List of Queensland public exposure sites and what to do if you visited them
The Territory has revoked its hotspot declarations for City of Brisbane and the Moreton Bay region but anyone in the Territory who visited a public exposure site in Queensland must still follow testing and quarantine directions. INFORMATION HERE.
Northern Territory
Don't miss out on the headlines from Northern Territory. Followed categories will be added to My News.
THE Territory has revoked its hotspot declarations for City of Brisbane and the Moreton Bay region, after the state recorded no new locally acquired Covid-19 cases overnight.
Test and quarantine directions however remain in place for people in or coming to the Northern Territory who have visited a Queensland public exposure site since June 19.
Public Exposure Sites declared by Queensland Health
A further list on whether a site classifies as close contact, casual contact and low risk can be found at: qld.gov.au/health/conditions/health-alerts/coronavirus-covid-19/current-status/contact-tracing
What to do next
If you have visited a public exposure site, you must identify whether you are a close contact, casual contact, or low risk contact and follow the below:
Close contacts: Must immediately get tested and undertake 14 days of mandatory, supervised quarantine at the Alice Springs or Howards Springs facilities. They must remain in quarantine (unless to get tested) until noon of the 14th day after they were in a Queensland Covid-19 case location, regardless of whether they return a negative Covid-19 test.
Casual contacts: Must immediately self-quarantine, get a Covid-19 test and remain in quarantine until a negative test is returned.
Low risk contacts: Must monitor for symptoms and get tested for Covid-19 if they arise. If tested the person must remain in self-quarantine until a negative is returned.