18 November 2020

ACT quarantine hotel staff face weekly testing as repat flights loom

| Ian Bushnell
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Rachel Stephen-Smith

ACT Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith. Photo: Dominic Giannini.

Staff at Canberra’s quarantine hotels that will host two planeloads of repatriated Australians due before Christmas will face mandatory weekly COVID-19 testing in the wake of the Adelaide outbreak that has forced a six-day lockdown in the state.

The first flight is due to arrive before the end of November and a second will be accepted in the ACT once the mandatory 14-day quarantine period has ended for the first arrivals.

The SA cluster, which erupted after a medi-hotel staff member contracted the virus, has brought into question the wisdom of accommodating overseas travellers in the CBDs of Australia’s capital cities.

One infectious diseases expert and epidemiologist, Professor Mary-Louise McLaws, has said that the Adelaide cluster shows why hotel quarantine programs should be shut down in favour of purpose-built quarantine stations.

ACT Health Minister Rachel Stephen-Smith said quarantine arrangements were a matter for the Commonwealth but the ACT Government was confident appropriate measures were in place to minimise the risk of COVID-19 transmission in current hotel arrangements.

She reassured Canberrans that every precaution would be taken every step of the way to minimise the risk to the community, including the new mandatory testing measure announced today by Acting Commonwealth Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly.

”The ACT has successfully received two repatriation flights, helping to bring people home to Australia,” Ms Stephen-Smith said.

“Since these flights, the ACT Government has reviewed the final report of the National Review of Hotel Quarantine and has implemented measures to further strengthen our quarantine systems and processes.”

She said all quarantining guests would be tested for COVID-19 twice during their stay – on day 1 and day 12. They would receive a phone call, including symptom check, from an ACT Health staff member every day of their quarantine, and any guest who became symptomatic would be tested for COVID-19.

READ ALSO New COVID-19 case confirmed, ACT Public Health Emergency extended

ACT Health was working with quarantine staff to implement additional precautions, including ongoing surveillance and regular testing for staff, in line with advice from AHPPC.

”Across the country, states and territories are being asked by the Commonwealth Government to support the return of Australians from overseas,” she said. ”We will continue to work closely with the Commonwealth Government to finalise arrangements for repatriation flights.

”This includes finalising how many passengers the ACT will accept at any one time to ensure we have the right resources and processes in place to reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission.”

Professor McLaws told the ABC that hotel quarantines were a great idea to get Australians and residents back home, but should only have been an interim measure.

“We do need to start thinking about a purpose-built environment,” she said.

Professor Kelly said it was clear that hotel quarantine was now the “major risk” for the reintroduction of COVID-19 into Australia.

“I know that in New South Wales they have been testing, not as frequently as this, and there has been some testing being done in other places, but we decided to make that recommendation which has been accepted for that to be a routine thing,” he said.

Chief Minister Andrew Barr said last week that the quarantine report did not identify any need for dramatic changes to the ACT’s hotel quarantine program “but there are some good recommendations around the separation of international from regular domestic guests in a hotel context”, as well as transit arrangements between Canberra Airport and transport to the quarantine venue.

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pink little birdie10:29 am 19 Nov 20

Offer the staff a significant bonus to only work at the hotel and isolate as much as possible for a 3 week period

Well thank you for the info “in the wake of the Adelaide outbreak that has forced a six-day lockdown in the state.”

Might swing into Coles tomorrow.

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