Medicine Hat News

Canadian military dealing with surge in new infections since December

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The Canadian Armed Forces is grappling with a surge in the number of troops who have been infected with COVID-19 over the past month, even as a growing number of service members have started receiving vaccinatio­ns from the illness.

Nearly 250 military members have tested positive for COVID-19 since the end of December, according to new figures provided by the Department of National Defence to The Canadian Press.

That’s a dramatic spike compared to the first nine months of the pandemic, when a total of 676 troops were infected, or about 75 per month.

While the rash of new cases within the Canadian Armed Forces coincides with a similar surge across Canada and many other parts of the world, it also comes amid an outbreak among the

540 Canadian soldiers currently deployed in Latvia.

Defence Department spokesman Daniel Le Bouthillie­r would not say whether the outbreak in Latvia — or another elsewhere — is responsibl­e for the surge in military cases of COVID19, citing operationa­l security.

However, he did confirm that Armed Forces members on four other missions — in Iraq, Ukraine, Egypt and Kosovo — have tested positive for COVID-19 since March. Those are in addition to an unspecifie­d number of troops who have been infected in Canada.

“The existence of COVID-19 cases among CAF personnel (has) not significan­tly impacted deployed operations or the provision of care by the CAF health-care system,” Bouthillie­r added.

The military’s surgeon general nonetheles­s underscore­d in a message to the troops earlier this month the importance of staying healthy to ensure the Armed Forces is ready to respond when called upon for a natural disaster or other threat to Canada.

“We are getting there, but we need to continue to protect the force in order to maintain the CAF’s operationa­l readiness,” Maj.-Gen. Marc Bilodeau said in his message.

“By protecting yourself, you are saving lives. Don’t let your guard down, continue to follow local public-health guidelines, preventive health measures, and get the vaccine when it is available to you.”

To that end, vaccines have started to roll out to service members.

The federal government says around 1,100 out of the military’s roughly 100,000 members have been vaccinated, with priority given to troops working in health-care settings or who have health conditions that could put them at greater risk from COVID-19.

Vaccinatio­ns have not yet been given to chief of the defence staff Admiral Art McDonald or other senior military commanders, Le Bouthillie­r said.

While vaccinatio­ns are voluntary for military personnel, Bilodeau said individual commanders will be allowed to decide whether to make them mandatory for deployment on certain missions.

At the same time, troops already deployed will not receive doses from the current Canadian supply. Instead, Bilodeau said planning is underway to determine the best way to inoculate them, including possibly turning to local government­s.

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