Predictable mistakes - not testing quarantine staff (fixed now); employing minimum wage workers who then need multiple jobs to make ends meet instead of paying them a decent wage to do their very dangerous quarantine job.
Why should SA Health reassure the public they are on top of a sudden tenfold increase in active cases in hotel quarantine (from 2 to 20)? Because they are public servants working to protect the public in the middle of a global pandemic of over 50 million cases and the equivalent of the entire population of SA in deaths. Their previous fallacious reasoning that 'an outbreak from quarantine hasn't happened here therefore it's not going to' astounds me.
Your point starting with 'second' is incorrect.
But, although I was alarmed before the SA outbreak happened, I've been happy with the effective SA Health response since it happened. I don't however accept the description of the junior doctor at Lyell McEwin as a 'heroine' as Nicola Spurrier called her. It was great that she did the swab but that was just doing her job. I'm amazed that apparently other doctors might not have taken that swab from someone presenting at hospital feeling non-specifically unwell in the midst of the global pandemic, the sudden tenfold increase of active cases in SA hotel quarantine and the knowledge of what happened in Victoria. But they've fixed that too now and are now swabbing anyone who presents to hospital with anything that could conceivably be covid, even just a slightly raised temp.
So the predictable mistakes were actually things SA had in common with every other State.
SA reacted as it did because if the pizza worker had been telling the truth then he would have caught the virus at the pizza shop so the number of possible cases and their geographic spread would have been possibly
enormous.Note the caught from a pizza box was the pizza worker's suggestion.I presume they requestioned him when they found no evidence of infection in any other worker making his suggestion highly improbable.
SA reacted also because of the genomics they had as well as a possible severe
scenario.They were correct to do
so.SA obviously shared the information with all other States and the
Commonwealth.As I have stated we at the hospital here in Tasmania were told of this by the medico here that is on the covid action committee before the lockdown was
announced.That day we had a refresher course on PPE doffing and
donning.The local health authorities obviously believed the possible SA scenario.
Lastly there are widely accepted guidelines on testing for covid and they particularly exclude testing people who present to hospital without possible covid
symptoms.This includes a fever.Without any other symptoms of covid a fever by itself is not a reason for a covid
test.This is a national
guideline.You will though grill such a patient more intensely to make sure they have no possible covid
symptoms.This was said by our infectious diseases physician this
morning.The problem is testing a person where there is a very low pretest chance of infection -such as residents of Tasmania and SA before this cluster - the chance of a positive test being a false positive becomes quite
high.Just ask the residents of Blackall in QLD what harm that does to a community.
And the junior doctor showed that she is indeed a very good
doctor.The initial patient presented complaining of NO Covid
symptoms.The doctor pressed for a covid test because she was observant and heard her cough twice which then made a covid test
necessary.If the patient hadn't coughed she would not have been tested and the outbreak likely a lot worse.