Canberra has recorded 46 new cases of COVID-19 in the 24 hours to 8pm Wednesday, and the sixth death linked to an aged care outbreak has been confirmed.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
Of those 46 cases, 30 are linked to known cases or ongoing clusters and 22 are household contacts.
Eighteen of the 46 new cases were in quarantine during their whole infectious period, while 16 were assessed as presenting a risk of transmission to others.
ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr said while lockdown would end at midnight on Thursday, Friday was not the end of the pandemic and the virus would continue to spread in the community.
Mr Barr said that was why the ACT was taking such a gentle step towards the easing of restrictions.
"Lockdown has not been easy but it has kept our case numbers significantly lower than they would otherwise have been," he said.
"Lockdown has allowed hundreds of thousands of Canberrans to get vaccinated and it has saved tens of thousands of Canberrans from getting very sick."
Since the lockdown commenced there have been 1359 recorded cases of the virus in the territory, 119 people have been hospitalised, 24 have needed intensive care and seven people have lost their lives, Mr Barr said.
"For the families who've experienced a loved one in hospital, or who have received intensive care, or who have lost someone to the virus, it's been scary, it's been shocking and it's been devastating," he said.
The ACT has hit 98.8 per cent for first vaccinations for those aged 12 years and over, and is at 74.7 per cent for second doses.
Mr Barr said the evidence clearly showed one vaccine was not enough to prevent serious illness from COVID-19.
"We want to see our world leading first dose vaccination rate translate into a world leading fully vaccinated rate," he said.
"The statistic that matters and the one we will focus on is the percentage of our community which is fully vaccinated."
That was why the ACT was focusing on double vaccination rates, which would keep the rate of hospitalisations down as restrictions continued to ease, Mr Barr said.
READ MORE:
The number of people in hospital was unchanged from Wednesday at 16, although there are now six people in intensive care - down from eight. There are still five people in intensive care requiring ventilation. There are now 492 active cases associated with this outbreak.
Nine weeks of lockdown will come to an end at midnight on Thursday with the easing of restrictions to include allowances for more businesses to open, a slight increase in home visitations and larger gatherings permitted outdoors.
Mr Barr told reporters on Thursday the cautious approach was welcomed by the majority of the Canberra population.
However, the slow easing out of lockdown has been criticised by many, particularly those in the business community and parents eager for their children to be back in school.
ACT Australian Hotels Association General Manager Anthony Brierley addressed the governments COVID committee on Thursday.
Mr Brierley quoted a business owner when he told the committee that while businesses understood public health was the government's primary concern, the ACT government was "killing us instead".
Mr Barr took an optimistic approach during what was his final scheduled COVID update on Thursday, while promising to front the media after a coffee date with his niece and nephew on Friday.
"From tomorrow more businesses will reopen, some people will start to go back to their workplace and we will begin to return to the life in Canberra that we are used to, the life that makes this the most liveable city in Australia," Mr Barr said.
READ MORE:
- New exposure sites include construction site
- Canberra restaurant to celebrate lockdown end with midnight feast
- Another death associated with Calvary Haydon Retirement Community
- Barr blames NSW for border bubble rules, says Canberrans will 'dob in' wrongdoers
- Perrottet could hold back Sydney from regions
- Severe thunderstorms may keep Canberrans inside when lockdown ends Friday
- Andrew Barr fights back over ACT-NSW border bubble criticisms, confusion
- Changes on business closures, quarantine requirements
Our coverage of the health and safety aspects of this outbreak of COVID-19 in the ACT and the lockdown is free for anyone to access. However, we depend on subscription revenue to support our journalism. If you are able, please subscribe here. If you are already a subscriber, thank you for your support. You can also sign up for our newsletters for regular updates.
Our journalists work hard to provide local, up-to-date news to the community. This is how you can continue to access our trusted content:
- Bookmark canberratimes.com.au
- Download our app
- Make sure you are signed up for our breaking and regular headlines newsletters
- Follow us on Twitter
- Follow us on Instagram