Tuesday, 30 June 2020

Victoria Covid19 Outbreak and Policy Response to Migrant Diversity


Despite Australia’s great success in containing Covid-19, the recent community outbreak in Victoria Melbourne suburbs with higher levels of migrants raises concern about some gaps in pro-active engagement and planning tailored to deliver culturally appropriate public healthcare responses.

On Monday and Tuesday 75 and 64 new cases respectively are reported. Affected areas are detailed on the Government link: Government Link
The Victoria Premier also just announced this afternoon 10 Melbourne postcodes involving many suburbs are going on lockdown as per Premier Press Conference.

Most Australian States have reported “0” outbreaks over the last few weeks, in a few cases only single digits. So while we are all wishing Victoria the very best outcome, we are wondering what is going on there? And are other states at potential risk?

The Victoria Government confirmed today that genomic sequencing has just shown the recent source of spread specifically came from hotel quarantine sites where travellers are kept. The infection controls at these sites failed resulting in hotel staff picking up Covid-19 from returning travellers and then spreading to families (Press Conference: Victoria Premier)

This verifies media reports over the last two weeks that people may have been moving around, some unaware they were infectious.

It also raises question that while Governments were rightly early on focussing on reorganising how hospital and GP medical sites interacted with the public, how much thought went into non-medical sites such as hotels for quarantined people? Particularly, who was thinking about hotel staff such as security guards and others?

For instance, Governments rightly saw it fit to put in place Telehealth Medicare payments for our medical GPs to safeguard their practices and patients from infections. Also some states offered their healthcare workers on clinical frontline tackling Covid-19 free accommodation options away from their home to minimise passing infections to family members.

Now let’s turn to security guards and other precariously employed staff at hotel sites accommodating quarantined travellers. What risk identification strategies were undertaken early on? And significantly what mitigation measures were put in place to minimise acquiring and passing on infections to families and community?

Hotel Security Guard: image Courtesy Shutterstock

                        


How much were issues of frontline hotel staff taken into account at planning level?

It is not uncommon to hear that people working in these sites hotels and hospitality in general their working conditions tend to be low. And we can only imagine the precariousness when some such as security guards are sent by contracting agencies.

Could it be that we have been somewhat overlooking need for thorough mitigation measures for lowly and precariously employed workers who sometimes tend to include large numbers of migrants?

This is not to take away the amazing measures that the Fed Government has put in place such as the doubling of Jobseekers payments or the Job Keeper payments. These remain historical and benefit people across population groups.

For those with “policy” hats, it helps if we reflect deeper on theoretical debates about public goods, private goods and mixed goods, and the justifications why we may decide a certain issue require attention.

In this case, we should not neglect that a hotel security guard and his family need as much protection. Otherwise Covid-19 could be spread far and wide from hotel parameters to community sites. The working conditions of a security guard are essential. We have seen this issue before with aged care workers in Nursing Homes, Baggage Airport Handlers and such.

I also think guaranteeing paid sick leave to precariously employed workers if they have confirmed Covid-19 cases unfortunately does not go far enough. How about the impacts when they go about to work with flu-like symptoms or when they are waiting for test outcomes? If aged care cases are to go by this is how some have passed on Covid-19 to others.

Again to those doing policy, surely there are “positive externalities” that come about and benefit the whole community if you ensure hotel staff and their security guards, food delivery people, casual aged care people are reasonably renumerated. Otherwise we all as a community pay some price such as the reimposition of Melbourne lockdowns, impact on business, impact on population mental wellbeing and so forth.

Although Governments are clearly doubling effort to stem the tide in Victoria, there are also reports that Governments could have done more to consult and collaborate with communities so that Governments could benefit from bottom-up knowledge perspectives.

The national Peak migrant body FECCA reported that the Government engagement with migrant communities across Australia was inadequate.

The Government’s own Expert Panel, the National COVID-19 Health and Research Advisory Committee noted that the community feedback indicated that Government engagement occurred "on an ad-hoc basis or not at all" (SBS). The Panel:
Warned the Federal Government of a "missed opportunity" to prevent coronavirus outbreaks in high-risk groups like migrant communities, several weeks before a spike of cases in Victoria [Reference…….]

Further, according to the ABC the Expert Report released on 21 May 2020
  • Pinpointed that migrants and refugees were one of the groups at-risk of acquiring Covid-19 and unknowingly spreading it as well.
  • Said migrants are more likely to have a chronic disease and miss out on important health information
  • FECCA identified state and federal governments’ collective failure to engage with community leaders
  • Band-Aid afterthought solutions are used instead of carefully designed policy and program responses to migrant communities
  • Lack of willingness to intentionally draw important input from vulnerable members of the community early on to ensure solutions are inclusive and designed appropriately
(ABC News: Government Warned Failing to Engage Migrant Communities)

Also, according to the The Conversation online newspaper, ‘’spatial concentration” seems to be a factor in most of the Melbourne suburbs associated with the rise in new Covid-19 cases. “People in overcrowded or unaffordable or insecure housing may have less control over their immediate environment and less capacity to isolate themselves” (The Conversation 29 June 2020).

People on low incomes could be under pressure to attend work despite feeling unwell to meet their everyday expenses. The high cost of living does not simply go away just because you manage to negotiate rent reduction with a Landlord (The Conversation 29 June 2020). For more info see The Conversation Link on: Overcrowding and Housing Affordability Stress-Melbourne.

The Melbourne lockdown starts in a few hours. The extensive community testing blitz continues with public health staff knocking at homes in suburbia with reports some people are refusing to be tested. And we now know the Premier for Victoria is putting in a place a Judicial Inquiry to look at look at how infection control breaches took place involving hotel quarantine staff (See SBS Link for Victoria Premier Press Conference.

I am tempted to make some suggestions. But even as I do, and as restrictions are eased in my state in the west of Australia, I am left with a lingering feeling that “There go many of us but by Grace God”. Our hearts across the country are with Victoria.

Suggestions

  • Forced test if are to occur should be of non-invasive type such as Saliva test. This may foster trust than forced internal swabs, ethically better to spit sample in a container especially if person is forced.
  • Judicial inquiry being commissioned by Victoria Premier should look at how vulnerable frontline roles as security guards, hotel workers or whatever are protected from contracting Covid-19 and passing to their families. But this should not be an exercise in transferring risk to these precariously employed people
  • Just as the nation gives incentives for medical GPs to receive Telehealth payments, consider how you incentivise these lowly paid workers such as contracted security guards and hotel staff at quarantine sites.
  • Casual workers with flu-like symptoms should be considered for paid leave and not wait until they tested and proved as Covid-19 positive. If Australia focuses on simply compensating those with proven Covid-19, we run the danger of having some people with flu-like symptoms turn up at work and spread the virus.
  • Migrant community engagement should not be simply reduced to language translation – there is more to it than that. Mere language translation strategy runs the danger of simplifying things to a ‘white’ mainstream Western lens.
  • A public health approach must pro-actively include culturally targeted strategies from the beginning, not in a reactive way as an afterthought.

References

Premier Victoria. Press Conference, 30 June 2020, SBS link https://youtu.be/W7IZ5If7nNI

The Conversation. Overcrowding and affordability stress: Melbourne’s COVID-19 hotspots are also housing crisis hotspots 29 June 2020, https://theconversation.com/overcrowding-and-affordability-stress-melbournes-covid-19-hotspots-are-also-housing-crisis-hotspots-141381
ABC, Author: Stephanie Dalzell. Government warned of coronavirus 'missed opportunity' to protect migrant communities before Victorian spike. 24 June 2020. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-24/government-warned-failing-engage-migrant-communities-coronavirus/12384800
SBS, Government rubbishes reports migrant communities weren't included in coronavirus response. https://www.sbs.com.au/news/government-rubbishes-reports-migrant-communities-weren-t-included-in-coronavirus-response
FECCA [Federation of Ethnic Communities Councils] CALD Resources for COVID-19: http://fecca.org.au/coronavirus/
Victoria Translated Corona Virus Resources for People from Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Backgrounds. https://www.dhhs.vic.gov.au/translated-resources-coronavirus-disease-covid-19?fbclid=IwAR1Pk8iNCH6gxMT4VWGKDcGMUCDTY0l1PADeerWynPH9yQ7ZQ_4toihHj7w
Premier for Victoria. Statement from the Premier. 20 June 2020. https://www.premier.vic.gov.au/statement-from-the-premier-45/
Premier for Victoria, Statement from the Premier. 25 June 2020. https://www.premier.vic.gov.au/statement-from-the-premier-46/
The Conversation, Overcrowding and affordability stress: Melbourne’s COVID-19 hotspots are also housing crisis hotspots, 29 June 2020, https://theconversation.com/overcrowding-and-affordability-stress-melbournes-covid-19-hotspots-are-also-housing-crisis-hotspots-141381

Sunday, 28 June 2020

Nursing Home Tragedy – Institutional and Policy Failure, a Commentary


The Australian Fed and State Governments have done amazing work to contain Covid-19 spread. But the significant loss of life at Sydney Anglicare Newmarch Nursing Home deserve closer look. Why? Without a review mistakes made maybe repeated in the future.

According to the ABC Four Corners Program, lack of appropriate prompt intervention at Newmarch after initial Covid-19 detection, by “18th day [led to] 56 infections, 22 staff and 34 residents, 12 people dead’’, and final total life loss of 19.

So what fell short? Remember families on Tele protesting outside the Nursing Home for days asking info about their elderly folk inside the aged care facility? The Four Corners episode now reveals a more worrying account from interviews with families as per link: https://youtu.be/1b3YJagAkLs

In a nutshell, I am paraphrasing some key points applying policy lenses:
  • There appear to be clear inadequacies in care, clinical management and policy framework to safeguard the wellbeing of residents
  • Elderly people were denied the option of being treated in a hospital setting equipped with higher level clinical care
  • Families not allowed input into clinical management such as having the choice to have their elderly treated in hospital
  • Government orders/regulations were in place to prevent families from removing elderly relatives from the Nursing Home even if the elderly person did not have Covid-19. Families told breach of orders could result in substantial $ fines  
  • The longer elderly people were left in the Newmarch facility, the more of them contracted Covid-19.
  • Reports by some elderly people that they were not given adequate nutrition - expected to make do with peanut butter sandwiches or frozen sandwich lunches
  • Families denied basic communication with elderly residents
  • Poor infection controls
  • One reported lack of readily available supplies to support dehydrated residents
Surprisingly the Government Regulator that is the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commissioner told the ABC thatsays there is nothing that fell short on Newmarch”.


Although Nursing Homes are operated by private and NGO agencies, these facilities are partly funded the Federal Government and individual residents. They are also regulated by Government. Residents in Nursing Homes on paper have similar rights to everyone in the community, even more so in their case as vulnerable groups they have a right to be protected.

At the peak of the Covid-19 crisis, it was clear the Government daily briefs had hospitals and GP medical sites well covered in it its planning at a granular level. There seems to be gaps when it comes to Nursing Homes (even though after the tragedy the Government provided extra funding to these facilities).

To date, it is not clear why the Fed Government in its fore planning did not prioritise giving daily or regular updates on how Nursing Homes were faring – in terms of detection, containment, clinical management reviews, and general care. This is was essential for rapid monitoring.

Why was it that rapid improvements were not being implemented to contain daily spread and offer better clinical care as soon as it was obvious Newmarch had no capacity to offer very basic care? Why is this different to overseas evacuees? Why is the treatment different to many other mainstream clusters?

Why it is that available public info indicates that basic personal care, clinical care and even nutrition were awfully neglected? Quite honestly, is peanut sandwich the sort of meals that would adequately support someone to fight Covid-19 infection? 

We could go on with lack of personal care – how could Government not concern itself where an elderly person has no access to a bath for more than two weeks?


The issues raised by this tragedy go well beyond Newmarch – the Government need to look at its own policy, care and clinical frameworks guiding Nursing Home operations and the interface with hospitals. One could go on staffing issues, perhaps a subject for another day.

Links
ABC Four Corners. Like the Plague: How Coronavirus spread among our most vulnerable elderly residents. Jun 22, 2020. https://youtu.be/1b3YJagAkLs


'No one knows where it came from': Inside Australia's first COVID-19 cluster.

The Sydney Morning Herald, Harriet Alexander, 10 May 2020

Sixth resident of Sydney nursing home dies of coronavirus as national tally rises to 41. April 2020

Thursday, 18 June 2020

Recent Australia’s ABC Podcast on Positives and Alarming Aspects of Artificial intelligence Possibilities


Not to be missed, here is a link:
AI enables machines to 'think' at a speed and depth far beyond human capacity, unleashing incredible possibilities but also the potential for harm. Will we see a new cold war as China and the US battle for tech supremacy?” [ABC]