There is one new Covid case at the border in New Zealand, director general of health Ashley Bloomfield says.
Today's new case is a woman in her 30s who arrived from Dubai on September 9 and is in managed isolation. She is linked to the three border cases announced yesterday.
Bloomfield said the man's death highlighted the seriousness of Covid-19 and said his thoughts were with Te Hiko's family.
"Ngāti Raukawa has lost clearly a rangitira...they mourn the loss of their loved one.
"I can't imagine how devastating this is for this whanau," Bloomfield said.
He said the death was another reminder of how dangerous the virus was, especially for those with pre-existing conditions.
Nigel lived in Tokoroa and had been visited by his brother before Auckland's August lockdown.
The deaths that we've seen in the Te Hiko family just do re-iterate just how deadly this virus is, he said. The death rate in New Zealand was between 1 and 2 per cent of the country's confirmed cases.
The healthcare worker with Covid
The exact epidemiological link to the health care worker who tested positive at the Auckland quarantine facility has been confirmed.
The worker went into the room to care for a person who tested positive and required hospitalisation.
All close and casual contacts from the gym whose test results have been returned have tested negative.
Bloomfield said there was very strict requirements and enforcement around the use of PPE at the facility where the healthcare worker contracted Covid-19. He said a clinical review would establish how she contracted it.
"We're increasingly confident we have ring-fenced the cluster and sub-cluster," he said.
There was also no indication anyone had contracted it from the healthcare worker. He said amber-green was the best way to characterise his feeling on the current situation.
Yesterday there were no new cases in the community with the three confirmed cases being in managed isolation facilities at the border.
The three cases were a man in his 30s and two children who arrived together from Dubai on September 9. They have been in managed isolation at the Ibis Hotel in Rotorua and tested positive for Covid-19 during routine testing around day three of their stay.
There were four people in hospital with Covid-19 – one was in isolation on a ward in Auckland City Hospital, and one was in isolation on a ward in Middlemore. Two were in ICU, at North Shore and Waikato hospitals.