3 weeks of tougher lockdowns in Sydney's hotspots halved expected case numbers
- Written by Allan Saul, Senior Principal Research Fellow (Honorary), Burnet Institute
In a pandemic, you expect that as new public health measures are introduced, there’s an observable impact on the spread of the disease.
But while that might have been the case in Melbourne’s second wave[1] last year, the highly contagious Delta variant is different. In Sydney’s current second wave, none of the increased restrictions seemed to directly decrease the spread of COVID-19. Until now.
Our modelling shows the curfew with the other restrictions introduced on the August 23 in the 12 local government areas[2] (LGAs) of concern has worked to halt the rise in cases.
And this wasn’t due to the level of vaccinations achieved so far. It suggests other LGAs with rising case numbers should not rely solely on vaccination to cut case numbers in the short to medium term. They may need to tighten restrictions to get outbreaks under control.
What are the tighter restrictions?
Restrictions across Sydney have been in place in various forms since June 23[3]. But daily case numbers only plateaued in the 12 LGAs after the latest round of restrictions[4] were introduced on August 23.
These included:
- a curfew from 9pm to 5am, to reduce the movement of young people
- restricting public access to hardware, garden supplies, office supplies and pet stores to click-and-collect only
- closure of face-to-face teaching and assessment in most educational institutes that remained open
- limiting outdoor exercise to one hour a day.
These came on top of the existing restrictions in these 12 LGAs: only four reasons for leaving home (work/education, care/compassion, shopping for essential supplies, and exercise), 5km travel restrictions and the closure of non-essential shops.
Read more: A tougher 4-week lockdown could save Sydney months of stay-at-home orders, our modelling shows[5]
What impact did these restrictions have?
There was a marked and significant decrease in the growth of the outbreak in the 12 LGAs of concern, starting a week after restrictions were introduced.
The expected growth rate of the Delta variant, in the absence of any controls, has a R0 between 5 and 9[6]. This means one infected person would be expected to pass the virus on to five to nine others.
In the 12 LGAs, the Reff — which takes into account how many others one infected person will transmit the virus to with public health measures in place — reduced from 1.35 to 1.0. That means one case currently infects just one other person.
Cases numbers went from doubling every 11 days to case numbers being constant.
Without the additional restrictions introduced on August 23, the outbreak would have continued with close to an exponential increase (see the dashed orange line in Figure 1 below).
References
- ^ Melbourne’s second wave (www.medrxiv.org)
- ^ 12 local government areas (www.nsw.gov.au)
- ^ since June 23 (theconversation.com)
- ^ round of restrictions (gazette.legislation.nsw.gov.au)
- ^ A tougher 4-week lockdown could save Sydney months of stay-at-home orders, our modelling shows (theconversation.com)
- ^ R0 between 5 and 9 (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ 74-86% (www.nsw.gov.au)
- ^ Pfizer vaccinations for 16 to 39-year-olds is welcome news. But AstraZeneca remains a good option (theconversation.com)
- ^ Joel Carrett/AAP (photos.aap.com.au)
- ^ What is life going to look like once we hit 70% vaccination? (theconversation.com)
- ^ crucial component of a safe exit (www.doherty.edu.au)