St Kilda sex worker one of four mystery cases among Victorias 24 new COVID infections

A St Kilda sex worker was among 24 new locally acquired cases of coronavirus recorded in Victoria on Wednesday.

Health Minister Martin Foley said the woman was being cared for in quarantine and there was no evidence of transmission occurring through her work.

“But out of caution, we are asking that if you have employed a sex worker in the St Kilda area, you need to come forward and get tested, no matter where you are,” Mr Foley said at Wednesday’s Victorian press conference.

Mr Foley said a number of the woman’s primary contacts had already been tested, and so far, they had returned negative results.

The Salvation Army’s needle and syringe program on Grey Street in St Kilda was deep cleaned on Tuesday night and all clients were directed to get tested at a pop-up testing clinic on Grey St.

COVID-19 response commander Jeroen Weimar said there were now 15 coronavirus cases in Melbourne’s inner south east that were all genomically linked, but the only other factor that linked them was geography.

He said the mystery cases were focused around Caulfield North, where an illegal engagement party was held last week, and Middle Park.

“We have accountants, we have architects, we have a sex worker, we have members of the Orthodox Jewish community, [and] we have a pizza guy who worked in a pizza shop in Glen Eira,” Mr Weimar said. “It is a very broad and disparate range of people.”

Mr Weimar said two people who had tested positive in the St Kilda area were homeless.

He said he believed the sex worker who tested positive, as well as one of her acquaintances, was detected after they arrived at a hospital emergency department.

Mr Weimar urged people in the St Kilda area to get tested for COVID-19.

“We are exceptionally concerned about what we don’t know [yet] in that area,” he said.

“There are clearly a number of chains of transmission that we do not yet have full pictures of, and we really want to use the next few days to get a full understanding of any possible transmissions that might be happening in that wider area.“

Mr Weimar said specialist health teams had been deployed to the St Kilda area.

Foley defends playground closures while childcare centres remain open

Mr Foley also revealed almost half of Victoria’s active coronavirus cases were young people.

There are currently 246 active coronavirus cases across the state, with 56 under the age of nine and 55 aged between 10 and 19.

But Mr Foley defended the closure of playgrounds while childcare centres remain open, describing the latter as a “controlled environment”.

“They have quite strict protocols in place … both federally and at the state level,” Mr Foley said.

“I think there’s always a difference between a regulated controlled environment, and an unregulated environment.”

He said playgrounds and childcare centres were qualitatively different, and noted the Delta variant had spread previously in outdoor areas.

He said a skate park in Melbourne’s north had been declared a COVID-19 exposure site.

“We have to work on the basis of public health advice and the evidence,” Mr Foley said.

Police patrol Princes Park in Carlton on Tuesday morning.

Police patrol Princes Park in Carlton on Tuesday morning.Credit:Joe Armao

“In regards to playgrounds, I think the evidence is that we’ve got 110 young people already infectious. Young people and kids, in particular, hang out in playgrounds. It’s a risky transmission site.”

Playgrounds were closed in Victoria on Monday evening as part of tougher new lockdown restrictions for Melbourne.

Four mystery cases among new infections

Of the new local COVID cases recorded in the 24 hours to midnight on Tuesday, 20 were linked to known outbreaks and 18 were isolating for their entire infectious periods.

There are now 12 people with COVID-19 in Victorian hospitals with two in intensive care.

The other new cases include:

  • 10 cases linked to Al-Taqwa College: three students and seven household contacts
  • Four cases linked to Glenroy West Primary School: all household contacts
  • Two cases linked to Caroline Springs: both work at the CS Square Shopping Centre
  • One case a household contact linked to Newport cluster
  • Two cases are residents of a Lygon Street residential tower
  • Four cases unlinked to existing clusters: two in Altona North, one in Glenroy, one a teenager from Glen Eira who works at a pizza shop in Malvern East (already declared an exposure site)
  • Exposure sites top 520

    A second Lygon Street residential tower has also been added to the state’s growing list of COVID-19 exposure sites.

    Victoria’s Department of Health declared the residential tower at 510 Lygon Street a tier 2 exposure site on Tuesday night.

    That means anyone who was on site between Saturday, August 14 and Tuesday, August 17 must urgently get tested for COVID-19, and isolate until they receive a negative test result.

    However, the health department said some individuals at the tower would be classified as tier 1 close contacts, meaning they must get tested and quarantine for 14 days, regardless of their test result.

    The department said it would contact those tier 1 contacts directly.

    The residential tower is the second on Lygon Street in Carlton to be declared an exposure site in this past week.

    An empty CBD during Melbourne’s sixth lockdown.

    An empty CBD during Melbourne’s sixth lockdown.Credit:Eddie Jim

    On Sunday, authorities listed the public housing tower at 480 Lygon Street as a tier 2 exposure site for more than a week, although they warned some residents would be classified as close contacts.

    Another three tier 2 exposure sites were listed late on Tuesday evening: a 7-Eleven at Flemington, a skate park at Jacana in Melbourne’s north and Bakers Delight in Ashburton, in the city’s south-east.

    Authorised worker permits required again in Melbourne

    Also late on Tuesday, at 11.59pm, authorised worker permits came back into effect for Melburnians.

    Authorised workers must carry their permits, signed by their employers, when travelling to and from their workplaces. Businesses can be fined up to nearly $110,000 if they issue permits to employees who aren’t eligible for the worker permit scheme.

    On-the-spot fines of $1817 will also apply to individuals, while businesses face $11,000 if they breach the scheme requirements.

    More than 39,832 coronavirus test results were processed on Tuesday, while more than 27,173 people rolled up their sleeves for a COVID-19 vaccine. Victoria recorded no new overseas-acquired cases of COVID-19 in hotel quarantine.

    Stay across the most crucial developments related to the pandemic with the Coronavirus Update. Sign up for the weekly newsletter.

    Cassandra Morgan is a breaking news reporter at The Age.

    0 Response to "St Kilda sex worker one of four mystery cases among Victorias 24 new COVID infections"

    Post a Comment