Regina Leader-Post

SHOULD WE BE TESTING THE PRIME MINISTER?

- JESSE SNYDER

TRANSMISSI­ON

OTTAWA • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he has not been examined for COVID-19 based on the advice of health care experts after his wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau tested positive for the virus.

“It was explained to me that as long as I do not show any symptoms at all, there is no value to me being tested,” Trudeau said Friday, in a press conference where he was several metres away from reporters.

Trudeau and his family are in self-imposed isolation for two weeks after Grégoire Trudeau was found to be showing symptoms of the COVID-19 virus. She later tested positive.

The situation faced by the prime minister reflects a wider uncertaint­y in Canada over when people should enter self-isolation, and whether the country is testing enough potential patients as a way to get a firmer grip on the virus.

For now, the World Health Organizati­on has said people showing no symptoms of COVID-19 are at “very low risk” of transmitti­ng the virus. However, some very preliminar­y studies — including a recent paper that tested 135 confirmed cases in China and 93 in Singapore — suggest infected people can potentiall­y transfer the virus during incubation, a several-day period before major symptoms begin to emerge.

“There’s a high probabilit­y, or a substantia­l risk, that in fact pre-symptomati­c patients, or patients with mild symptoms … could actually be contagious,” said Pierre-gerlier Forest, director of the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy. “You incubate it for a while.”

Forest also stressed the studies are in their early stage, and there is a substantia­l lack of informatio­n.

“It’s complicate­d because there’s so much noise,” he said.

Trudeau said experts advised him he did not put staff and other contacts at risk before he entered quarantine.

“According to health officials, the fact that I have expressed absolutely no symptoms means that anyone I engaged with throughout this week has not been put at risk,” he said.

Scientists remain highly limited in their understand­ing of how early the COVID-19 virus is able to spread. The study of patients in China and Singapore, which involved Canadian researcher­s, studied only a small sample of patients. But researcher­s found the initial period, or “incubation”, is between six and 10 days, while the period of time between a patient showing symptoms and someone they infect showing symptoms is shorter, around 4.5 days.

“What that means is that people can start infecting others before they start seeing symptoms themselves,” Dr. Caroline Colijn, a professor at Simon Fraser University and co-author of the report, told the National Post earlier this week.

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