Questioning quarantine – there are better ways to manage it
Piterman
As the judicial inquiry continues into quarantine practices at several Melbourne hotels designed to prevent the spread of COVID-19 from returning travellers, we are treated to a smorgasbord of tales from witnesses who were housed there or worked in the hotels that allegedly demonstrate gross failures in a public health measure designed to protect the community in the midst of a pandemic.
The reports are particularly disturbing when, prior to the aged care fiasco, more than 90% of Victoria’s active cases emanated from breaches in hotel quarantine.
The alleged breaches include:
- Lack of proper infection control processes, and lack of training of hotel and security staff in hygiene measures
- Filthy hotel rooms and bed linen, including blood stained-linen
- Failure by guards to wear PPE
- Granting detainees temporary leave to go into the community, in some cases for up to nine hours
- Exercise breaks undertaken before COVID-19 testing
- Guards not practising social distancing, and failure to wear face masks when delivering items to detainees
- Reluctance by security guards to assist a lady who fractured her foot in the hotel
- Failure to offer mental health services to a detainee who was severely depressed, having also just lost his father
- Staff ignoring suicide threats
- Security guards working in a number of different hotels, creating risk of cross-contamination
- A "board of shame" for so-called difficult residents
- Higher authorities (DHHS and the police) ignoring pleas for help by hotel staff
There's no doubt that quarantine measures are essential. They're a long-established means of infection control, and apply not only to humans, but also to various imported goods – for example, timber products that may harbour insects or pathogens.
In the absence of an effective and safe vaccine or effective medication, isolation in one form or another remains the most effective means of controlling epidemics or pandemics; it's been so for millennia. Quarantine is simply a form of isolation. Like all forms of human isolation, it can, and does, have mental health consequences.
There are lingering concerns about quarantine processes, but beyond these we posit questions about the duration of compulsory 14-day hotel quarantine for all overseas arrivals.
Examination of Commonwealth Department of Health data reveals that between the start of the quarantine system and 19 June, about 63,000 people nationally had been placed into hotel quarantine at a cost of $118 million.
By 19 June, about 7000 cases of COVID-19 had been detected, some 6300 of them linked to returning travellers. We conclude that of the 63,000 returnees, about 56,700 travellers (90%) were kept in hotel quarantine for 14 days, although the majority of them probably did not have COVID-19.
It seems that the 14-day approach was "one for all and all for one". There may have been an alternative, more humane and less costly approach.
Testing of travellers was only carried out initially on those who had symptoms, and only routinely for all in preparation for discharge.
It seems that the 14-day approach was one-size-fits-all. There may have been an alternative, more humane and less costly approach, given that the incubation period is usually five to seven days for COVID-19.
Had rapid testing been completed on arrival on all travellers, they could have been classified into one of four categories:
- No symptoms, and negative test on arrival
- Symptoms, but negative test on arrival
- No symptoms, but positive test on arrival
- Symptoms, and positive test on arrival
If groups one and two are tested again in seven days, with test results in 24 hours being negative, why should they be kept in hotel quarantine?
It would be more humane and less costly to send them home with clear instructions on a course of action should they develop symptoms, just like the advice given to all members of the community. Or, if necessary, a program of home isolation for seven days.
Wearing of e-bracelets has been suggested to track those at risk of infection in home isolation. Home isolation for seven days would certainly prevent some of the mental health consequences of a 14-day isolation period, and save millions of dollars in hotel costs.
The China approach
A similar approach was used in Beijing in China, with all returning travellers taken to a convention centre for immediate testing, and those in categories one and two sent home, with a local community supervision committee responsible for their monitoring.
Those in category three were sent to a temporary, specially reserved observation clinic for 14 days of monitoring, and those in category four were sent to a single, specialised hospital for respiratory infections (in Beijing, for example, Ditan Hospital).
China has learnt from the SARS epidemic, and applied that knowledge to this pandemic. Of course, the different political system enables strict enforcement of quarantine protocols.
As we eagerly await the outcome of the judicial inquiry into hotel quarantine in Victoria, there are 18,000 travellers wanting to return home to Australia.
We believe this is an appropriate time to review the protocols regarding compulsory quarantine. We suggest testing for COVID-19 on arrival, identifying the four groups we described above, and following different monitoring strategies for different groups of returnees. It's never too late to change our policies if the grounds for change are compelling.
This article originally appeared on The Medical Republic.
About the Authors
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Leon piterman
Professor, General Practice
Leon led Monash University’s China GP Programs in recent years, with more than 240 Chinese doctors graduating from the program. He is also a past member of the Board of Examiners of the Australian Medical Council. Leon has extensive expertise in medical education, medical research and clinical audit.
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Marika vicziany
Emeritus Professor, Director, National Centre for South Asian Studies, Monash Asia Initiative /SOPHIS
Marika (Antonia ) was Director of the Monash Asia Institute from 2000 to 2013, Foundation Director of the National Centre for South Asian Studies from 1993 to. She has a Ph.D. in economic history from the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London) and has published on long term economic development issues in Asia and Europe. She specialises in questions about mass poverty, socio-economic inequality, cultural heritage, regional and international development issues, and public health including family planning, HIV/AIDS, rural health and food security, and the intersection between health policies and community needs.
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Hui yang
Associate Professor of General Practice
Hui has an adjunct position in the School of Primary Care and Allied Health of Monash University. During the past 12 years he has been involved in GP training and international training cooperation, as well as research on a range of subjects including primary care, general practice, healthy ageing and quality of care. In 2019 he won the Sir John Monash Award.
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