Australia suffers deadliest day of pandemic as Omicron drives up
hospital cases
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[January 18, 2022]
By Renju Jose
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia suffered its
deadliest day of the pandemic on Tuesday as a fast-moving Omicron
outbreak continued to push up hospitalisation rates to record levels,
even as daily infections eased slightly.
Australia is dealing with its worst COVID-19 outbreak, fuelled by the
Omicron variant of the coronavirus that has put more people in hospitals
and intensive care than at any time during the pandemic.
A total of 77 deaths was recorded, exceeding the previous national high
of 57 last Thursday, official data showed.
"Today, is a very difficult day for our state," New South Wales (NSW)
Premier Dominic Perrottet said during a media briefing as the state
reported 36 deaths, a new pandemic high.
Only four of those who died in NSW had received their booster shot,
prompting the state's health officials to urge people to avoid delays
and get their third dose soon. Thirty-three were double-dosed.
"There needs to be a sense of urgency in embracing the booster doses,"
NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said. "For Omicron, we know that
the protection is lower and we need that next boosting to get that
higher level of protection."
The surge in case numbers battered consumer confidence last week, an ANZ
survey on Tuesday showed, triggering self-imposed lockdowns and stifling
spending even as states looked to avoid lockdowns and keep businesses
open.
Omicron also dented Prime Minister Scott Morrison's approval ratings,
according to a widely watched poll on Tuesday, putting opposition Labor
into a leading position months out from a federal election.
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A lone woman, wearing a protective face mask, walks across a city
centre bridge as the state of Victoria looks to curb the spread of a
COVID-19 outbreak in Melbourne, Australia, July 16, 2021.
REUTERS/Sandra Sanders
Amid rising hospitalisations,
Victoria on Tuesday declared a "code brown" in hospitals, usually
reserved for shorter-term emergencies, that would give hospitals the
power to cancel non-urgent health services and cancel staff leave.
To help public hospitals cope, the federal government has activated
a plan for private hospitals to provide up to 57,000 nurses and more
than 100,000 staff to Omicron-affected areas around the country,
Health Minister Greg Hunt said.
While authorities usually do not specify the coronavirus variant
that leads to deaths, officials have said most patients in intensive
care were infected with the Omicron strain, with unvaccinated young
people forming a "significant number".
Queensland said none of Tuesday's record 16 deaths in the state had
received booster shots. Of the 45 people who have died in the state
due to COVID-19 since Dec. 13, only one had received their third
dose.
"Please come forward and get your booster, we know that it makes a
difference," state Health Minister Yvette D'Ath said.
About 73,000 new infections were reported on Tuesday, down from a
high of 150,000 last Thursday. So far, Australia has reported about
1.6 million infections since the pandemic began, of which around 1.3
million were in the last two weeks. Total deaths stood at 2,776.
(Reporting by Renju Jose; Additional reporting by Sonali Paul in
Melbourne; editing by Richard Pullin)
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