People should be able to visit loves ones in Brisbane's hospitals, aged care facilities and disability providers from Friday, as the coronavirus risk ebbs.
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Queensland conducted 7500 COVID-19 tests in the 24 hours to 9am on Thursday and none came back positive.
The state has now gone seven days without a case of community transmission of the virus.
The Brisbane lockdown began when a doctor tested positive on March 12, after working at Princess Alexandra Hospital and visiting four venues in the city's south the day before.
Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk says the call on reopening hospitals, aged care facilities and disability providers will be made by Chief Health Officer Jeannette Young on Friday morning.
"Dr Young was very positive on our phone hook up this morning, and so we'll await that outcome tomorrow. So let's say fingers crossed overnight," she told reporters in Cairns.
Queensland reported eight new virus cases in hotel quarantine on Thursday, six of those involving people who arrived from Papua New Guinea.
The state and federal governments are now assisting with a vaccination drive in PNG, where the spread of COVID-19 is growing.
Queensland has 48 active COVID-19 cases and authorities have administered 28,533 vaccine doses.
The state has also changed its advice on the vaccine for people who suffer from anaphylactic shock.
On Wednesday, Health Minister Yvette D'Ath advised sufferers to delay getting a vaccination after four people had allergic reactions to the AstraZeneca jab.
But later in the day, federal Health Minister Greg Hunt and Health Secretary Brendan Murphy said there was no need for concern.
Following Australian Health Protection Principal Committee talks on Wednesday night, Queensland has now fallen in with Therapeutic Goods Administration advice.
Ms Palaszczuk defended Ms D'Ath's advice.
"Early in the morning there was some initial concerns, and she was doing an early morning press conference, and I back what she said," Ms Palaszczuk said.
"But like I said, this is Commonwealth-led, and everyone is comfortable with the vaccine rollout and we fully support the vaccine rollout."
The premier didn't think the Commonwealth had moved too early in starting the second phase of the vaccine rollout to group 1b people, mostly over 70, through GP surgeries.
The federal government is responsible for 60 per cent of the vaccine drive.
Opposition Leader David Crisafulli criticised the state government over the slow vaccine drive, even if it is meeting its own targets.
Australian Associated Press