4 Nov 2021

Covid-19: Health officials investigate death of person while isolating at home

8:54 am on 4 November 2021

Health officials are investigating the death of a person who had Covid-19 and was isolating at home in Auckland.

Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield during the Covid-19 and vaccine update at Parliament on 29 September 2021.

Director-General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield. Photo: Pool / NZME / Mark Mitchell

The person tested positive for Covid-19 on 24 October and had been self-isolating in Manukau.

They were found by a family member who visited on Wednesday.

The Ministry of Health has said the cause of death was unknown and the coroner would determine whether it was due to the virus or something else.

Director General of Health Dr Ashley Bloomfield said there was no indication at this stage they required any extra support, but a formal investigation was under way.

"We got notified late yesterday afternoon by the police, who had been called by a family member who found this person deceased, and that's a tragic situation.

"At this stage we don't have any more information but we do have a very formal investigation protocol that we initiated to look and see what might have happened from a health perspective and will work with police."

He understood the person was isolating alone at home.

Because it was an unexplained death it would be referred to the coroner, Bloomfield said.

Bloomfield said a daily check-in is standard procedure for those isolating at home.

"For most people that will be simply through electronic feedback - an email that they will send in with information about their symptoms. If an email isn't received then that's followed up with a phone call."

On whether the person was getting all the help they needed or had asked for further assistance, Bloomfield said they had no further information on that, and there was no indication at this stage on whether person was high risk.

The first assessment of a person with Covid-19 is a "thorough process" to find out what support they need, and their potential risk to themselves or others, he said.

That was the point health officials found out whether the person has access to emails or needs phone calls instead.

"There is a range of options available for anyone isolating at home."

He hoped to give more information about today, including whether the person was a high-risk individual.

"There's no sense yet if the death is related to Covid or another cause," he said.

Manurewa/Papakura ward councillor Daniel Newman said it would be a very distressing time for the person's family.

"We're wanting to ensure that those people who are Covid-positive, and whānau who are affected by that diagnosis, are receiving all the support they need in a community, obviously, which is complex in terms of the wider economic and social challenges we face.

"Most people in New Zealand are going to face an outbreak of Covid in their community with about 80 or 90 percent full vaccination coverage.

"My community in Auckland faced it with about 20 percent vaccination coverage."

Northland

Bloomfield said household and workplace contacts of the two unexplained Northland cases had so far returned negative test results.

They remained in isolation, and it was still possible they positive in the coming days.

Part of the Far North is in alert level 3 until at least Monday due to the cases in Taipā having no known epidemiological or person-to-person link with any other Covid-19 cases.

Bloomfield was still waiting for genome sequencing results on the initial case but hoped to have that today.

"It may or may not help us with identifying where the case came from", he said, and interviews and other work was going on.

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