s important to recognise this achievement. It took all of us to get here and it was a long and painful journey but we held the course. I can’t thank Victorians enough for that.
Many have suffered enormously through recent months and many more continue to struggle. We should never forget that, and so we must continue to reach out to help each other. Over 800 Victorians tragically died. Parents, grandparents, people we love and miss.
So it’s also only right that many of us still feel anxious, angry or burdened by sadness. Mistakes were made and we owe a duty to learn from everything we’ve been through. I have only ever had protecting the health and wellbeing of Victorians in mind and I will always do so.
Read 7 tweets
15 Apr 20
My advice to the Victorian Government was and continues to be that to slow the spread of coronavirus, schools should undertake remote learning for term two.
1/3
This is because having around a million children and their parents in closer contact with each other, teachers and other support staff has the potential to increase cases of coronavirus not just in schools but across the community. 2/3
By having remote learning, it can contribute to physical distancing and therefore supports efforts to drive transmission down.
3/3
Read 4 tweets
23 Feb 20
Thread:
Victoria has been working on its #pandemic preparedness for #COVID19 for some weeks. It's clear that with local transmission in several countries that a pandemic is very likely, if not inevitable. We are working rapidly on planning and surge with our health sector. (1/6)
We've provided guidance to practitioners and many communications materials but are now focused on the models of care that will need to be in place - clinics, phone triage, home care, right through to ICU and aged care. There are dozens focused on this across the sector. (2/6)
Victoria and Australia nonetheless remain completely in containment mode - identifying any possible case; isolating those who are infectious; and quarantining contacts. Regardless of developments internationally, this gives all of us time and space to plan and prepare. (3/6)
Read 6 tweets

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