Gladys Berejiklian says she needs a COVID ‘crystal ball’ to end Sydney’s lockdown — these people could have one




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Greater Sydney is in locked but COVID-19 case numbers continue to rise. (ABC News: John Gunn)

In a dire week for NSW’s COVID-19 outbreak, Premier Gladys Berejiklian yesterday made one thing clear: Greater Sydney’s lockdown will be extended.

She was stating the obvious.

The number of infections since the Delta variant was first identified in the eastern suburbs last month is approaching 2,000. Daily updates show figures in several key COVID indicators are climbing.

Ms Berejiklian said she would be working hard over the weekend on a blueprint out of the crisis.

Some academics have already started.

They’ve built three different models that provide clues as to how long the lockdown in Sydney and its surrounds could need to run.

They’re based on complex maths, and designed by separate teams from different institutions.

“I would love a crystal ball,” the Premier quipped on Wednesday.

The people behind these models argue they’re about as close to that as you can get, and history shows they’re pretty accurate.

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The first, from the University of Melbourne’s Populations Intervention Unit shows Sydney’s 14-day average number of new cases could be brought down to five by around August 28.

The model predicts it could be as early as August 16 or as late as September 6 when variable factors are included in calculations.

A 14-day average of less than five was the same trigger to relax restrictions that Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews used during Melbourne’s second wave last year.

Ms Berejiklian hasn’t publicly identified it as a significant number in her state’s lockdown calculations.

The real-world data shows the actual 14-day average in NSW has been rising steadily and has not started to plateau.

Tony Blakely, the epidemiologist who led the work, said the model was very accurate at predicting when Melbourne’s lockdown reached its goal.

“Our model predicted, to the day, when we got to the average of five per day. It was smack on,” he said.

Professor Blakely said the strength of the model was that it took the guess work out of calculating what the reproductive rate — the number of people each case infected — needed to be.

The model has been tailored to Sydney and factors in the increased transmissibility of the Delta COVID-19 variant, which was not present during Melbourne’s second wave.

Another model, developed by the Burnett Institute of Medical Research, shows what have happened if restrictions similar to those brought in at the height of Melbourne’s second wave last year were introduced in Sydney on July 7.

The model, run in early July, predicted case numbers would be brought down to five in about a month.

However, stronger restrictions were not introduced in Sydney until July 18, pushing the target out even further.

Margaret Hellard, the epidemiologist who led the work, said the model ascribed random attributes to every individual.

“Then when you introduce restrictions, those restrictions might have more impact on one person than another,” Professor Hellard said.

She said the strength of the model was that it captured some of the random nature of the pandemic, but models were only one component and contact tracing and epidemiological data gathering were important to “paint the bigger picture of what’s going on”.

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The third model, developed by the University of Sydney, is based around compliance.

It shows case numbers could be brought down to less than five a day by August 13 if compliance in Greater Sydney increases to 90 per cent.

Study author Sheryl Chang said to achieve 90 per cent compliance, Sydneysiders needed to reduce their activity to 10 per cent of normal.

Dropping to 80 per cent compliance pushes the target out to August 28.

The actual case numbers show compliance has been below 50 per cent since around July 12.

“More importantly, we really have to bring down the community interactions,” Dr Chang said.

“Reduce number of times, duration of time you have on the street.

“Minimise your time outdoors, minimise the time you meet strangers. That’s how we can bring down the number of cases.”

The model currently does not include actual movement data in Sydney.

South-west Sydney has become the outbreak’s epicentre, accounting for more than 65 per cent of cases in the past week.

Google movement data shows residents in the Fairfield, Liverpool and Canterbury-Bankstown local government areas of concern have cut the time spent in shops and workplaces, even before the tougher restrictions were imposed.

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Professor Blakely said the current settings were about as hard as you could go and it was now about the quality of the implementation.

“If you want to make incremental gains and beat our model — which I’d be delighted for Sydney to do — its about really high quality implementation, people staying at home, people not having a quick drink with mates in the backyard,” he said.

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Source: Thanks msn.com