Canadian Security Magazine

Ontario to extend state of emergency, despite ‘glimmer of light’ in numbers: Ford

By Allison Jones, The Canadian Press   

COVID-19 Updates News COVID-19 doug ford Ontario state of emergency

TORONTO — Ontario will extend its state of emergency by another month, Premier Doug Ford said Monday as he cautioned that even with some promising signs in the province’s COVID-19 fight, it is too early to start lifting restrictions.

The legislature will sit for an emergency session Tuesday to extend the orders by another 28 days, which closed non-essential businesses and child care centres — the province has not yet said whether school closures will be extended beyond May 4.

It comes as associate chief medical officer of health Dr. Barbara Yaffe said modellers are predicting that Ontario’s curve will peak this week, assuming all current restrictions continue.

Ontario reported a six-per-cent increase in new cases Monday, continuing a relatively low growth rate over the past several days.

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“We’re seeing a glimmer, a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel here,” Ford said.

“But what happens if we do that and all of a sudden this comes back and bites us in the backside and just comes back with vengeance or another wave comes through?”

People are getting antsy, Ford said, but he wants to take a cautious approach.

“Everyone’s at the gate, ready to let those doors open, like at the horse races,” he said. “Everyone wants to take off. We just can’t right now. We have to go through this for a little bit longer, as painful as it is for everyone…When the time is right we will open it up slowly but surely.”

Ontario reported 421 new COVID-19 cases Monday and 17 new deaths. That brings the province to a total of 7,470 cases, including 291 deaths and 3,357 cases that have been resolved.

Meanwhile, 41 per cent of all of the COVID-19 deaths in the province have been long-term care residents.

There have been at least 89 COVID-19 outbreaks reported in long-term care homes across the province, with 741 residents and 430 staff members infected, and at least 120 residents have died.

Some of the hardest-hit facilities include Pinecrest Nursing Home in Bobcaygeon, where 29 residents have died; Seven Oaks in Toronto, where 22 residents have died; Almonte Country Haven outside Ottawa, where 16 residents have died; and Anson Place in Hagersville in southwestern Ontario, where 13 residents have died.

Health Minister Christine Elliott acknowledged that some outbreaks in long-term care homes have been the result of staff who work in two or three facilities inadvertently bringing in the virus.
The Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario has urged the province to restrict health-care workers from working in more than one long-term care or retirement home, which they often do because they’re unable to get full-time positions.

CEO Doris Grinspun has said Ontario must ensure staff work in one home only, and those who cannot be given full-time hours must receive wage enhancement in order to keep them from working in other places.

Ontario has strongly recommended staff only work in one facility, but hasn’t mandated it.

Ford, however, seemed to express support for the idea Monday.

“I’m going to rely on our health team to come up with that recommendation, but it sounds like common sense,” he said. “You don’t want people going from home to home to home.”

Ford also expressed frustration that Ontario continues to test for COVID-19 at a rate well below its capacity of 13,000 tests per day, even as he demanded last week that the rate immediately be increased.

The province has said it will do 8,000 tests daily by Wednesday, but just over 5,000 were completed in the last 24 hours.

“Just get these damn tests done, simple,” Ford said. “I don’t know what takes so long, what’s so hard about it.”

Yaffe noted that the day before about 7,000 tests were done, and the number depends on who shows up at assessment centres and the testing done in various outbreaks.

The premier said repeatedly Monday that every single long-term care resident and health worker in those facilities will be tested, but that is contrary to a recent directive from the chief medical officer of health. It expanded testing guidelines for long-term care homes, but did not advise testing all residents and staff.

“Testing every single person in a home, especially if there’s no evidence of an outbreak or a case is basically, it’s a snapshot in time,” Yaffe said Monday.

“You may pick up something — unlikely — you may pick up nothing and you may be wasting a lot of tests that should be done on other people.”

Ontario has made progress in the area of personal protective equipment, with Ford saying the province’s supply is much better now than when he recently warned it was in danger of running out. Over the past five days the province has acquired more than 13 million surgical masks, 200,000 N95 masks and 38 ventilators, Ford said.

During the weekend more than 6.5 million surgical masks were delivered to hospitals, long-term care home and retirement homes, he said.

Provincewide, the number of patients in hospital — 760 — rose slightly Monday, but rates of patients in intensive care and on ventilators remained relatively stable.

More than 800 health-care workers have tested positive for COVID-19, about 11 per cent of the total number of cases.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 13, 2020.

News from © Canadian Press Enterprises Inc. 2020


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