Contact Tracing Locations Of Interest: November Quarantine Cluster
A number of push notifications will be sent to people who logged on with the COVID Tracer app as a new case was announced today. The alerts were sent to people that logged in at several locations of interest in Wellington and Auckland.
The new case, a contact of a quarantine
worker in Auckland, visited the following locations:
·
Domestic Terminal, Auckland Airport: 5.30 – 7.45pm, 5
Nov
· Avis Car Rental, Auckland Airport: 5.00 –
5.15pm, 5 Nov
· Orleans Chicken & Waffles, Auckland
Airport: 5.30 – 7pm, 5 Nov
· The Gypsy Moth, Auckland
Airport: 7.00 – 7.15pm, 5 Nov
· Hudsons, Auckland
Airport: 7.00 – 7.15pm, 5 Nov
· Little Penang, The
Terrace, Wellington: 1.15 – 3.45pm, 6 Nov.
The alert has advised users that they may have been in contact with COVID-19. Further information is available here.
If you begin to feel unwell, or for more information, please contact Healthline 0800 358 5453
For contact tracing purposes, anyone who attended one of the locations listed during the relevant timeframes is considered to be a COVID-19 ‘casual contact’ with a low risk of exposure. Close contacts have been contacted directly.
This case once again reinforces the importance of everyone who is able to using the app to keep a record of where they have been - it allows our contact tracing team to quickly notify you if you may have been exposed to this virus, and allows you to take immediate action to protect yourself, your whanau, and your community.
Country Music Honours: 2026 Country Music Honours Finalists Announced
Mana Mokopuna: Children’s Commissioner Welcomes New Youth Mental Health And Suicide Prevention Services In Te Tai Tokerau
New Zealand Kindergartens: 100-Years On - Investing In Teacher-Led, Quality Early Childhood Education Is Investing In Aotearoa’s Future
Dry July: Thousands Set To Go Alcohol Free This July As Cancer Diagnoses Continue To Rise Across Aotearoa
New Zealand College of Midwives: Celebrating Midwives Across Aotearoa This International Day Of The Midwife
PPTA Te Wehengarua: Building The Secondary Curriculum On Broken Drafts Is A Serious Risk