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Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has announced Covid vaccinations will be suspended for 48 hours due to a nationwide lockdown.

"We want to ensure vaccinations can still take place in a safe environment... we will be providing a further update in the next 24 hours," Ardern said this evening.

She said officials would be considering whether drive-through vaccinations were the best option and what other precautions could be put in place to ensure it was safe.

Director-general of health Ashley Bloomfield echoed Ardern's comments, saying we wanted to minimise movement as much as possible.

It comes as the Government has made the decision to shift into a nationwide lockdown due to 58-year-old man in the Devonport testing positive in the community.

Auckland and the Coromandel regions would be in lockdown for seven days and the rest of the country for three days.

The Prime Minister said it was unknown yet whether the man was carrying the Delta variant but it was assumed he was as all MIQ cases had been for the last three weeks.

People who have appointments that are affected will hear from us soon to provide information on rebooking. You will be contacted directly as soon as possible if your vaccine requires rebooking. Everyone who has a booking in the system will still get vaccinated. 

What will this mean for medical care?

Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners medical director Bryan Betty said under a level 4 lockdown general practices would move into a predominantly virtual consultation model.

"Patients would be required to ring up prior to coming to see their GP, very similar to what we saw during last year's lockdown. Those patients who need to be seen in person will be," he said.

Midwives union MERA's co-leader Caroline Canroy said midwives were "well seasoned" and "all geared up" to transition their practise to alert level 4.

She said most hospitals maternity wards already had visitor limitations in place due to RSV.

A level 4 lockdown meant midwives would be required to wear PPE and thorough screening would be used so vulnerable midwives weren't caring for women with potential Covid, she said.

"Video appointments would be more common but that didn't mean face-to-face meetings couldn't happen where required."

The head of the doctor's union, Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, Sarah Dalton said she hadn't received any advice from hospitals yet but would assume the usual precautions would apply like social distancing and staying away unless urgent.

Comments

This had to happen. We should be much further on with the vaccination programme by now, it's been a bit of a shambles. Stay safe and think of others.

I agree. This is down to the District Health Boards and the incompetence of their elected members.
At the next local body elections think very carefully about who you vote for on your Board. Ask yourself of candidates: are they linked to particular special interest groups? Are they driven by how a loved one was (mis)treated by the system? Are they focused on building newer of bigger medical facilities rather than the community as a whole? in a related area what big ticket items have they failed to support in the past? what is their attitude to staff relations?
Also, think about whether you should vote for Doctors or Nurses, these people may well have brilliant medical qualifications and be highly respected in their field of expertise but that is no qualification to administering a massive, multi million$ health care system.