“As we have discussed this week, this variant of concern is starting to show up in places where normally it would be less likely, so the Brighton Beach Hotel, that was an outdoor dining setting, well ventilated, you wouldn't expect transmission to occur.” tveeder.com/560/byrange?&f…
“The fact that we’re seeing transmission in some of these casual tier2 exposure sites or even tier3 exposure sites means we have to re-examine those sites. We have to reach out to people in some of those exposure sites and ask them to quarantine rather than just test and isolate”
“REPORTER: Numbers have not exploded, contact tracers yesterday said they are meeting every key benchmark, vaccinations are up, we are hitting record testing levels, Melburnians are doing their bit and numbers have not gone up exponentialally, so what's the concern here”
“An infectious case that was dining there outdoors, this new case from overnight was also dining with a group of people…They were outdoors, in a well ventilated, shaded but effectively ventilated setting, but nonetheless transmission has occurred”
“We do have a suspicion that there has been transmission 2 hours after an infectious case has left an indoor enclosed space and was therefore a substantial period of time but they had left two hours before the next exposed individual came in who has become a case”
“That's... That's in the kind of measles category of infectiousness. Probably relates to an unventilated setting where someone spent a great deal of time but to come in two hours later and be infected.”
“So we have two index cases where we do not know how they got the virus?”
“That is right.”
“something like 75% of the adult population getting covered with a vaccine is a pretty good indicator that you really drive transmission down”
“Have AHPPC made a final decision on improved PPE for aerosol transmission that was put to you three weeks ago, I think?”
“Ah, I'm not sure. I haven't, ah, um, seen that come to AHPPC. It might have been published online, but I haven't seen it”
“We’re following up people who were on the plane from Adelaide to Melbourne...who were with the individual who came out of hotel quarantine…asking them to undertake blood tests to use some serology to find any other traces. We’re really keen to identify this missing-link piece.”
“1 new community case, associated with the port of Melbourne. This is an individual who lives quite close to Stratton Finance in Port Melbourne, and who appears to have caught the virus through very peripheral, very tangential contact with 1 of the Stratton Finance employees”
“This is stranger to stranger transmission. The individuals concerned, it is not 1-2, we now have at least four instances in this cluster of 54, where people who are unknown to each other before, during and after, have clearly transmitted to each other.”
“What we're seeing now clearly is people who are brushing past each other in a small shop, they’re going round to a display home, they’re looking at phones in a Telstra shop. This is, relatively speaking, relatively fleeting. They don’t know each others names.”
1/4 Something to think about. VIC had an almost identical quarantine leak because of guest doors opening around the same time. This was shared with all states back in Feb. Seems like it was IGNORED and SA repeated the same mistake? Now Victorians are paying the price. Who’s next?
“it is highly likely the close timing of doors opening and closing between adjacent rooms was responsible given the clear role of aerosol transmission of this virus”
“However, the adjacent rooms were at the end of a corridor on one floor of the Medi-hotel. There were two occasions on 3 May 2021, when entry doors opened within 30 minutes of each other.”
“For example, on one occasion, Case B opened his room door to collect his meal, then 18 seconds later Case A opened his door to collect his meal.”
1/8 NZ Director-General of Health Dr. Bloomfield:“I think over the last month or 2 in particular, probably 3 months, there’s been much more emergent evidence about the importance & the significance of airborne transmission of Coronavirus being a way that people become infected.”
2/8 “And I think if we look at our more recent cases, the role of airborne or aerosolised transmission has been much more likely to have been the cause.”