I have several days missing data here but I have updated simply using the figures provided by the NZ MoH, not reflecting those cases that have recovered.
I continue to have minimal trust in these figures. We have a person in our social circle who is trapped in a hostel where he describes listening to others coughing like there is no tomorrow. Am I to believe that this is just coincidental and a whole hostel has come down with something that has no relationship to covid19?
Is the way this data is collected (what they count and what they don't) simply to justify an agenda of shutting down the population?
I simply don't know but that is what comes to mind
https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2020/04/coronavirus-ministry-of-health-confirms-89-new-covid-19-cases-in-new-zealand1.html
I continue to have minimal trust in these figures. We have a person in our social circle who is trapped in a hostel where he describes listening to others coughing like there is no tomorrow. Am I to believe that this is just coincidental and a whole hostel has come down with something that has no relationship to covid19?
Is the way this data is collected (what they count and what they don't) simply to justify an agenda of shutting down the population?
I simply don't know but that is what comes to mind
Coronavirus: Ministry of
Health confirms 89 new
COVID-19 cases in New
Zealand
https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2020/04/coronavirus-ministry-of-health-confirms-89-new-covid-19-cases-in-new-zealand1.html
There are 48 new confirmed cases and 41 probable cases of COVID-19 in New Zealand, the additional 89 cases bringing the country's total to 1039.
The latest figures were announced by the Ministry of Health's Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield during the daily press conference on Sunday.
As of Sunday, 156 people have recovered from the virus and 15 are hospitalised, including three patients in the ICU. Two are in a critical condition.
In the past week there have been 2448 tests per day on average and a total of 36,209 tests so far. On Saturday alone 3093 tests were completed.
Forty-five percent of New Zealand's cases have clear links to international travel and 36 percent are contacts of known cases. Confirmed community transmission remains at 1 percent while 18 percent of cases are still under investigation.
Per day, more than 2000 calls are being made to potential close contacts of confirmed cases.
There are 12 significant clusters around the country, including new clusters in Canterbury and Auckland. Fifty-eight cases have been linked to a wedding in Bluff and 56 have been confirmed in the Matamata cluster. The Marist College cluster in Auckland remains the largest with 66 cases.
Of New Zealand's cases, 74 percent are European, 8.3 percent are Asian, 7.6 percent are Māori and 3.3 percent are Pacific.
"What we need to do is get down from [Alert Level 4]," Dr Bloomfield said, acknowledging there are no plans for a curfew to be added to lockdown protocol.
"As long as people stick to the rules we should be able to maintain [the current restrictions]."
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said that 795 prevention patrols have been completed by police nationwide over Friday and Saturday alone, as well as 990 reassurance checks at essential services, including pharmacies and supermarkets.
Ardern also called out the 38-year-old Christchurch man who filmed himself coughing and sneezing on supermarket shoppers in Barrington. The man, who was arrested on Saturday night, was "charitably described as an idiot" by the Prime Minister.
Lifting of lockdown 'undecided'
The Prime Minister noted that nothing has been decided regarding the extension or reduction of the lockdown period.
"No decisions have been made at the point at which we will be exiting Level 4," Ardern told reporters.
"The more people comply, the more likely we can come out of [lockdown] at the time we've said."
Death toll remains at one
As of Sunday, there have been no additional virus-related deaths. The first COVID-19 patient to die in New Zealand was announced on Sunday, March 29.
Greymouth woman Anne Guenole, aged in her 70s, returned a positive test for COVID-19 after initially being diagnosed with influenza, complicated by an underlying health condition.
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