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WorkSafe has launched an investigation into Cedar Meats over virus outbreak

A coronavirus outbreak at Cedar Meats, which is now responsible for 88 cases, will be investigated by WorkSafe. Here’s what will be examined as part of the probe.

The Cedar Meats factory in Brooklyn has been shut down after a Covid19 cluster. Picture: Jake Nowakowski
The Cedar Meats factory in Brooklyn has been shut down after a Covid19 cluster. Picture: Jake Nowakowski

Worksafe is investigating whether an abattoir at the centre of Victoria’s largest coronavirus outbreak placed its workers and the community in danger.

The workplace watchdog on Wednesday confirmed it had launched an investigation into Cedar Meats as the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases from the Brooklyn meatworks climbed to 88.

The Herald Sun understands the probe will examine Cedar Meat’s pandemic preparedness, including checks on whether it had sufficient measures in place to ensure workers maintained social distancing wherever possible; avoid sharing work tools and equipment, and had access to hand sanitiser and personal protective equipment.

WorkSafe confirmed it had launched an official investigation this afternoon.

“WorkSafe is working with DHHS to develop appropriate industry guidance for managing and controlling coronavirus (COVID-19) in the workplace and is also working with DHHS to manage incidents of COVID-19 where they occur in a workplace,” a spokesman said.

WorkSafe first became involved in the Cedar Meats outbreak after an inspector attended a workplace incident on April 23, in which a boning room worker severed a thumb.

After the worker tested positive to coronavirus in hospital the following day, five WorkSafe Victoria officers had to be placed in isolation.

When contacted by the Herald Sun about the official WorkSafe investigation, a Cedar Meats spokeswoman said the company “will co-operate with any inquiry”.

The investigation is likely to assess whether Cedar Meats followed pandemic preparation guidelines from the Department of Health and Human Services, as well as recommendations for dealing with the coronavirus threat made by the Victorian Chief Health Officer.

The Cedar Meats outbreak is now responsible for 88 cases. Picture: Jake Nowakowski
The Cedar Meats outbreak is now responsible for 88 cases. Picture: Jake Nowakowski

LAB BUNGLE DELAYED TEST

A Cedar Meats worker was finally told he had coronavirus – 11 days after undergoing a test that was later bungled by a laboratory.

As Victoria’s Premier, Health Minister and Chief Health Officer faced a parliamentary grilling over the state’s biggest coronavirus outbreak, cases linked to the Brooklyn abattoir grew by another eight yesterday to 85.

The new cases include a Cedar Meats worker who was first tested on May 1, but who had been able to gain his test results due to an “error” at the private lab contracted to analyse samples.

After the Herald Sun revealed the bungling of the distraught worker’s test on Monday, he finally received notification he was positive for coronavirus virus that evening.

“I know now, I can deal with it – you can’t deal with what you don’t know,” he told the Herald Sun.

“I am still in isolation and will have to be tested to be cleared, but will have to wait for the health department to tell me when and where I can go.”

After the Herald Sun raised questions about the man’s delayed test results on Sunday an Andrews Government spokeswoman said incident was an “anomaly” due to an administrative error at the Dorevitch Pathology laboratory.

Dorevitch failed to return calls relating to the test yesterday.

The man – who has asked not to be identified – working in the Cedar Meats boning room on with a colleague who severed his thumb on March 23 and subsequently revealed to have coronavirus in the first alarm of the abattoir cluster.

During a Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the state’s response to the coronavirus pandemic yesterday Chief Health Officer Prof Brett Sutton was asked why boning room staff waited a week to be tested, replying:

“The first case that was identified in the boning did not identify any close contacts,” Prof Sutton said.

“I didn’t speak to this specific case myself, but the contract tracers will go through a very rigorous and standard process of interviewing individuals who’ve been identified as positive.”

Prof Sutton said hundreds of Cedar Meats staff remain in quarantine, including some who had become symptomatic in the previous 24 hours.

Opposition health spokeswoman Georgie Crozier said the testing error underlined that the Department of Health’s handling of the Cedar Meats cluster had been “far from perfect”.

“The confusion and mishandling of an employee’s test result has caused enormous and unnecessary distress to him and his family, with still more confusion around what he is to do next,” Ms Crozier said.

But appearing before the parliamentary committee, Health Minister Jenny Mikakos said all appropriate contact tracing began once it was clear that there were cases of coronavirus diagnosed among workers.

“The advice that I have is that initial contact tracing at the company focused on those most at risk, including employees, and that subsequent contact tracing was undertaken to identify any other visitors, including the meat inspectors,” Ms Mikakos said.

MORE NEWS

LAB MISHANDLED COVID-19 TEST FROM CEDAR OUTBREAK

ANDREWS GRILLED ON CALL TO KEEP CAFES CLOSED

INFECTED HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT LINKED TO CEDAR MEATS CLUSTER

grant.mcarthur@news.com.au

Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/coronavirus/lab-bungle-delayed-cedar-meats-coronavirus-test-result/news-story/8b8febc5a6a9ace5ead5cd038c02f942