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Murphy marvels at pace of early pandemic change

By Aisha Dow

If there is one thing that sticks out to former chief medical officer Dr Brendan Murphy about the early weeks and months of the pandemic in Australia, it was how fast everything changed.

Monumental decisions such as shutting down the border to residents of an entire country could be discussed, made and enacted within hours. That happened on February 1, 2020, when the federal government announced that most foreigners who had recently been in China were no longer able to travel to Australia.

Dr Brendan Murphy, then the nation’s chief medical officer, with then prime minister Scott Morrison at a meeting with state leaders in March 2020.

Dr Brendan Murphy, then the nation’s chief medical officer, with then prime minister Scott Morrison at a meeting with state leaders in March 2020.Credit: Dominic Lorrimer

“The idea that I would wake up on a Saturday morning at nine o’clock and would start a process that would lead to borders being closed to China at nine o’clock that night, I mean those sort of things are sort of unimaginable in most lives,” Murphy told The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.

Murphy now serves as head of Australia’s federal Health Department, with tasks that include helping to implement the new Albanese government’s promised aged care reforms.

But the kidney specialist is probably best known to the public for his stint as the nation’s chief medical officer, a role that was due to wrap up for Murphy in January 2020 before it was extended into the winter of that year as COVID-19 entered the country and Murphy became a leading figure in the national pandemic response.

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He is among eight Australians who have been appointed as companions in the General Division of the Order of Australia (AC) – the country’s highest Queen’s Birthday Honour. He is recognised for a career spanning more than 35 years in clinical work, research and health administration.

Queensland’s long-term former chief health officer Dr Jeannette Young, now the state’s governor, was also made a companion of the Order of Australia, while NSW’s chief health officer Dr Kerry Chant was appointed as an officer (AO) in the General Division. Both were unavailable for interview.

Others made companions of the Order of Australia were John Anderson (politics), Leigh Clifford (business), Gina Fairfax (philanthropy), Professor Anne Green (science), Professor Tanya Monro (science) and Dr Patricia Selkirk (science and conservation).

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Department of Health secretary Brendan Murphy during a press conference on the COVID-19 vaccine rollout at Parliament House in Canberra in February last year.

Department of Health secretary Brendan Murphy during a press conference on the COVID-19 vaccine rollout at Parliament House in Canberra in February last year. Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

They were among 992 Australians who received Queen’s Birthday Honours this year, 40 per cent of whom were women.

Murphy said he was holidaying with his family in Rome over Christmas 2019 when he first heard about a new virus in Wuhan, China.

Concern was somewhat muted, he said, in early January, as it initially appeared that there were only a few dozen cases. That changed on January 19 and 20 when it became clear that the virus could transmit between humans, and healthcare workers had been infected.

Hundreds of construction workers and heavy machinery build new hospitals to tackle the coronavirus on January 28, 2020 in Wuhan, China.

Hundreds of construction workers and heavy machinery build new hospitals to tackle the coronavirus on January 28, 2020 in Wuhan, China.Credit: Getty

“I think I was increasingly convinced it wouldn’t be containable despite all the aggressive measures that the Chinese took,” Murphy said.

He said while it was clear that it would be impossible to stop COVID-19 from being imported into Australia entirely, he and state chief health officers, through the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee, advised state and federal governments that it might be possible to control it for long enough to avoid the feared tens of thousands of deaths.

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“We thought that we could, by a combination of border measures and public health and social measures, manage to largely control and contain transmission while we were still waiting for a vaccine.”

The Melbourne-born health administrator said, while acknowledging the “terrible outbreak in Victoria” in 2020, that this was largely achieved until the Delta strain arrived in the winter of 2021.

“We did avoid the overwhelming of the health system and the tens of thousands of deaths. The US had well over a million deaths, which is sort of mind-boggling,” he said.

“I think as a nation we pulled together incredibly well. And then when the vaccines came, I think Australians put their arms out and we managed to get a pretty good primary vaccination rate. And now I think we’re in a phase where we’re trying to protect the vulnerable, we’re not trying to stop transmission.”

Former Nationals leader John Anderson.

Former Nationals leader John Anderson.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

Murphy has also worked as an academic clinician, helping to discover a number of new immune inhibitor proteins, as a kidney specialist at St Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne and as chief executive of Austin Health in Melbourne for more than a decade, among other roles.

He said he still missed clinical medicine, working with patients and the reward of making important diagnoses and changing people’s lives.

John Anderson, the former Nationals leader and deputy to prime minister John Howard, was among five former politicians to receive honours.


Since stepping away from a long career in politics, Anderson has become a vocal advocate for rural and regional development, focusing on agricultural research and food security.

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“What I’ve tried to do since I left public life, much of it is centred on trying to be a friend and a supporter to many wonderful Australian organisations and people building in the region, and in other parts of the world like Africa,” he said.

Other former politicians to receive honours included Carmen Lawrence, the first woman to become premier of an Australian state, having led Western Australia in the early ’90s.

with AAP

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/national/murphy-marvels-at-pace-of-early-pandemic-change-20220610-p5asvr.html