SYDNEY—New South Wales has recorded 12 new COVID-19 cases and health authorities have updated mask usage recommendations to include public-facing workers, worshippers, and people near clusters.
Premier Gladys Berejiklian said authorities would not enforce mask usage in NSW but had revised their recommendations to address four specific circumstances.
As well as in situations where social distancing is impossible, such as on public transport, masks should be worn in NSW by public-facing employees such as hospitality or supermarket workers, worshippers and residents of suburbs near clusters.
Those who are elderly or suffer underlying health issues should also wear masks.
“We have been talking about masks for several weeks but obviously the persistent situation in Victoria gives us cause for alarm in terms of the potential for further seeding in NSW, and it is about risk mitigation strategy,” Berejiklian told reporters on Aug. 2.
“Were going to the next stage of assessing what else and how else we can decrease the risk and break the current chain coming through NSW.”
However, Berejiklian reiterated social distancing remained the first line of defence.
NSW recorded 12 new COVID-19 cases—with just one in hotel quarantine—in the 24 hours to 8 p.m. on Aug. 1 from almost 22,500 tests. Eight people are in intensive care.
NSW Healths Jeremy McAnulty has said seven cases in the prior week were not linked to known cases, emanating from southwestern Sydney, western Sydney, southeastern Sydney and Sydney local health districts.
One additional case recorded on Aug. 2 had no known source.
It comes after an 83-year-old man connected to the Crossroads Hotel cluster in southwest Sydney died on Aug. 1, taking the NSW death toll to 52 and the nationwide tally past 200.
It was the first coronavirus-related death in NSW since late May.
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