The COVID-19 figure an epidemiologist says Victoria should reach before easing lockdown

An epidemiologist says sheâs âdelightedâ about Victoriaâs drop in COVID-19 cases, but warned the state is still a long way from being able to safely ease lockdown restrictions.
Professor of Epidemiology at the University of NSW, Marylouise McLaws, who is also a member of the WHO Experts Advisory Panel for COVID-19, says she understands why Victorians are celebrating todayâs daily case figure of 116, but itâs too early to relax.
âI imagine youâre all celebrating, but youâve got to get it lower, not just 116 in a day, but lower than 100 over a two-week period,â she told Neil Mitchell.
Press PLAY below for the full interview.
Professor McLaws said cases must fall to fewer than 100 in a fortnight before restrictions are eased, so effective contact-tracing is possible.
â100 every day is potentially 90 too many. You need it much lower than that so you can do good contact tracing,â she said.
âIâm looking at your two-week average and itâs 3500. Thatâs an awful lot.
âOther epidemiologists may think Iâm being too conservative, but once you get over 100 over about a two incubation period it means this virus can get quickly out of control.â
Professor McLaws revealed the point at which she thinks it will be safe for the Victoria-NSW border to reopen.
âYou wonât be able to, I donât think, open up your border to NSW until you get to what I call the green zone, the safe zone, which is somewhere between zero and 59 infections over a 14-day period,â she said.