Vancouver Sun

Reopened Quebec cautiously optimistic

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL • Quebec reported its sixth consecutiv­e daily decrease in the number of people hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 on Monday, as retail stores across the Montreal area reopened following weeks of shutdowns to slow the spread of the virus.

Authoritie­s had repeatedly pushed back the reopening day for Montreal-area stores because they worried the province’s health-care system couldn’t handle a sudden increase in COVID cases.

Premier François Legault told reporters in Montreal on Monday that in the past seven days, 114 COVID-19 patients had left Montreal-area hospitals while about 1,194 patients remain. The situation is improving but “it’s still fragile,” he said.

“That’s why we are reopening gradually,” said Legault, who also announced Monday that shopping centres outside the greater Montreal area could reopen as of June 1. The manufactur­ing sector was also permitted to operate at 100 per cent capacity across the province starting Monday.

“We have to continue to be careful because we cannot afford to have large increases in the next few days or weeks in the number of people in our hospitals in Montreal,” Legault said.

Dr. Horacio Arruda, Quebec’s director of public health, said the province had finally met its target of conducting 14,000 daily tests for COVID-19. Authoritie­s conducted roughly 15,000 to 16,000 tests per day on Thursday and Friday, he said.

That number dropped to fewer than 12,000 on Saturday and Arruda said he expected the testing figure to be even lower on Sunday, noting fewer people visit testing clinics on weekends.

But even as the number of tests increases, the number of positive results is dropping. The province now has 47,984 confirmed cases of COVID-19 — an increase of 573 cases compared to Sunday. More than 14,650 people have recovered.

Quebec reported 85 additional deaths linked to COVID-19 Monday, bringing the total number to 4,069 since the beginning of the pandemic. Legault said 42 of the newly reported deaths occurred more than seven days ago in Laval, a hard-hit city north of Montreal.

Arruda said the number of daily confirmed cases of the virus is decreasing — despite more testing — because people living in hard-hit areas of Montreal have already been exposed to the virus, which is leading to a slowdown in community spread.

There are also fewer positive daily cases, he said, because public health authoritie­s are conducting more tests outside long-term care homes and other health care settings, where the rate of COVID-19 transmissi­on is lower.

Arruda said the province will soon begin serologic tests in order to help determine how many Quebecers have been exposed to the virus and developed antibodies to fight it.

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