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Fully-vaccinated Australians returning from overseas will be allowed to spend their quarantine period at home under a trial program expected to launch in Adelaide over the coming months, according to a report by David Flynn of Executive Traveller.

The question I ask of the government is that this has been talked about for months with modelling apparently having taken place, but still it appears that progress is painfully slow…why?

The report says that the government says that depending on its success, the pilot could pave the way for home isolation to become a nation-wide norm for vaccinated travellers.

Home quarantine figures prominently in the federal government’s four-stage “path to recovery” roadmap announced earlier this month, with one measure of the current first phase being to “trial and pilot the introduction of alternative quarantine options, including home quarantine for returning vaccinated travellers.”

South Australia’s state government agreed to host the home quarantine trial, which will be presented as an alternative to spending 14 days in hotel quarantine at a cost to the traveller of over $3,000 and while details are still to be finalised, SA Premier Steven Marshall said the trial – which will require approval by the SA Health department – would be “only be for South Australians wanting to return home to this state.”

It would also apply only to fully-vaccinated travellers arriving from “lower-risk countries” and is likely to include some form of electronic monitoring to ensure that those travellers remain in their home of within their property’s boundary, with monitoring measures adopted overseas ranging from smartphone-linked Bluetooth wristbands to smartphone apps which rely on GPS location tracking and facial recognition.

Marshall said, “We have been looking at pathways out of this pandemic for quite some time as vaccination rates increase,” adding, “”While we will be the first jurisdiction to return South Australians through home quarantine, it is expected other states will then adopt the system.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the home isolation trial “will be a two-week trial based on the advice from the medical panel,” although he indicated this could be reduced to seven days if the scheme is rolled out on a national basis with Morrison noting that expert medical advice “shows that a vaccinated person doing quarantine for seven days is stronger than an unvaccinated person doing quarantine for 14 days.”

Morrison also said that stage two of the four-stage plan, which Morrison expects Australia to enter in early 2022, [GTM comment which could be six month away!] includes “new reduced quarantine arrangements for vaccinated residents, adding that the SA pilot will be “a transparent project with all the other states and territories” to prepare them to adopt the new system upon successfully completing the trial.

He also clarified that home quarantine could be a measure by which fully-vaccinated Australians can leave the country and come back, with home isolation would also reduce the pressure on city hotels and dedicated quarantine facilities such as Darwin’s Howard Springs, allowing for the return of more Australians from higher-risk countries.

Stage two would see arrival caps restored to previous levels for unvaccinated travellers, with “higher levels of arrivals” for vaccinated passengers.

GTM comment – Once again no real clarity regard timing is provided, but it seems to be grinding along very slowly indeed and in reality, for those waiting for this change, it appears way off in the distance, so sadly, don’t hold your breath.

A report from Executive Traveller by John Alwyn-Jones, Special Correspondent, Travel and Tourism, Global Travel Media.