The Ministry of Health is reporting 810 new community cases and 32 people in hospital.
Of the new community cases, 13 are in Northland, 623 in Auckland. 81 in Waikato, 11 in Bay of Plenty, 11 in Lakes, eight in Hawke's Bay, three in MidCentral, six in Whanganui, five in Taranaki, three in Tairawhiti, 15 in Wellington, ten in Hutt Valley, two in Nelson Marlborough , three in Canterbury, two in South Canterbury, and 14 in Southern DHB region.
There were 18 new cases identified at the border, of which five are historical.
Of the 32 people in hospital, 30 have active infections. There is one case in Whangārei, four in North Shore, eight in Middlemore, 15 in Auckland, one in Tauranga, one in Rotorua, one in Wellington and one in Christchurch Hospital. The average age of current hospitalisations is 62 years and there are no cases in ICU or HDU.
More than 49,000 boosters were given out on Saturday.
'The sharp increase in new cases today is another reminder that, as expected, the highly transmissible Omicron variant is now spreading in our communities as we have seen in other countries,” says a Ministry of Health spokesperson.
'Our expectation is that cases will continue to increase over the coming weeks and we're asking people to do all they can to slow the spread of the virus and protect themselves and their whānau.
'The most important step anyone can take to prepare for Omicron is to book their vaccine, whether it's their first, second or booster. Every dose counts and lowers the chances of getting very sick and being hospitalised.”
The ministry is also continuing to remind people to do the basics well.
'Staying home if you're unwell, wearing a mask, physical distancing and scanning in using the NZ Covid Tracer app when you're out and about,” says a Ministry of Health spokesperson.
Anyone with cold or flu symptoms that could be Covid-19 is asked to get a test and isolate at home until a negative result is returned.
The most common early symptoms of the Omicron variant are a sore or scratchy throat, and a runny nose.
'Even if you develop a small sniffle, please get a test.”
The Big Boost
The Ministry of Health is thanking the more than 214,000 New Zealanders who have so far rolled up their sleeves to get their booster shot during ‘The Big Boost'.
'This is our national week of action where we're making it as easy as possible to get your booster, with pop-up vaccination centres and extended opening hours,” says a Ministry of Health spokesperson.
'February is a critical month to get New Zealand boosted – and we're encouraging every New Zealander aged 18 and over who had their second vaccination at least three months ago to get their booster as soon as possible.
People can access a Pfizer booster dose in the same way as any other dose, booking online via www.BookMyVaccine.nz visiting a walk-in or drive-thru vaccination clinic, or by calling the COVID Vaccination Healthline on 0800 28 29 26 (8am to 8pm, 7 days a week).
COVID-19 vaccine update
- Vaccines administered to date (percentage of eligible people): 4,052,799 first doses (96%); 3,982,623 second doses (95%); 1,891,241 booster doses (59%).
- Vaccines administered yesterday: 554 first doses; 1,147 second doses; 4,256 paediatric doses; 49,523 booster doses.
- Māori (percentage of eligible people aged 12+): 516,079 first doses (90%); 492,377 second doses (86%).
- Pacific Peoples (percentage of eligible people aged 12+): 279,094 first doses (97%); 272,058 second doses (95%).
- Paediatric vaccines administered to date (percentage of 5-11-year-olds): 213,517 first doses (45%)
- Māori (percentage of eligible people aged 5-11): 29,843 first doses (26%)
- Pacific Peoples (percentage of eligible people aged 5-11): 17,592 first doses (36%)
Vaccination rates for all DHBs (percentage of eligible people aged 12 +)
- Northland DHB: First doses (90%); second doses (87%)
- Auckland Metro DHBs: First doses (97%); second doses (96%)
- Waikato DHB: First doses (95%); second doses (93%)
- Bay of Plenty DHB: First doses (95%); second doses (93%)
- Lakes DHB: First doses (93%); second doses (91%)
- MidCentral DHB: First doses (97%); second doses (95%)
- Tairāwhiti DHB: First doses (93%); second doses (90%)
- Whanganui DHB: First doses (92%); second doses (89.9%)
- Hawke's Bay: First doses (97%); second doses (94%)
- Taranaki DHB: First doses (95%); second doses (93%)
- Wairarapa DHB: First doses (97%); second doses (95%)
- Capital and Coast DHB: First doses (99%); second doses (98%)
- Hutt Valley DHB: First doses (97%); second doses (95%)
- Nelson Marlborough DHB: First doses (97%); second doses (95%)
- West Coast DHB: First doses (93%); second doses (91%)
- Canterbury DHB: First doses (99%); second doses (98%)
- South Canterbury DHB: First doses (95%); second doses (94%)
- Southern DHB: First doses (98%); second doses (96%)
Hospitalisations
- Cases in hospital: Total Number 32 (30 of whom have active infections): Whangārei: 1; North Shore: 4; Middlemore: 8; Auckland: 15; Tauranga: 1; Rotorua: 1, Wellington 1, Christchurch: 1.
- Average age of current hospitalisations: 62
- Cases in ICU or HDU: 0
- Vaccination status of current hospitalisations (Northern Region only, excluding Emergency Departments): Unvaccinated or not eligible (3 cases / 12%); partially immunised
Cases
- Seven day rolling average of community cases: 432
- Seven day rolling average of border cases: 25
- Number of new community cases: 810
- Location of new community cases*: Northland (13), Auckland (623), Waikato (81), Bay of Plenty (11), Lakes (11), Hawke's Bay (8), MidCentral (3), Whanganui (6), Taranaki (5), Tairawhiti (3), Wellington (15), Hutt Valley (10), Nelson Marlborough (2), Canterbury (3), South Canterbury (2), Southern (14).
- Number of new cases identified at the border: 18 (five of which are historical)
- Location of origin of border cases: Albania (1), Sri Lanka (1), Germany (1), United Arab Emirates (1), Singapore (2), Philippines (2), Australia (1), Iran (4).
- Number of active community cases (total): 4,072 (cases identified in the past 21 days and not yet classified as recovered)
- Confirmed cases (total): 20,228
* Please note, the Ministry of Health's daily reported cases may differ slightly from those reported at a DHB or local public health unit level. This is because of different reporting cut off times and the assignment of cases between regions, for example when a case is tested outside their usual region of residence. Total numbers will always be the formal daily case tally as reported to the WHO.
Tests
- Number of tests total (last 24 hours): 22,196
- Tests rolling average (last 7 days): 20,056
- Number of Rapid Antigen Tests in New Zealand: 7.0 million (Please note that this number is not updated over the weekend and reflects the number of tests as of Friday.)
Wellington protest
There are a number of rumours circulating about possible cases of Covid-19 linked to the protest at Parliament Grounds in Wellington.
Wellington's Regional Public Health Unit has confirmed that there are currently no notified positive cases linked to the protest. However, we encourage everyone to be vigilant and to get a test if they become unwell with symptoms of Covid-19.
For details of testing centres operating in the Wellington region, please visit Healthpoint.
Ministry of Health website
Please be aware that the case details on the Ministry's website will not be updated today. They will instead be included in the 1pm web update on Monday which will cover the previous 48 hours.
2 comments
Conspiracy Grant?
Posted on 13-02-2022 14:41 | By Slim Shady
Grant says there is a conspiracy thory element to the protest. I'm vaccinated. I don't see the need now for punishing mandates with Omicron, which is based on scientific evidence. Neither do most countries, some of whom did have mandates but are now dropping them. What's the conspiracy theory there Grant? Am I conspiring with other countries around the world? Spin machine gone mad.
Far left tyranny
Posted on 13-02-2022 16:29 | By Slim Shady
It’s great to see all the protests in Canada, France, Netherlands, Belgium, and all the other terribly divided countries. All run by power mad, far left tyrannical Governments. These countries, like New Zealand are so divided. The ‘us and them’ gang mentality created by the loonies. And divided down the middle. The Government and their media puppets try to kid people that it’s a fringe minority but it’s not. Lots of people who have been jabbed have had enough of this tyranny. They’re gone burger.
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