Queensland may never beat coronavirus, experts say, as 42 cases remain 
untraceable

By Kerrin Binnie and Rachel Riga  Updated 1 hour ago  
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-05-19/coronavirus-queensland-epidemiological-link/12259336


Queenslanders are being warned not to assume we have beaten coronavirus and "it 
is unlikely that we will, ever" despite a large drop in cases.

Chief Health Officer Dr Jeannette Young said 42 Queensland cases of COVID-19 
have no traceable source, including an infected nurse working at a Rockhampton 
aged care facility.

"These are the cases that worry me," Dr Young said.

"This is why we cannot assume we have beaten this virus — we haven't.

"It is unlikely that we will, ever.

"We'll have to find ways of managing it and the hope of course is for a vaccine 
to assist us in that."

Queensland has moved to stage one relaxation of restrictions with small groups 
of people allowed to dine at restaurants, cafes or pubs.

Dr Young said the infected nurse was the only case in the past two weeks where 
an epidemiological link had not been established.

"We know we are getting cases out there in the community," she said.

"We had more cases earlier on, when we were having those 60 cases a day where 
[we] couldn't find epi links."

Dr Young warned people not to become complacent.

"If you have respiratory symptoms there's every chance it is more likely due to 
COVID-19 than it is due to anything else," she said.

"We do know that people can have asymptomatic disease — no symptoms at all — 
and can spread the virus.

"Townsville's not had a case for quite a while [so] don't think 'I live in 
Townsville, therefore I don't have to worry that that sore throat and that 
cough [means] that I've got COVID', it could very easily be COVID.

"In actual fact, we have possibly got more respiratory disease in our state at 
the moment due to COVID-19 than we do due to flu."

University of Melbourne epidemiologist Professor Blakely said Queensland was 
not in a bad position if it only had one untraceable case of COVID-19 in the 
past fortnight.

"It's a concern but it's nowhere near as bad as some other places with more of 
those cases occurring in the last two weeks," he said.

"It is still possible if Queensland keeps its borders really locked, and goes 
really hard on contact tracing that maybe they'll get rid of all the community 
transmission.

"What you can say with some confidence is in places where you've still got 
community transmission and you're opening up, you're going out more, you've got 
bigger group size meetings, [the] chance of that community transmission taking 
off is real.

"What happens in Queensland, only time will tell."

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said the state's border with New South 
Wales could remain closed until at least September.
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