Covid hospital admissions reach record high in Australia as country battles ‘twindemic’ with flu also causing havoc — after draconian border closures left Aussies with weakened immunity
- 5,450 patients in hospital with Covid – eclipsing prior record of 5,390 in January
- Australia hailed as success story early in the pandemic after Zero Covid strategy
- But that policy is coming back to bite country due to lack of natural immunity
Coronavirus hospital rates have reached record highs in Australia as the country grapples with a ‘twindemic’ of Covid and flu.
There were 5,450 patients in hospital with Covid on Monday, official figures show, eclipsing the previous record of 5,390 during the first Omicron wave in January.
That figure has soared from about 3,000 a month ago, amid the spread of the highly infectious but equally mild BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants of Omicron.
Australia was hailed as a Covid success story early in the pandemic when it managed to keep cases at virtually zero by turning itself into a hermit state with repeated lockdowns and border closures.
But the ‘Zero Covid’ policy — which it only ditched nearly two years into the pandemic — is thought to have left its population with subpar immunity.
Around 95 per cent of Australians have been double-vaccinated and 70 per cent boosted, but barely anyone had been exposed to the virus until this year.
The draconian lockdown strategy is also thought to have weakened people’s immunity to seasonal illnesses, and has been blamed for the current flu outbreak.
Australia’s flu season, which typically runs from June to September, started unusually early this year and caused infections to spike up to 10 times higher than the pre-pandemic level in some weeks.
The new Labor Government has resisted calls for social restrictions to be reintroduced but has recommended people wear masks indoors and businesses allow employees to work from home if they can.
There were 5,450 patients in hospital with Covid on Monday, official figures show, eclipsing the previous record of 5,390 during the first Omicron wave in January
Australia is recording around 30,000 Covid infections per day and daily deaths topped 100 last week for only the second time in the pandemic
Dr Leana Wen, a public health policy professor at George Washington University in the US, told WebMD Australia was in the midst of a ‘twindemic’ caused by a lack of natural exposure to Covid and influenza earlier in the pandemic.
At a press conference last week, Health Minister Mark Butler and the country’s Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly admitted ‘millions’ more Australians would be infected over the coming weeks.
Australia is recording around 30,000 Covid infections per day and daily deaths topped 100 last week for only the second time in the pandemic.
While BA.4 and BA.5 — which are also behind a fresh Covid surge in the UK — are milder than previous strains, they are wreaking havoc on Australia’s care homes.
More than 1,000 social care facilities have suffered outbreaks during the latest wave, putting the elderly and most vulnerable at risk.
Many frontline workers in care homes and hospitals are also sick or in isolation because of high infection rates, piling more pressure on services.
Nearly 2,000 Australian army troops have been ordered to remain in care homes to ease staff shortages.
Australians who cannot make a living because they are isolating due to Covid are entitled to a $750 (£430) payment.
Meanwhile, neighbouring New Zealand, which also doggedly pursued Zero Covid earlier in the pandemic, is now suffering record Covid death rates.
Weekly virus fatalities hit 162 in the seven days ending July 23, compared to 115 in the worst week of the previous flare-up in March, according to Health Ministry data.
It means the country’s current mortality rate is twice as high as the UK’s and four times higher than the US.
Data from Oxford University-backed research platform Our World in Data shows four people per million in New Zealand are dying with Covid every day.
For comparison, in the darkest days of the pandemic, similar rates in the UK and US sat closer to 19 and 10, respectively.
However, both countries are now logging much lower death counts.
The UK is recording two deaths per million people each day, despite up to one in 15 people being infected.
Meanwhile, the US is suffering just one Covid fatality for every million people, a quarter of the scale seen in New Zealand.
Covid cases rise by 10% in England… but ‘it’s proof outbreak has PEAKED’
England’s Covid outbreak is slowing down, according to official data.
Analysts behind the country’s most trusted surveillance project, ran by the Office for National Statistics, estimate 3.14million people were infected on July 13 — up only 9 per cent on the previous week’s estimate. For comparison, the surge logged last Friday was roughly a third.
Cautious statisticians said it’s ‘too early to say’ if the wave is peaking.
But public health experts claimed the worst is likely over, given that the mass-testing survey is ‘always two or three weeks behind the epidemic curve’.
Separate NHS England figures shows admissions actually began to fall 10 days ago. MailOnline analysis yesterday revealed rates are now dropping in each region.
Despite the positive signs, some scientists have urged ministers to reintroduce mask mandates and working from home rules.
Others have even raised the prospect of limits on social gatherings, similar to harsh policies adopted during the darkest spell of the pandemic.
Source: Read Full Article