Australia is dealing with its worst COVID-19
outbreak, fuelled by the omicron variant of the coronavirus that has put more
people in hospitals and intensive care than at any time during the pandemic.
A total of 74 deaths were registered by late
morning between New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland, Australia's three
most populous states, exceeding the previous national high of 57 last Thursday,
official data showed.
"Today, is a very difficult day for our
state," New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet said during a media
briefing as the state reported 36 deaths, a new pandemic high.
Perrottet, who has consistently ruled out any
tough curbs due to high vaccination levels, said hospitals can still cope with
the rising number of admissions. "Despite the challenges, they are not
unique to the rest of the world," he said.
Amid rising hospitalisations, Victoria on
Tuesday declared a "code brown" in hospitals, typically reserved for
shorter-term emergencies, that would give hospitals the power to cancel
non-urgent health services and cancel staff leave.
Authorities have said unvaccinated younger
people form a "significant number" of the country's hospital admissions.
Even as states look to avoid lockdowns and
keep businesses open, Australian consumer confidence took a battering last
week, an ANZ survey out on Tuesday showed, as the omicron surge triggered
self-imposed lockdowns and stifled spending.
Omicron has also dented Prime Minister Scott
Morrison's approval ratings, according to a widely watched poll on Tuesday,
putting opposition Labor into a leading position months out from a federal
election.
Just over 67,000 new infections were reported
in New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and Tasmania, down from a national
high of 150,000 last Thursday. Other states are due to report later.
Australia has reported about 1.6 million
infections since the pandemic began, of which around 1.3 million were in the
last two weeks. Total deaths stood at 2,757.