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As it happened: Victoria emerges from lockdown as state records zero local COVID-19 cases; Australian Open welcomes back crowds

Rachael Dexter and Marissa Calligeros
Updated ,first published

Summary

  • Victoria’s five-day, hard lockdown has ended and greater Melbourne is no longer considered a COVID hotspot. Residents are now free to travel more than five kilometres from their homes and the four reasons for leaving home have been revoked, but some restrictions on public and private gatherings remain
  • State health and hospital pages have been swept up in Facebook’s mass ban of news publishers in Australia, a move which risks undermining public health messaging ahead of the coronavirus vaccine rollout which begins next week.
  • Victoria has recorded no new local COVID-19 cases for the second day in a row, although one new case has emerged in hotel quarantine. NSW has achieved its 32nd day in a row without a local case, while Queensland has recorded its 42nd straight day of zero cases. 
  • Debate rages among scientists over whether a nebuliser really was the source of Victoria’s Holiday Inn outbreak, as the Andrews government has suggested. Meanwhile, the man blamed for spreading the virus by using the nebuliser is pushing for an independent review of his case.
  • Visit our new vaccine tracker, which shows how many people around the world have been vaccinated so far and which countries are leading the charge.
Pinned post from 3.43pm on Feb 18, 2021
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Interactive: Is your town on the list for aged care vaccines next week?

By Rachael Dexter

As we reported in the blog earlier (1.42pm), the federal government has released a comprehensive list of nearly 200 towns and suburbs across Australia where aged care residents will be vaccinated next week.

Our visual journalist Jamie Brown has knocked up this nifty searchable list and an interactive map that you can use to see whether your local area is part of the week 1 rollout.

More than 500 nurses will travel to 190 towns and suburbs across the country to deliver the first Pfizer vaccines.

Sixteen Pfizer hospital hubs will also help vaccinate the residents of more than 240 aged care facilities.

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The day in review

By Robyn Grace

That brings us to the end of another big day of coronavirus coverage. A reminder of what made news today:

  • The federal government released a list of nearly 200 towns and suburbs across Australia where aged care residents will be vaccinated next week.
  • Health and hospital pages were swept up in Facebook’s mass ban of news publishers in Australia, a move that risks undermining public health messaging before the coronavirus vaccine rollout begins next week.
  • Office workers and shoppers have slowly returned to Melbourne’s CBD after Victoria’s five-day “circuit-breaker” lockdown ended. But 3400 people potentially exposed to the virus as a result of Melbourne’s Holiday Inn outbreak are still self-isolating.
  • The city’s annual Moomba festival has been cancelled for the first time in its 66-year history. Reduced crowds under COVID-19 restrictions and the cancellation of key festival events including the parade and Birdman Rally were deciding factors.
  • Victoria recorded no new local COVID-19 cases for the second day in a row, although one new case has emerged in hotel quarantine. NSW achieved its 32nd day in a row without a local case, while Queensland has recorded its 42nd straight day of zero cases.
  • Life expectancy in the United States dropped a staggering one year during the first half of 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic caused its first wave of deaths, health officials are reporting.
  • Britain will become the first country to deliberately infect healthy volunteers with coronavirus, now that the country’s ethics body has approved a “human challenge trial”.
  • Also, don’t forget to check out our new vaccine data tracker.

The impact of Facebook’s news ban on news websites

By Craig Butt

Analysis of Facebook link sharing data by the Queensland University of Technology Digital Media Research professor Axel Bruns shows how the number of links posted to Australian media websites on the social network plummeted on Thursday as soon as the news ban was implemented.

Professor Bruns tracked the number of hourly links to 35 Australian media organisations shared on public Facebook pages over the past three days, which are a proxy for posting dynamics across the social network and his graph shows the impact Facebook’s ban on referral traffic as soon as it was implemented on Thursday morning:

“The dropdown here is just over 50 per cent,” he said. But he said even links to an Australian news website that had successfully been posted would not have been viewable by Facebook’s Australian users, meaning the actual drop-off was even higher.

“My guess is that those pages may have posted content via overseas Facebook accounts (or using workarounds of some sort) - but that access to these posts is blocked for Australian users. So even those 50 per cent of posts that are still being made may not reach their intended audience.”

US life expectancy drops by one year

By

Life expectancy in the United States dropped a staggering one year during the first half of 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic caused its first wave of deaths, health officials are reporting.

Minorities suffered the biggest impact, with black Americans losing nearly three years and Hispanics, nearly two years, according to preliminary estimates Thursday from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This is a huge decline,” said Robert Anderson, who oversees the numbers for the CDC. “You have to go back to World War II, the 1940s, to find a decline like this.“

Other health experts say it shows the profound impact of COVID-19, not just on deaths directly due to infection but also from heart disease, cancer and other conditions.

“What is really quite striking in these numbers is that they only reflect the first half of the year ... I would expect that these numbers would only get worse,” said Dr Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, a health equity researcher and dean at the University of California, San Francisco.

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Virus fragments found in two more Queensland sewage catchments

By Matt Dennien

Queensland health authorities have detected COVID-19 fragments in two further sewage catchments, chief health officer Jeannette Young says.

The detections in Maryborough, about 250 kilometres north of Brisbane, and Rockhampton, about 380 kilometres further north, come amid a number of recent positive test results across the state.

Dr Young urged anyone with any symptoms to get tested immediately, given the recent Melbourne cluster and the uptick in interstate travel, with early identification of the virus “critical”.

Wastewater testing is an early-warning system for COVID-19 outbreaks.University of Queensland

“We are concerned by the new variants that are emerging overseas that are more contagious than previous variants we have seen in Queensland,” she said.

“It’s also possible that this detection relates to previous COVID-19 cases that can shed viral fragments for a couple of months after they are no longer infectious.”

Queensland Health data has shown virus fragments were detected 110 times in wastewater between July and December, with the most frequent positive results found throughout the state’s south-east corner and Cairns.

Breaking: Melbourne’s Moomba festival cancelled

By Carolyn Webb and Rachael Dexter

Melbourne City Council has just confirmed that the annual Moomba Festival will not go ahead next month due to restrictions brought about by COVID-19 and the recent snap lockdown.

In a statement Lord Mayor Sally Capp said the massive reduction in crowds and cancellation of major drawcards meant the event was not feasible.

The Moomba Festival usually draws over a million people over the long weekend in March.Simon Schluter

“Reduced crowds together with the cancellation of key elements such as the Birdman Rally, the Moomba Parade, and most recently, the water skiing, mean that the Moomba we know and love cannot go ahead,” the Lord Mayor said.

Usually more than one million people attend the multi-day festival over the Labour Day long weekend in Melbourne along the Yarra River.

Melbourne aged care case still under investigation

By Rachael Dexter

A quick update on the news that emerged last night of an elderly gentleman from an aged care facility in Melbourne’s north who had returned a weak positive result this week after two negative tests.

The man, who lives at Twin Parks aged care facility in Reservoir, was diagnosed with COVID-19 in August last year. His latest test result is thought to be an instance of viral shedding rather than a new infection.

The Victorian Health Department has just advised his case is still under investigation, with yet another test taken today and an expert panel reviewing the findings.

The man has no links to the Holiday Inn cluster, but all staff and residents at Twin Parks have been tested this week in light of the weak positive.

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Wastewater viral fragments found in Wantirna, Boronia, Carrum Downs, Langwarrin, St Kilda and Caulfield

By Rachael Dexter

Symptomatic residents in three wastewater catchment areas in Melbourne’s south and south-east are being urged to get tested for COVID-19 as soon as possible, with viral fragments found in sewage this week.

The Victorian Health Department has just advised that the Wantirna South/Boronia, Carrum Downs/Langwarrin and St Kilda East/Caulfield areas showed up weak traces of COVID-19 in wastewater samples taken on Monday and Tuesday this week.

Anyone who has any symptoms of COVID-19 is urged to get tested, especially if you live in or have visited one of these areas during these periods:

  • Wantirna South or Boronia from Saturday February 13 to Monday February 15 (includes parts of Bayswater, Ferntree Gully, Knoxfield and Tremont)
  • Carrum Downs or Langwarrin from Saturday February 13 to Tuesday February 16 (includes parts of Skye)
  • St Kilda East or Caulfield North from Saturday February 13 to Tuesday February 16 (includes parts of Balaclava, Caulfield and Elsternwick)

In photos: Melburnians re-emerge from lockdown into a sun-drenched city

By Rachael Dexter

A few more photos have just hit the newsdesk from photographer Paul Jeffers, who has been out and about in Melbourne documenting the city after its third lockdown ended last night.

It’s a gorgeous day out there - currently 33 degrees. Despite the heat, it seems some people are still wearing masks outdoors even though the rules have relaxed (you now only need to wear them indoors and outside when you cannot keep distance from others).

If you’re stuck inside like me, enjoy Paul’s photos of freedom:

Diners, shoppers and pedestrians fill Centre Place post lockdown on Thursday.Paul Jeffers
Melburnians re-emerge from lockdown into a sun-drenched city on Thursday.Paul Jeffers
Degraves Street was humming on Thursday afternoon.Paul Jeffers
Pinned post from 3.43pm on Feb 18, 2021

Interactive: Is your town on the list for aged care vaccines next week?

By Rachael Dexter

As we reported in the blog earlier (1.42pm), the federal government has released a comprehensive list of nearly 200 towns and suburbs across Australia where aged care residents will be vaccinated next week.

Our visual journalist Jamie Brown has knocked up this nifty searchable list and an interactive map that you can use to see whether your local area is part of the week 1 rollout.

More than 500 nurses will travel to 190 towns and suburbs across the country to deliver the first Pfizer vaccines.

Sixteen Pfizer hospital hubs will also help vaccinate the residents of more than 240 aged care facilities.

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‘Assault on a sovereign nation’: Hunt ramps up Facebook rhetoric in question time

By Rachael Dexter

G’day, Rachael Dexter here to take you to the end of the day. Feel free to drop me a line on email if you have news tips.

Turning our attention to the latest from question time in Parliament House in Canberra...


Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt has repeated his condemnation of tech giant Facebook in question time just now, claiming the move by the company to shutter the Facebook pages of Australian news outlets and government departments was “an assault on a sovereign nation”.

Mr Hunt made similar remarks in a press conference held a short time ago.

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