The clamour in New Zealand to ditch vaccine passes and change the traffic light setting is poorly timed, an epidemiologist says.
The number of covid-19 deaths is on the rise, with nine reported yesterday.
Nine hundred and fifty seven people are now in hospital, including 26 in ICU, the highest number yet in intensive care.
- LISTEN TO RNZ MORNING REPORT: ‘I think this is politicking’ – Epidemiologist Dr Rod Jackson
- READ MORE: Covid-19 update: Nine deaths, 12,020 new community cases, 957 people in hospital
- Samoa covid testing reveals climb to 196 cases
- Other NZ covid outbreak reports
University of Auckland epidemiologist Professor Rod Jackson said the worst may be yet to come.
It is “too soon to relax”, although the country is nearing its peak, Professor Jackson said.
He said the push for change is “politicking” and not many businesses want to remove vaccine passes at present.
He told RNZ Morning Report that looking around the world other countries did not go straight up and down with their peaks and New Zealand would be at risk of “yo-yoing around” if vaccine passes and other public health interventions were removed too soon.
Vaccine passes should be retained until it was clear that the omicron outbreak was just about over, he said.
‘We’re at the top’
“We’re at the top at the moment. It makes absolutely no sense to remove any effective public health measures when we’re still at the top.
“It’s crazy. I think it’s political nonsense to be pushing to take them away now.”
Professor Jackson said more than 1 million New Zealanders still needed to get their booster. As well, the unvaccinated were twice as likely to catch covid-19, three times as likely to transmit it than fully boosted people and five times more likely to be in hospital.
“We’re not over it yet … those relatively small numbers of people, when you do all of those multiplications, they are sufficient to overwhelm our health system.”
He referred to what was happening in the UK and parts of Australia where there were rising case numbers.
“I know there’s huge pressure to take away the vaccine passes but I think it’s a mistake.”
Professor Jackson said it was business which forced the government to introduce vaccine mandates and he did not believe they were hugely in favour of taking them away now.
“I think this is politicking.”
Makes no sense
It did not make sense to change the traffic light setting in the next few days either.
“We’ve got more people in hospital today than we’ve ever had. We’ve got more deaths than we’ve ever had.
“It just doesn’t make any sense to be relaxing public health measures that have proven to be incredibly effective at the peak of an outbreak.”
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told Morning Report that the traffic light system must be “no more restrictive” than needed and mandates would not be as necessary after the first omicron wave.
Cabinet was meeting today to review vaccine mandates, vaccine passports and the traffic light system, though any decisions will not be announced until Wednesday.
Watch the PM talking to Morning Report
The changes will mark the biggest domestic shake up to covid-19 restrictions since omicron arrived on Aotearoa’s shores.
“We know that in the future we’re likely to have have additional waves of omicron… We’re already seeing that in other countries,” Ardern said.
“So let’s make sure we get the covid protection framework, that traffic light system, right for the future.
“We want it to be no more restrictive than it needs to be, so if there are areas we can pare it back, we will.”
She said that with a highly vaccinated population the government believed mandates and vaccine passes would no longer be as necessary once the omicron outbreak had peaked.
This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.
This content originally appeared on Asia Pacific Report and was authored by APR editor.
APR editor | Radio Free (2022-03-20T22:41:55+00:00) Omicron peak not right time to relax public health measures, says professor. Retrieved from https://www.radiofree.org/2022/03/20/omicron-peak-not-right-time-to-relax-public-health-measures-says-professor/
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