Continued leaks from hotel quarantine are “a frustration to all Australians” and state governments are not doing enough to prevent it, the president of the Australian Medical Association, Dr Omar Khorshid, has said.

Western Australia’s Perth and Peel region on Saturday began a snap three-day lockdown after the latest hotel quarantine outbreak led to community transmission. The virus spread in the corridors of the Mercure quarantine hotel in Perth, infecting a man who was staying adjacent to a couple with the virus who had returned from India.

The man had tested negative before returning home to Victoria, spending time in venues across Perth – and infecting a friend. He has been staying at a Victorian “health hotel” for international arrivals with Covid-19 since Thursday, before his positive test came back on Friday morning. Victorian authorities are contacting people who were on the same flight from Perth to Melbourne as the man.

Dr Omar Khorshi
Australian Medical Association president Dr Omar Khorshi says the hotel quarantine facility at Howard Springs in the Northern Territory is the only one that is ‘fit for purpose’. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Speaking to Guardian Australia from lockdown in Perth, Khorshid said “The best way to avoid lockdown is to avoid breaches of hotel quarantine and, unfortunately, state governments are not doing absolutely everything that can be done in order to protect those facilities and the people within them”.

“The prime example of that would be the report that was commissioned by the WA government after the last breach here, which identified aerosol spread of the virus as the most likely issue. An engineering review of the hotels has subsequently taken place over a couple of months with the Mercure hotel identified as unsuitable for the purpose in which it is being used just one week ago. The ventilation in these hotels wasn’t up to scratch.”

Khorshid said the Australian Medical Association had been informed that hotel quarantine workers were still not always using the appropriate levels of personal protective equipment when exposed to Covid-positive patients, and that positive patients were not being kept in separate sections of hotels from negative ones.

“Victoria does that, but Western Australia does not,” Khorshid said. “We also understand there are still a number of quarantine workers that are not vaccinated. So there’s a number of fairly simple measures that could be taken that haven’t been taken that are increasing the risk.”

Khorshid said the bigger question was whether hotel quarantine should be used at all.

“We’ve been saying from the start that it wasn’t an appropriate emergency measure for the long-term,” Khorshid said. “It’s done extremely well at protecting Australia, but it’s not perfect. These hotels were never designed for this purpose. And there is an increasing realisation I think in the community that we need some other solution.”

He said the hotel quarantine facility at Howard Springs in the Northern Territory was the only one that appeared “fit for purpose”. While he acknowledged the Northern Territory was not receiving the volume of international travellers as other states, it was nonetheless “a pretty good template for what we need going forward”. At the Howard Springs facility, people are kept further apart, reducing the risk of spread between rooms through corridors or ventilation.

The Howard Springs disused mining camp has gradually increased its capacity over the past few weeks to take 15% of people arriving on repatriation flights – up to 2,000 Australians each fortnight. Rooms are single accommodation, with no internal connecting doors between the rooms.

The WA premier, Mark McGowan, has asked the prime minister, Scott Morrison, if the state can halve the number of weekly international arrivals over the next month, from 1025 to 512.

“Howard Springs is a facility fit for purpose,” Khorshid said. “Everything that can be done in hotel quarantine needs to be done right now and unfortunately in Western Australia as in some other states, that is not the case. There are still holes that can be plugged and the report from the last outbreak have underlined some of the things that need to be done in WA.”

Personal protective equipment needed to be taken more seriously, sick people needed to be cohorted further away from other people, and all workers should be vaccinated, he said.

“Facilities like the Mercure Hotel which have been identified as being inappropriate shouldn’t be used at all,” Khorshid said. “The last lockdown in WA occurred because a security guard was sitting in a corridor and wasn’t even wearing a surgical mask, let alone any other form of PPE.”

People who had been staying at the Mercure hotel have now been sent elsewhere.

New Zealand, which last week opened a trans-Tasman travel bubble, on Friday announced a pause on travel from WA due to the Perth outbreak.

Meanwhile, NSW Health has announced it will screen all flights from Perth to identify those who had visited WA venues of concern.

The virus spread in the corridors of the Mercure quarantine hotel in Perth, infecting a man who was staying adjacent to a couple with the virus who had returned from India.
The virus spread in the corridors of the Mercure quarantine hotel in Perth, infecting a man who was staying adjacent to a couple with the virus who had returned from India. Photograph: Richard Wainwright/AAP

“NSW will reflect the stay at home restrictions that apply to Western Australia,” NSW Health said in a statement.

Queensland from midnight will require any resident who has been in Perth or Peel since April 17 to enter hotel quarantine for up to 14 days while non-residents will require an exemption to enter and also must quarantine. Anyone entering Queensland before midnight is required to obtain a Covid test and remain at home until 2am on April 27, only going out for essential reasons once they have received a negative test.

Tasmania has declared Perth and Peel high-risk regions, with travel and quarantine rules imposed for those coming into the state who may have been in those regions.

The Northern Territory has also declared Perth and the Peel region COVID-19 hotspots.



This content first appear on the guardian

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