Friday 26 June 2020

Some in Melbourne's COVID-19 hotspots dismiss the health risks as testing blitz gets underway.

A "suburban testing blitz" launched in Victoria
On the streets of Broadmeadows in Melbourne's north, there is both deep concern and general indifference to the Victorian Government's coronavirus testing blitz, with some locals saying that not even a deadly virus would cause them to change their behaviour.
A team of 800 health workers will try to test 10,000 people a day in Melbourne's ten problem suburbs, with the aim to carry out about 100,000 tests in 10 days.
Broadmeadows is one of the hotspots with a worrying spike in the number of cases of COVID-19.
A child getting a test for COVID-19 with a man putting a swab in her mouth.
Victorian health authorities are testing widely to try to tackle the rising number of COVID-19 cases.(AAP: Daniel Pockett)
But while some Broadmeadows locals expressed fear and urged their fellow residents to heed health warnings, others described the virus as "rubbish".
"I've been out and about, and everyone has, and I haven't met a person that's got it," one man said.
He said he was still hugging and kissing people in greeting and said COVID-19 was not dangerous.
"It's not deadly, it's like any other virus," he said.
"I'm not going to stop my whole life for coronavirus, I've got to work, I've got a business to run … just like everyone else in Broadmeadows."A man in a black top with a beard.
This Broadmeadows man says he won't be changing his behaviour because of coronavirus.(ABC News)
Others said they were not surprised to learn that Broadmeadows was a hotspot.
"No-one listens to the rules … not staying home, hugging, kissing," one man said.
Some urged the Government to introduce heftier fines for failing to practice social distancing.
"People think they don't get sick, but this is not a game anymore," one woman said, describing the behaviour of some as "stupid".
"The new Australians are hugging, they're kissing, they're too close to each other," she said.
But other locals said they were not worried about hugging and were not practicing social distancing.
"In our community everybody does that," one man said.Two men greet and embrace each other in a street.
These Broadmeadows men said the risk of coronavirus would not stop them from greeting each other with an embrace.(ABC News)
Elsewhere, as the testing blitz got underway, people said they were unfazed to be living or working in one of Melbourne's coronavirus hotspots.
One woman from Keilor Downs in Melbourne's north-west said she was getting on with life and had been dismissing the concerns expressed by her relatives for her safety as "rubbish".
"I ignore the hotspot, Keilor's a wonderful place to live, hotspot or not," she said.
She was unimpressed by the testing blitz.
In Pakenham, some said they were living life as normal, despite the virus.
"I haven't seen anybody with COVID," one woman said.
But Kay from Cafe Transylvania in Hallam said she was praying for people to listen.
"It's better for everyone to do the right thing," she said.A woman holds a swab to her mouth as an ambulance officer watches.
Ambulance officers will help test people in Broadmeadows and Keilor Downs over the next several days, before the testing blitz moves to eight other problem suburbs.(AAP: Daniel Pockett)

Premier urges everyone to be cooperative

The first three days of Victoria's testing blitz will focus on Keilor Downs and Broadmeadows, where health workers will aim to test half the population.
The focus will then move to other hotspot suburbs over the course of the 10-day program.
Broadmeadows and Keilor Downs will be the focus in the first few days of the testing blitz.(ABC News)
The other suburbs central to the ramped-up testing program are Maidstone, Albanvale, Sunshine West, Brunswick West, Fawkner, Reservoir as well as Hallam and Pakenham in the outer south-eastern suburbs.
A map showing Hallam and Pakenham highlighted in orange.
Hallam and Pakenham are also key to plans for mass testing.(ABC News)
Victoria's Premier Daniel Andrews said ambulances and other testing vans would be at the end of many streets to make it easy for residents to be tested.
"They will be invited to come and get a test, and they'll only have to travel 50 metres or 100 metres in order to complete that test," Mr Andrews said.
The blitz was announced on a day when Victoria recorded 33 more coronavirus infections and another childcare centre, Connie Benn Early Learning Centre in Fitzroy, was forced to close after a parent of a child who attended the centre tested positive to COVID-19.
Mr Andrews said he was "confident" the strategy would help contain community transmission in Victoria.
He urged everyone to be cooperative and get tested.

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