House debates
Thursday, 13 May 2021
Questions without Notice
COVID-19: Health
2:41 pm
Greg Hunt (Flinders, Liberal Party, Minister for Health and Aged Care) Share this | Hansard source
Indeed, that is exactly the point I was making. There are 750,000 people who have contracted the virus in the last 24 hours. There are 14,000 lives that have been lost. In Australia, we are blessed with the fact that there were zero cases of community transmission. Of all of the different things that could be happening in Australia, this is perhaps the most important in the last 24 hours. The defences that we have built as a nation over the course of the last year are keeping Australia secure. They are continuing to keep Australia secure, and the investments which have been put in place as part of that are continuing.
I note that the member for Higgins was one of 402,000 people last week to put her shoulder forward for the vaccination. There are many others who have done this in all parts of the country—82,000 in the last 24 hours. Very significantly, the budget contains an accumulated investment of over $25 billion in our COVID health response. That includes both our primary care, which is above $6 billion, and telehealth. It includes our vaccination program, which is over $7 billion. Very importantly, as part of that, I'm delighted to be able to say, as we announced earlier today, that the government has secured access to 25 million doses of the Moderna mRNA vaccine. As part of that, importantly, that allows us to have a medium-term strategy—where we are focusing next year on the ability to have booster and variant capacity. Now that the medical advice has indicated in particular this is important for the variant strategy—the ability to adapt—we've followed that advice and made that investment, but there are two other elements that are particularly important.
The minister for innovation will help lead a process of securing mRNA investment and processing capability in Australia through an approach to market. Indeed, Moderna itself has indicated it is interested in participating in that process and potentially producing vaccine over the medium term in Australia. That means that we now have over 190 million vaccines, we have a new capability and we potentially have the capacity to produce the vaccines here in Australia. (Time expired)
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