Edmonton Journal

QUEBEC TO IMPOSE 8 P.M. CURFEW FOR FOUR WEEKS

Premier says hospitals are overburden­ed

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MONTREAL • Quebec Premier François Legault is imposing a provincewi­de 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew beginning Saturday and for the next four weeks as a way to halt surging COVID-19 infections and hospitaliz­ations.

Legault told reporters Wednesday he wanted to

give Quebecers an “electrosho­ck” regarding the critical situation in the province's hospitals, which he said are overburden­ed with COVID-19 patients who are mostly over the age of 65.

Quebec will become the first in the country to impose such a drastic measure to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

The premier said that despite the fact schools, retail stores and many other businesses have been closed since December, COVID-19 infections continue to rise. He said the transmissi­on is coming from private gatherings.

“We are obliged to provide a type of shock treatment so that people reduce their visits,” he said.

Legault says anyone found on the street after 8 p. m. without good reason would be subject to a fine of between $ 1,000 and $ 6,000. The premier says all non-essential businesses that he ordered closed in December will remain closed until at least Feb. 8, when the curfew is scheduled to be lifted.

Legault, however, said primary schools will reopen as scheduled, on Jan. 11, and high school students will return to in-person learning the week after, on Jan. 18.

Earlier on Wednesday,

Quebec reported 2,641 new

COVID-19 infections and 47 more deaths attributed to the novel coronaviru­s. The Health Department said hospitaliz­ations jumped by 76, to 1,393 — the largest number since late May — and 202 people were in intensive care, a rise of eight.

Dr. Donald Sheppard, chair of the microbiolo­gy and immunology department at Mcgill University,

says Quebec’s health- care

system is under heavy strain, adding that surgeries and cancer screenings are being put off and intensive care units are filling up.

“The biggest worry is, eventually, if we don't do anything, we' ll get to the point where it's going to be the decision where we have two patients, one ventilator and someone has to decide,” Sheppard said Wednesday.

He said the impact of cancelled procedures is already being felt: breast cancer patients are presenting with larger tumours than they were before the pandemic, a sign they're being diagnosed late.

Quebec’s INESSS institute, a government-mandated health- care think tank, warned on Dec. 31 that hospitals in the Montreal area are likely to run out of dedicated COVID-19 beds within three weeks.

“Our hospitals are on the verge of a breaking point,” Roxane Borges Da Silva, professor of public health at Université de Montréal, said Wednesday. The “partial measures” in place, she said, have had “no effect on the increasing trend of cases.”

Much of Quebec, including the province's largest cities, has been under partial lockdown since October, when bars, restaurant dining rooms, gyms and entertainm­ent venues were closed. In December, Legault closed all “non-essential” retail stores and extended the winter break for elementary and high school students.

But while those measures slowed the spread of the virus, they didn't “render the curve flat,” Sheppard said.

He said the majority of outbreaks documented by public health have been in workplaces and schools and said while some cases may be due to people breaking rules, he doesn't think enough people are having illicit parties that would result in more than 2,500 cases a day.

Speaking before Legault's evening news conference, Sheppard said he supported shutting workplaces and schools, but Legault needed to clearly justify why a curfew is needed to significan­tly reduce transmissi­on.

Borges Da Silva, however, said she thinks a curfew makes sense because it will force people to ask themselves whether it's really worth it before they go out and, for example, have a beer with a friend.

She said she believes that illicit gatherings over the holidays have had a major impact on the spread of COVID-19 in the province.

OUR HOSPITALS ARE ON THE VERGE OF A BREAKING POINT.

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