Chief Health Officer Dr Jeannette Young will brief Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk about the vaccine's distribution in Townsville on Wednesday, as coronavirus fragments are found at 13 wastewater sites across the state in the past 48 hours.
Health by Ally Foster and Charis Chang 27th Jan 2021 6:26 AM People who get vaccinated may believe they can t spread the coronavirus and could prove to be the next super-spreaders, Harvard University public health student Rushabh Doshi has warned. Writing on KevinMD, a platform founded by Dr Kevin Pho, Doshi noted that it was still unclear whether vaccinated people could still spread the virus. With a slower than expected vaccination rollout to the general public, people who are vaccinated and fail to understand that they can still be carriers of the virus pose an immediate threat to the unvaccinated, Doshi wrote last week.
Queensland has been put on high alert after coronavirus was found in sewage at a string of wastewater treatment plants, including three in Brisbane.
Viral fragments of the virus were detected at facilities in the state capital, as well as those servicing Hervey Bay - such as one in Maryborough.
In total, seven plants showed evidence of the virus - Caboolture South, Oxley Creek, Bundamba, Gibson Island, Luggage Point, Maryborough and Pulgul.
While it is not unexpected for the virus to be detected in Brisbane s waters, due to infections in hotel quarantine, the other plants are a cause for concern.