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PM rejects he underprepared for RAT race

Scott Morrison rejects the idea Australia was left underprepared for COVID-19 worst case scenarios.

Scott Morrison rejects the idea Australia was left underprepared for COVID-19 worst case scenarios. Photo: AAP

Scott Morrison has defended the government’s supply of COVID-19 rapid antigen tests, saying the whole world has been under pressure from the Omicron variant and scrapping for test supplies.

The prime minister rejected the assertion the country was left underprepared for worst case scenarios despite extensive modelling on various possibilities by the health department.

“I don’t accept the suggestion that they haven’t been doing their job. I think they’ve been doing their job extremely well and under extraordinary pressure in a very uncertain environment,” he told reporters on Thursday.

He pulled up just short of laying the blame at the feet of states and territories as criticisms continue over the undersupply of rapid antigen tests.

“States secure the supply for PCR tests and rapid antigen tests,” he said.

“It was discussed at national cabinet in November … so there was no confusion.

“I’m not making a criticism of the states. I am just saying that you asked me whether the Commonwealth had done what is needed to do and I said, ‘Yes we had’ and now we are going further.”

People who test positive on a RAT don’t have to get their results confirmed with a PCR test in the hopes of easing pressure on overwhelmed clinics.

But University of Melbourne epidemiologist Professor Tony Blakely warned surveillance would not be accurate going forward with the tests mainly being done at home.

“The horse has bolted, this is the biggest policy failure so far in Australia,” he told the Seven Network on Thursday.

But Mr Morrison said it was more important to connect people with care than reporting numbers.

“Case numbers are less of an issue (and) will be underestimated in Australia because we know that people are self managing in many instances,” he said.

“What matters first is that people who have COVID (is) the care they get connected to.”

Mr Morrison noted national cabinet is working through how to more accurately record case numbers so hospitals were able to prepare.

Infectious disease expert Professor Peter Collignon said getting a PCR confirmation of a positive rapid test doesn’t add much, telling people to stay home and isolate if they have a positive test.

“If you’re vaccinated and are a 30- to 40-year-old, your chance of coming into grief is really low. We have support if you need it but don’t get on the (PCR) queue and delay the older people who may need to be in front of you,” he told Sky News.

It comes as NSW registered another 34,994 new cases on Thursday and a further six deaths.

Victoria recorded a new one-day high for new cases, with 21,997 infections and six deaths.

There were also 10,332 new infections in Queensland, 3070 in SA and 751 in Tasmania.

There were a record 222,565 booster shots delivered on Wednesday.

Mr Morrison said 200 million rapid tests would be available in coming weeks but ruled out making them universally free, instead providing 10 tests over a three-month period to concession cardholders, which covers more than six million people.

Labor senator and chair of a parliamentary COVID-19 committee Katy Gallagher hit out at the concession plan, saying the Australian pandemic response had been one where everyone was in it together.

“Huge amounts of funding has been provided to ensure we have been able to live safely. Providing rapid antigen tests to everybody is part of that approach,” she told Sky News.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said tests have always been free for health purposes.

“When you go to a testing clinic, whether it’s a PCR test or a rapid antigen test, and you are going for symptoms or as a close contact, that remains the case that is free,” he told the Nine Network.

– AAP

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