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You'll notice today I don't have a sign language
interpreter with me, but I can assure any viewers who
would otherwise be using sign language to follow the media
stand-up.
And we will have a written transcript
available on our website as soon as possible after the session.
I have with me today Professor Sunny Collings,
who is the Chief Executive Officer of the Health Research
Council.
She's going to speak shortly about a research initiative
that the HRC has just announced.
This relates to a $3 million research fund
into issues around the current COVID-19 outbreak.
And we anticipate any research funded through this fund
will not just guide our planning and preparation
for this outbreak, but also our future planning and response
to these sorts of events.
So I'm going to hand over very shortly to Sunny.
I think this is an exciting initiative.
It's great.
And I know a lot of people have put a lot of hard work
in to develop up this proposal over the last week or so.
And I'd like to hand over to Sunny to talk a little bit more
about it.
[INAUDIBLE]
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH] For those who aren't aware,
the Health Research Council is the agency responsible
for commissioning a significant amount of government funded
health research.
And investment is about $125 million a year,
so a significant investment.
So 10 days ago, I got back from Geneva
where I attended the World Health Organization's Global
Research and Innovation Forum for COVID-19.
And since then, our agencies have worked together
to pull together this $3 million research fund.
In Geneva, there was a lot of discussion, not just about
the basic biology of the virus itself
and the way it affects and infected people
but also about the social impact of events like this,
both within and between different countries,
and the need to understand just how this continues to evolve.
International support for [? research ?]
across this whole spectrum was seen as imperative.
The World Health Organization is going
to be pulling together a process to ensure that the research
community can see what's being done elsewhere
to enable collaboration and reduce duplication.
And the health research community
and [INAUDIBLE] New Zealand has international standing.
And those people are very, very well connected.
So this fund also helps [? kept ?]
of the benefit of those connections
that our researchers already have.
The $3 million fund we're making available
could go towards a broad range of research,
including helping with vaccine development for COVID-19,
analyzing how New Zealanders have access to public health
information on offer, looking at different models for health
service responses, looking at how responses
can be led in ways that are appropriate
for Maori and Pacific communities.
How do we ensure that our health system response doesn't
magnify health inequalities?
And we're also mindful of our role in supporting our Pacific
neighbors.
And these are just examples.
We're looking for a wide range of innovative projects.
It's situations such as this that
show that our investment and health research and [INAUDIBLE]
New Zealand is well-placed.
And I'm really confident that our researchers can and will
be able to contribute meaningfully
to the global efforts and answering important research
questions.
At the same time, as making sure the findings
are relevant and beneficial to New Zealanders.
And I'm really pleased that we've
been able to devised this in such a short time.
I've been back in New Zealand for 10 days after that meeting.
And at this point, I would like to thank the Health Research
Council staff and all those in other government agencies who
have worked incredibly hard to pull this together
to get it to this point.
So at this point, I'll hand back to [? Ashley. ?]
And we can have questions later.
Thanks again, Sunny.
I should say, before I go on, is I usually start these briefings
with I confirmed we had no suspected,
or confirmed cases of COVID-19 in New Zealand at this point.
Over 100 people have been tested as part
of our ongoing assessment.
And with a low bar for testing people,
no positive tests at this point, and no suspected cases.
Just turning to the current border restrictions.
We're at the point in time now where
those current restrictions expire at midnight tonight.
As you know, Cabinet has considered a paper this morning
on whether those should be maintained, or indeed extended,
or modified in any way.
And the PM will be announcing that decision
at [? your ?] post-cabinet press conference later today.
As you're aware at the moment, the restrictions
apply to people other than New Zealanders, people
who have traveled in, or through China in the 14 days
before they arrive in New Zealand.
And we also have a similar restriction
on people who were onboard the Diamond Princess who
might be traveling to New Zealand
within 14 days of having come off that boat.
Right from the start we have impressed
the importance of those restrictions
being temporary in nature.
And that continues.
And we will continue to review them every 48 hours.
As you may be aware, there were quite significant developments
globally over the last 48 hours, in particular, big increase
in cases in Italy, and in South Korea,
and a number of deaths in Iran with an increasing
number of cases there.
We're following this very closely.
And have [AUDIO OUT] from our technical advisory group
on whether we should extend in the first instance
our case definition for a suspected case
to take in some of those areas where
we've seen that big increase in cases over the weekend.
So we're expecting that advice from our technical advisory
group in the next 24 hours.
And we'll adjust our case definition in response
to that advice.
And that will also inform any advice
we give to ministers about whether or not
the current travel restrictions could be extended
to include other places.
I just also want to speak directly
to the question of whether we are in a pandemic situation.
At this point, we're not.
A pandemic is something that the WHO would declare.
And as you can imagine, they will be looking very closely
at the developments, especially the increasing number of cases
in regions beyond Asia.
But at the moment, they will be reviewing that status
regularly.
And we, of course, will take our guidance from them.
So saying we are, with the developments over the weekend,
closer, I think, to a situation where
a pandemic could be declared.
And so we are, of course, adjusting our planning
accordingly to ensure that we are now moving into a point
where, if a pandemic was to be declared,
we would be ready to go with the sorts of measures,
even though we still do not have a case here in New Zealand.
[INAUDIBLE]
As you may be aware, it's been reported
that one of the six New Zealanders being cared
for there was in hospital over the weekend
for an unrelated condition.
As a precaution, that person was tested for COVID-19.
And the test was negative.
They've now been discharged and are
back with the group in [INAUDIBLE],, who are otherwise
all well and being looked at daily, cared for by GP,
and assessed daily.
And my final comment relates to--
final two comments-- first relate
to the folks who came back from the Westerdam, which
was the one that docked in Cambodia.
You may be aware that we had 13 people return to New Zealand.
Our initial advice was that they go into self-isolation.
We have now lifted that requirement in discussion
with colleagues in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia,
because it seems apparent that there was only one case
diagnosed on that ship.
That person is now negative.
And despite very widespread testing
of the people who were on that ship,
no one else has returned a positive test.
Finally, just in the last seven days,
just to give you a feel for the number of people
traveling from China to New Zealand, around 200 people
a day in the last seven days, either coming directly
from China, or from somewhere else
but having been in China in the prior 14 days.
So over 4,200 of the people who have traveled here
since the 3rd of February, 4,200 people
will have finished their 14 day self-isolation period
of a total of around 9,350 people
who have traveled here in the last 14 days.
So once again, a huge response from people, many of whom
have registered with Healthline.
They have voluntarily undertaken this self-isolation.
And that's a key contribution to our efforts
to maintain New Zealand's current preparation
and planning, and also the fact that we are still
free of COVID-19.
I'm happy to pause there and open the floor to questions.
And Sunny, please come closer, because any questions
around the research, I'll hand over to you.
Sure.
[INAUDIBLE]
So in a sense, we're already moving
to plan as if a pandemic had been declared.
We think now it's the time to do that.
What that does then is it just formally would release--
or make available the release of supplies.
For example, our personal protective equipment, supplies,
and other supplies that are specifically ring-fenced
for that sort of situation.
We have already got a very good idea and discussions
over the last few weeks about our hospital capacity
around ICU beds and our negative pressure ventilation rooms.
So we'll put that information up on our website
around where those facilities are.
The other thing is we'll step up our planning around what
might happen in community settings
where, if we had a large number of cases,
we would move to establish what are called
community-based assessment centers
rather than have everybody go to different general practices.
We might set those centers up if we had
an increasing number of cases.
So we're just moving our planning into that phase
as if we were in the management phase, although, clearly,
not yet.
There's a question here?
[INAUDIBLE]
Of the 100 persons that have been tested,
what exactly is it about those people that
has caused you to test them if they're suspected
to have the coronavirus?
Yes.
So the decision to test is with the clinicians
who are assessing those people.
And it would be a combination of their travel
history and their symptoms.
Now, in most cases, I would imagine the travel history is
one that suggests they could have been exposed
to coronavirus, but their symptoms and signs
are not necessarily consistent.
So they may not have had a fever above 38 degrees.
They may not have had a cough, and/or difficulty breathing,
but there's enough suspicion because they've
got some respiratory symptoms.
Most, of course, and as we've found in every case so far,
those symptoms are due to other viruses, which are generally
circulating in the community.
These reports coming out of the UK and Australia that, perhaps,
the 14 days of isolation isn't long enough [INAUDIBLE] testing
positive once they [? come ?] [? away ?] from China
[INAUDIBLE] 19 days.
Are you [? re-looking ?] at 14 days [INAUDIBLE] stand
by [INAUDIBLE]?
Yes.
We're standing by that at the moment,
and obviously watching it closely.
And I've alluded to the fact we're
in an almost daily discussion with counterparts,
and at least four other countries,
but particularly with Australia.
The weight of evidence is still that the range
of incubate for the incubation period is under 14 days.
There are one or two small studies that have suggested
could be longer than that, but also a suggestion that
could have been that a person was not necessarily
exposed the first time, but exposed a second time.
In fact, and that's what led to what appeared to be a longer
period, where we and other countries
are sticking with the 14 days at this point.
[INAUDIBLE]
List of things [INAUDIBLE] $3 dollars on.
[INAUDIBLE]
or asked other countries to look at urgently, or highlighted?
Perhaps, that's what they were seeking [INAUDIBLE] research
[INAUDIBLE].
Well, they're obviously very interested in our vaccine
research.
And in fact, by the time the meeting was happening,
the vaccine research had already kicked in in a very major way,
and a number of other countries that
have got that capability and capacity to do that.
There was a lot of interest in coming
to a coordinated international effort.
And that's why the World Health Organization are putting
together this process, so that researchers
can see what's going on.
They're also mindful that they couldn't prescribe the research
that specific countries could do, because health research
agencies have their own things that they have to adhere to,
and that varies by country, and whether they're a charity
or not, whether they're government funded,
all those things.
So they couldn't be very prescriptive,
but general guidance.
[INAUDIBLE] making the money available,
and it's now [INAUDIBLE].
Yes.
So we're running our usual competitive funding process.
So the aim is that only the best science will be funded.
With COVID-19 being so [INAUDIBLE]
did you feel the [? sense ?] of urgency from the [INAUDIBLE]
fast on [INAUDIBLE]?
Yes.
So it seemed reasonably evident from the discussions
at the WHO meeting that it was going to evolve in the way
that, in fact, it is.
There was a degree of confidence about that among the experts
who were there.
And so by the end of the two day meeting,
I came away convinced that we needed to [INAUDIBLE]..
And that's what we've done.
[INAUDIBLE]
We are not involved at all.
I do know that foreign affairs staff are in liaison with them
and will provide support as required.
But it's very pleasing to see that being discharged
from hospital [? well. ?] And I'm
pleased that made a good recovery.
[INAUDIBLE]
No.
No.
They wouldn't.
Well, thank you very much.
Just two comments to finish with, if I may.
One is just talking about the vaccine research,
recalling that any vaccine, even with [INAUDIBLE]
globally if that would be at least 12 months off,
and obviously that is something that is informing our planning
and response.
And my other comment is that, as we have seen over the last 48
hours, this continues to be a very rapidly evolving
situation, high degree of uncertainty.
You've heard me say that before.
And we are watching closely and adjusting our response
accordingly.
Thank you very much for being here.
Sorry.
There is another question.
[INAUDIBLE]
Are you confident we are prepared in New Zealand?
I am.
Yes.
I'm very confident we are.
We have a very good plan.
It's been tested.
And the way that central government agencies,
and the health system has responded already
to our efforts, and what we've been able to do to date to--
for example, look after the folk who were evacuated out
of Wuhan, and the folk who came back from the Diamond Princess,
very significant cross government efforts.
And we're in daily discussions with the wider health system
to ensure that we are geared up to respond.
Thanks again.
[NON-ENGLISH SPEECH]