Analysis: Australia was a model in how to handle Covid. Now it’s a mess
Last week, worker absences due to Covid isolation and illness became so severe that the national cabinet considered lowering the age limit for forklift licenses so that minors could pitch in to smooth supply chains.
Ministers ultimately decided not to go ahead with the plan. But the idea that Australia, a country once lauded for its Covid-19 response, was considering such a move appeared to show how much the country’s leaders were struggling.
Most of Australia’s 1.5 million Covid infections were acquired in the past three weeks, and on Friday the country reported a record single-day total of 88 deaths.
But while the new course isn’t causing a health disaster on the scale seen elsewhere, it is leading to widespread disruption in a country that once prided itself as an exemplar of action on Covid.
The emergence of Omicron
From the government’s perspective, Omicron changed everything.
“Omicron has been one of the biggest [surprises] in challenging and pretty much turning on its head the way we’d been managing the pandemic up until that point,” Morrison said Thursday.
Better known as RATs, the at-home tests provide results in minutes, but they’re almost impossible to find in Australia.
Demand for the devices swelled when queues for the traditional PCR tests, performed by pathology labs, grew longer as more people came down with Covid symptoms.
Some people want them to prove they are Covid-free to go to work. Others need them to visit vulnerable relatives in hospitals and care homes. Without them, many people are stuck at home, unsure if they’re contagious or not.
Within a week, the site was getting half a million hits a day. At the peak of the squeeze, tests were available in just 10 locations around Australia, according to Hayward, who co-founded Melbourne software agency Pipelab.
“They were disappearing within about 30 minutes,” he said. According to the site, the supply issues have eased since then — RATs are available in fewer than 200 locations across the country, a number that changes as stock arrives and is sold out.
The government says more stocks are on their way. Free tests are already available from state clinics — but only for people who are symptomatic or those considered a close contact, which is defined as someone who is living with a positive case or has been with them in close quarters for more than four hours. From Monday, tests will be distributed free through pharmacies to concessional card holders, including pensioners.
Worker shortages test supply chains
It’s not just RATs in short supply — worker absences due to illness and isolation mean major supermarkets are struggling to keep stores stocked with common products.
This is partly because Covid is spreading rapidly — but also because close contacts of positive cases are required to isolate for seven days. In a bid to keep the country moving, essential workers are now exempt from that rule — as long as they return a negative test — but some industries are still suffering severe shortages.
Processed chicken, in particular, has become a rare commodity as workers call in sick with Covid along all points of the supply chain. A spokeswoman for the Australian Chicken Meat Federation told CNN that as many as 50% of staff are off sick in some processing facilities. Remaining workers are focusing on distributing whole chickens, instead of spending time cutting them up to sell as wings, thighs, and fillets, she told CNN.
“It’s really hard to judge who’s going to call in sick so planning is pretty impossible at the moment,” she said. “There’s still people contracting Covid, so just it’s really a day-to-day by day thing that doesn’t look like it might ease in the next couple of weeks.”
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet said Sunday that all children and teachers will be required to take two RATs when school resumes there Friday. Victoria is taking a similar approach but is only “strongly recommending” twice-weekly tests.
In both states, tests will be provided by the government, taking some pressure off pharmacies. And masks will be mandatory for teachers and most children age 8 and up.
Other anti-Covid measures are being employed, including air purifiers and outdoor lessons where possible in the summer heat.