LIVE: 68 additional community cases

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

UPDATE: There are 68 new cases of Covid-19 in the New Zealand community to confirm today.

This brings the total number of cases in the community outbreak to 277.

One case reported yesterday has been reclassified as not a case after being confirmed as a false positive, says a statement from the Ministry of Health.

The total number of community cases in Auckland is now 263 and in Wellington it is 14.

The two new Wellington cases are household contacts of a current case and were in isolation during their infectious period.

"All of the cases have or are being transferred safely to a quarantine facility, under strict infection prevention and control procedures, including the use of full PPE," says an MOH spokesperson.

"As previously indicated, it's not unexpected to see a rise in daily case numbers at this stage. At its peak last year, New Zealand had a daily total of 89 new cases."

There are 154 cases to date which are epi-linked, and a further 123 for which links are yet to be established.

There are currently six epidemiologically-linked subclusters identified within this outbreak. The two largest clusters are the Birkdale Social Network cluster associated with Case A (approximately 41 confirmed cases), and a cluster associated with the Mangere church (approximately 117 confirmed cases). The remaining clusters have fewer than 15 people associated with them.

Of these 68 new cases, 49 of these are Pacific peoples, eight are Asian, three are European, three are Māori, and as yet, the ethnicity is unknown of five, says the MOH.

"Fifteen of the current community cases are in a stable condition in hospital; there are no cases in ICU. Of these, three are in North Shore Hospital, seven are in Middlemore Hospital, and five are in Auckland City Hospital.

"There is one new case in a recent returnee in a managed isolation facility."

The total number of active cases being managed in New Zealand is currently 314.

Since 1 January 2021, there have been 124 historical cases, out of a total of 1053 cases.

"Our total number of confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic is 2871."

Testing

Yesterday, 41,739 tests were processed across New Zealand, another very high number of tests.

Testing nationwide remains a priority in our assessment of spread and in determining the edges of the outbreak, says the MOH.

Testing centres in Auckland had another busy day yesterday with over 20,000 swabs taken across Auckland, with around 7000 at community testing centres and 13,000 at general practice and urgent care clinics.

"There are 23 community testing centres available for testing across Auckland today, this includes 5 invitation-only for high-risk groups and to prioritise essential health care workers. There are 6 regular community testing centres and 12 pop-up testing centres, including a new pop-up at Tuakau in South Auckland.

"In Wellington, 3303 tests were processed yesterday. There are 11 community testing centres operating today, and around 32 GPs open for testing.

"All DHBs are continuing to ensure there is good access to testing across the regions."

For up-to-date information on all testing locations, please visit Healthpoint.co.nz.

The total number of COVID-19 tests processed by laboratories to date is 2,854,717.

The seven-day rolling average is 38,626.

Wastewater testing

Covid-19 has been detected in samples collected from the Christchurch catchment on 21 and 23 August following previous negative results.

However, there are at least three positive cases in MIQ facilities in Christchurch and these results are consistent with virus shedding from those cases, which we have seen previously, says the MOH.

"Further samples will be taken from around Christchurch today, with results expected by the end of the week. All other South Island sites are negative.

"Further samples are being collected from Warkworth following the previous positive results."

In the Wellington region, Covid-19 has only been detected in samples collected from the Moa Point site in Southern Wellington and is considered to reflect known cases shedding in the catchment.

"No new Auckland samples have been analysed since yesterday's report."

Contact tracing

As of 9am today, more than 24,402 individual contacts have been identified and around 71 per cent of these have had a test, reflecting the high levels of testing.

Locations of interest

There are now almost 500 locations of interest listed on the Ministry's website.

Of the three new locations added so far today, one is a rugby game which was pre-lockdown and two locations are supermarkets that were visited by positive cases post-lockdown.

"Please remember to regularly check the Ministry's website. Locations of interest are being updated automatically on a 2-hourly basis," says an MOH spokesperson.

"Any significant or urgent locations of interest will be published as required.

"Anyone who was at a location of interest at the specified time, is asked to self-isolate and call Healthline on 0800 358 5453 for advice on testing."

Covid-19 vaccine update

More than three million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine have been administered to date, another significant milestone.

Of these, 1.94 million are first doses and more than 1.07 million are second doses.

More than 174,000 Māori have received their first vaccination. Of these, more than 98,000 have also had their second vaccinations, says the MOH.

"More than 113,000 doses have been administered to Pacific peoples. Of these, more than 66,000 have also received their second doses.

"Yesterday 87,972 vaccines were administered. Of these, 61,755 were first doses and 26,217 were second doses. This is the biggest daily total to date, and reflects the huge amount of work across the system."

NZ Covid Tracer

NZ Covid Tracer now has 3,077,439 registered users.

Poster scans have reached 330,188,428 and users have created 14,320,184 manual diary entries.

There have been 743,324 scans in the 24 hours to midday yesterday.

EARLIER:

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Director of Public Health Caroline McElnay are giving the latest update on the government's Covid-19 response.

The pair are expected to be live from Wellington from 1pm.

The total number of confirmed community Covid cases in now 210.

As of yesterday, there were 12 people in hospital with the virus.

And last night South Auckland's Ōtāhuhu College became the 10th school to be linked to the Delta outbreak.

A person was infectious while at the school last Monday and Tuesday, just before the country went in to lockdown.

All 1000 students, 120 staff and those they live with are now being asked to get a test and isolate at home.

On alert levels, Auckland stays in lockdown to at least midnight on Tuesday, and Cabinet will decide tomorrow decides whether level 4 will stay in place after midnight that day.

That decision is expected to be made at 3pm.

3 comments

Looks like a long grind...

Posted on 26-08-2021 14:09 | By morepork

Another week in lockdown? Not a pleasing prospect, but at least we can know we are "waiting out" the life cycle of the virus. If it can't infect anybody in 4 weeks (and the current host has repelled it) it is likely to die. Although it is a hard road for us, I believe it is viable (as long as we all comply, of course.)


Vaccine not a cure

Posted on 26-08-2021 17:53 | By Angel74

so why the hype about getting vaccinated, even mask wearing isnt full proof either. Like the common cold and or flu you are either going to get covid or not.


@Angel74

Posted on 28-08-2021 19:56 | By morepork

You are right about both vaccines and masks, BUT, the vaccine gives you 3x higher resistance (one third as much chance of dying, AND one third as much chance of passing it to SOMEONE ELSE), and masks block 2 of the 3 channels by which the virus can enter your body. Given that the vaccine is free and masks are cheap, can you not see a point to protecting yourself and others? Believe me, the Delta variant is not like any cold you ever had. While th einitial symptoms may be superficially similar, the devastation that the virus wreaks internally is not only life-threatening but, if you survive it, you may still be affected for the rest of your life. Get vaccinated. You'll be doing yourself and all of us a favor.


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