The restrictions in place for metropolitan Melbourne now are in some ways stricter than those that were in force during New Zealand's Covid-19 lockdown. A curfew is in place and most people have to wear masks when they leave their home – neither of which happened in New Zealand.
'An endless game of Covid-19 whack-a-mole': a New Zealand expert on why Melbourne's stage 4 lockdown should cover all of Victoria
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Melbourne in lockdown. Photo / Getty
There is a major difference in how Australia and New Zealand approached COVID-19 when it first emerged. New Zealand decided on an elimination strategy, while Australia took the suppression path. It meant Australia could be looser with their earlier restrictions and relax them more quickly.
In March, New Zealanders entered an alert level 4 lockdown, aimed at stopping community transmission of the virus altogether. And it worked. In contrast, the goal of Australia's suppression strategy was to lower community transmission to some manageable level.
Between early April and the middle of June, new case numbers in the state of Victoria were between one and 20 each day, including some cases of community transmission. But they began to rise again from the end of June.
How asking people to stick to their 'bubble' could help
During New Zealand's alert level 4, our households became "bubbles".
There were no funerals and we couldn't get takeaways. Bakeries and butchers were closed. Construction was shut down unless the work was needed to make a building safe.
The bubble concept helped people to restrict their contact to those within a home or between households with shared care arrangements. It reinforced that any contact with people from another bubble would provide an opportunity for the virus to spread.
Even under Melbourne's stage 4 lockdown rules, that message of choosing a bubble at the start of lockdown and trying hard to stick to it could be a helpful addition to Victoria's health messaging.
While announcing the new business restrictions for Melbourne and regional Victoria yesterday, the Victorian premier Daniel Andrews was asked about how his lockdown rules compared to New Zealand – and he replied that "this is a uniquely Australian and Victorian approach".
And in many ways he's right: while Melbourne has a curfew and compulsory mask wearing, it's not closing as many non-essential businesses or restricting people's movement for things like takeaways as strictly as New Zealand did in level 4 lockdown.
While Victoria and New Zealand have similar populations, no one should pretend that one country's strategy is the perfect solution for another. Victoria today is at a very different stage to New Zealand a few months ago.
New Zealand went into lockdown with just 102 confirmed cases and no known deaths. Compare that to about 7,000 active cases for Victoria right now. That's why I think it's all the more important to make the stage 4 lockdown state-wide. Without it, Victoria runs a very high risk of having to do it all again in a few months' time.
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