Premiers defend COVID isolation reduction

Premiers have defended national cabinet’s decision to cut the COVID-19 isolation requirement back to five days after the peak medical body called on the government to release the health advice.

Sep 02, 2022, updated Sep 02, 2022
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet. Photo: AAP/Bianca De Marchi

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet. Photo: AAP/Bianca De Marchi

Australian Medical Association president Steve Robson has urged the government not to treat the virus as other infectious diseases after the prime minister said there aren’t mandatory isolation requirements for other illnesses.

Professor Robson said the AMA had not been consulted ahead of the announcement, and that doctors were “scratching their heads on what this advice is”.

Western Australian Premier Mark McGowan said he is satisfied at the health advice presented to him at national cabinet, and by his own chief health officer, that now was the right time to move.

“Everything is always balanced … and the advice from my chief health officer was very strong that we should do that,” McGowan said when asked about the reduction.

“Over the course of the last two-and-a-half years, I’d been one of the more cautious people about COVID. But the health advice given to me was very strong.”

Mr McGowan said case numbers wouldn’t necessarily go up due to the isolation changes, after a warning from Prof Robson about a potential spike.

“One of the things we face is a lot of our staff, particularly in hospitals, are furloughed, which has other complications,” he said.

“Maybe six weeks ago, the AMA was saying case numbers were going to go through the roof and … it turned out to be the opposite.

“What’s occurring is case numbers are going down, we’re coming out of winter, it’s the right time to do it.”

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NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet said it was time the nation moved away from mandatory health orders, so employees could make their own decisions about when to go to work.

“We need to move to a place where if you’re sick you stay at home, and if you’re not sick you go to work,” Perottet said.

“Ultimately, the point we need to get to is less reliance on public health orders and a greater reliance on people respecting each other.”

ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr said while he argued the reduction from seven days to five occur be delayed, there was a compromise from moving immediately.

“I argued it occur at the end of September,” Barr said.

“Ideally, we would be fully over the winter peak before making this step down, (but) I was pleased that rather than an instant announcement, that doesn’t occur for another 10 days or so.”

It comes as more than 60 people with COVID-19 died across the nation on Thursday while more than 11,700 cases were recorded.

-AAP

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