Another 199 cases of Covid-19 have been found in New South Wales overnight – including 50 who were infectious in the community – as Gladys Berejiklian revealed the number of jabs in arms needed to ease Sydney’s lockdown.
The NSW premier said transmission of the virus was still highest in the eight local government areas in the city’s west and south-west with tightened lockdown rules.
Authorities have yet to find the source of infection for 111 of the new cases.
Ms Berejiklian on Tuesday said she wanted six million jabs in arms across NSW by the end of August – which would mean half the state’s eligible population have received either their first or second jab of a Covid-19 vaccination.
She said reaching that target would give her ‘additional options’ in terms of easing the strict stay-at-home lockdown in Greater Sydney – which is entering its sixth week and was last week extended until at least August 29.
‘We’re at 3.9 million [total vaccinations in NSW]. I suspect we’ll be at four million by the end of the week,’ she said.
The state leader also suggested her government was considering allowing NSW residents who are vaccinated greater freedoms than those who haven’t had the jab.
‘We know that people value their freedom, their desire to go back to work, their desire to engage in community life,’ she said.
‘We want our citizens to know that if they’re vaccinated and their loved ones are vaccinated, there will be opportunities for greater freedom moving forward.’
Pictured are pedestrians wearing masks in Newtown in Sydney’s inner-west. The city is entering its sixth week of a strict stay-at-home lockdown
Authorities have yet to find the source of infection for 111 of Tuesday’s 199 new cases of Covid-19
The announcement comes after worrying new modelling suggested there could be 600 new cases in Sydney each day by Friday if lockdown restrictions are not tightened across the city.
Infections could even hit an astonishing 7,700 cases a day in a worst case scenario by the end of August, experts predicted, similar to the thousands of daily cases seen overseas with the Indian Delta variant.
Evidence collated by Professors Allan Saul, Brendan Crabb AC, Margaret Hellard AM and Dr Campbell Aitken of the Burnet Institute on Monday showed tighter measures in the hotspot government areas may be working – but the rest of Sydney is teetering on a knife’s edge.
Cleaners are pictured in personal protective equipment at Strathfield South Public School in Sydney’s inner-west on Monday. Researchers have predicted Sydney’s lockdown could get much worse.
Pictured is a police patrol in Fairfield on Tuesday morning. The Fairfield LGA is one of eight parts of Sydney under tighter stay-at-home restrictions to slow the spread of the Delta variant
This was clear in a late night drop of exposure sites released on Monday, including a Coles and Aldi on the city’s lower north shore, as well as an auto parts store in Rockdale.
Using analysis of what restrictions did and didn’t work during Melbourne’s outbreak last year, the team of scientists found NSW’s effective contact tracing, use of QR codes and record testing rates had helped stop the outbreak spiralling into thousands of daily cases.
Without such measures, and a lockdown, Sydney could already be looking at 1,000 daily cases – but infections are still doubling on average every nine days.
But the modelling, based on how infections have spread to date, still predicted the city would see 570 cases per day by Friday.
This is despite south-west Sydney’s outbreak slowly coming under control, with infections still increasing rapidly in other areas of the city.
The upward trend of daily cases in south-west Sydney’s Fairfield reversed on July 15, six days after the three initial LGAs restrictions were tightened.
Cumberland, Blacktown, Parramatta, Georges River and Campbelltown were added to the list of LGAs under stricter lockdowns on Friday and experts are hoping the numbers drop in those areas, but they say the restrictions should be broadened.
Of the 207 new infections New South Wales recorded on Monday, 83 were found in the city’s south-west. Pictured: health workers at Hardi Aged Care Nursing Home Facility at Summer Hill on August 2
FIND THE LATEST EXPOSURE SITES NEAR YOU
‘Although the number of cases is still lower outside south west Sydney, daily cases in the rest of Sydney are now increasing at about the same rate as happened initially in Fairfield – doubling every four to five days,’ the research body said.
‘Unless new controls introduced on July 28 or 30 or in the future have a major impact, our model projects that Sydney will have about 7,700 cases per day four weeks from now.’
The experts recommended bringing in ‘consistent stringent restrictions’, like those seen in the hotspot LGAs, all across the city.
Australian Defence Force troops have joined NSW police patrolling streets in Sydney’s west and southwest during lockdown (pictured, personnel in the city on Monday)
‘Not only is this the equitable approach, but epidemiologically sound,’ the report concluded.
According to their modelling, it will take until the end of September to get below five new cases per day over a seven-day period.
Some areas not included in the tightened restrictions, such as Burwood, Strathfield and Bayside, are seeing higher case numbers per capita than those under the stricter lockdown.
Of the 207 new infections New South Wales recorded on Monday, 83 were found in the city’s south-west – but contact tracers say those infections are contained to the area.
Worryingly, a further 53 were recorded in the west and 48 were in the central Sydney local health district.
To combat a potential explosion of cases, researchers suggested a tighter lockdown for the whole of Sydney.
‘The reality is that no one is safe until everyone is safe,’ the experts warned.
‘Every positive case, no matter in which LGA, takes testing and contact tracing resources and has the potential to trigger new outbreaks.
The experts recommended bringing in ‘consistent stringent restrictions’, like those seen in the hotspot LGAs, all across the city (pictured, a runner in Bondi on Monday)
Ms Berejiklian said on Monday that at least 50 of those newly-acquired infections were out in the community while infectious. Pictured: Cleaners in personal protective equipment at Strathfield South Public School on Monday
Worrying modelling shows the virus is likely to spread even further in Sydney (pictured on Sunday) and could reach nearly 600 cases a week by Friday
Health workers take out stretchers from an ambulance at the Hardi Aged Care Nursing Home Facility in Summers Hill suburb of Sydney on August 2. There are now 232 patients suffering from Covid-19 in NSW hospitals – including 54 in intensive care and 25 who require ventilation
‘A highly mobile population means new outbreaks could occur anywhere in Sydney or NSW or across Australia.’
But on a positive note, researchers found that a potential 1,000 new cases per day were avoided because movement in the city was largely curtailed near the start of the outbreak.
‘We calculate that the restrictions implemented so far have avoided 4,000 cases, over and above the many prevented by contract tracing and subsequent isolation,’ they said.