That report would have to be the biggest pile of crap I have read recently, a mixture of stating the bleeding obvious with some hysterics thrown in. For a publicly funded institution they should at least provide some intelligent musings on the future insead of writing reports designed to garner headlines. This is the best that these clowns can come up with in the way of strategy..........
Schools should enforce social distancing policies, and close if a COVID-19 case is detected. NSW has been doing this since school went back 3 weeks ago
Mandatory quarantining of international arrivals must remain in place. No **** sherlock
And if a second wave of mass infections breaks out, governments will have to reimpose lockdowns. Really, maybe some insight into how difficult that might be would be useful. Maybe a couple of suggestions on how to manage the riots and civil unrest that might occur if this was to happen or the financial impact would be useful insights from a policy institute.
It’s dangerous for people to think this fight is over. The nature of the virus hasn’t changed – our behaviour has. Yes but the nature of our circumstances has changed as well, From being unaware of the number of community infections most states, including Victoria have a very good handle on where they are.
If Australians go back to a pre-COVID normal, the virus could spread quickly and wildly, like it has elsewhere. Again, no **** sherlock, as long as the virus is endemic in most populations outside Australia we will be fighting to stay in control.
Some of Australia’s states have effectively eliminated local transmission of COVID-19, and are keeping their borders closed to states where it persists. States should maintain different restrictions if they have different rates of local transmission. That makes sense, but it doesn't address nonsensical border closures.
Restrictions are obviously needed much less in states which have effectively eliminated the virus from their local population. Really???
Australia should learn lessons from the way the health system responded to the pandemic. Probably but what was so wrong about the response????
Telehealth has been embraced by doctors and patients; it should now be expanded to give more people quicker access to care. I believe this has already been done
Mental health and hospital-in-the-home services should be bolstered. aah, something that resembles a policy suggestion
And the federal and state governments need to strengthen supply chains to ensure adequate supplies of personal protective equipment and ventilators in the event of a second wave of COVID-19 infections. PPE OK, but I would imagine we have enough ventilators to last the next 20 years
If Australia gets this transition to a ‘new normal’ wrong, we won’t benefit from the overdue health system changes that the crisis forced on us. That would be another tragedy on top of the trauma caused by the pandemic itself. What is the "New Normal" anyway ? No one knows what the virus situation will be like in 6 months, a year, two years. It could be anything from the rest of the world having herd immunity and Australia remaining isolated and slowly going broke or a vaccine could bedeveloped, or the virus could burn itself out. All three are possible outcomes that have vastly differing "new normal" outcomes.
Clowns, I think I want a job there, could write a bit of the crap I put on this forum and be paid handsomely for it
Regards,
Tote






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