RNZ
06 March 2022, 5:00 PM
The trend of falling daily cases Covid-19 should be treated with caution, the Ministry of Health says.
There were 15,161 new community cases today, more than 3500 fewer than yesterday's total of 18,833. On Friday, it was 22,527.
It is the third day running that case numbers have fallen.
Urging caution, the ministry said: "The variation in reporting numbers each day means that the rolling average of cases gives a more reliable indicator of testing trends. The seven-day rolling average
of cases is today 17,272, up from 16,687 yesterday".
"Additionally, public health officials consider that one possible reason for the decrease in cases could be related to delays in people self-reporting Rapid Antigen Test (RAT) results, even if it is a
negative result.
"It is essential we have as much information as possible to inform public health decision-making. If you take a Rapid Antigen Test, report the result online through My Covid Record."
Instructions for self-reporting RAT results can be found on the Unite Against Covid website
RAT result reporting dropped from Thursday to Saturday - from 71,084 on Thursday, to 55,994 on Friday and 41,637 on Saturday, numbers provided to RNZ showed.
Those numbers included includes both self-reported RATs results from people uploading their results to their My Covid Record, and supervised results taken at a community testing centre or other
healthcare setting.
The ministry said "as with testing numbers more generally, we would expect to see a drop in RATs results reported over the weekend".
Just yesterday, epidemiologist Professor Rod Jackson said people should not read too much into the decline in Covid-19 case numbers.
"I hear every day, and frequently every day, of people with symptoms not getting tested and of those with symptoms who do get tested not reporting them.
"I think a lot of people have given up reporting, so I take next to no notice of the cases anymore. I look at the hospitalisations and the deaths."
In today's coronavirus update, the ministry said 618 people were in hospital, 10 were in intensive care and one more person had died - taking the total of Covid-19-related deaths to 65.
Hospitalisations were "significantly greater than those from last year's Delta outbreak", the ministry said.
"The hospitalisation figure of 544 on Thursday was six times the peak in hospitalisations seen in the Delta outbreak last year.
"The number of cases in hospital is currently expected to peak in the second half of this month.
"The Omicron variant means people who are hospitalised are more likely to have a shorter stay and less likely to be admitted to ICU or require oxygen or ventilation support."