National Post (National Edition)

Toronto to resume full contact tracing

RULES TO BE EASED

- JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL

Toronto will resume its full contact tracing program and scale up other COVID-19 infrastruc­ture measures as the city readies itself to ease restrictio­ns on Nov. 14.

Dr. Eileen De Villa, Toronto's chief medical officer of health, said on Wednesday that the city's public health unit had increased its pre-pandemic case management and contact tracing team of 50 up to nearly 700 people, the largest in Canada. She noted that 200 more people would be added to the group and that three local hospitals would contribute to the effort.

“Our objective is not simply to do it well, but to be amongst the best in the world,” De Villa said, adding that contact tracers would focus on identifyin­g super-spreader events.

Toronto is one of four hot spots in Ontario — along with Ottawa, Peel Region and York Region — currently under tighter restrictio­ns that closed gyms, cinemas and indoor restaurant dining.

Those restrictio­ns will lift in Peel Region and Ottawa on Saturday, but Mayor John Tory asked the province to keep Toronto's restrictio­ns in place for an additional week as the city works to curb cases.

Tory said on Wednesday he believes that the extra week will be enough time to implement new safety measures, communicat­e the new guidelines to local businesses, and get Toronto's daily caseload lower.

“I'm confident that we can take the steps with the resources that we will apply as a city and through Toronto public health to be ready, to open safely, and to stay open safely,” said Tory.

Toronto scaled back its contract tracing efforts in early October to focus on high-risk cases as the second wave of COVID-19 began to overwhelm the public health unit. At the time, the city said a rapidly rising case load made trying to connect with all close contacts of infected residents unsustaina­ble.

There were 338 new cases in Toronto on Wednesday, with a total of 159 people hospitaliz­ed and 36 people in intensive care because of COVID-19.

Although Toronto's seven-day average for new cases continues to climb, De Villa said that context is important and more rigorous contact tracing will get the public health unit the data it needs to make informed decisions.

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