Medicine Hat News

‘Emergency brake’ factored into reopening plan: Hinshaw

- LAUREN KRUGEL

COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations are the focus of Alberta’s road map for gradually opening up more businesses and activities, but the province’s top doctor says a different criteria will factor into whether to slow down or tighten up.

Hospitaliz­ations are a lagging indicator. It could be weeks between cases being identified and those people being sick enough to need medical care. It’s a less-thancurren­t snapshot of how the novel coronaviru­s is spreading. Dr. Deena Hinshaw, chief medical officer of health, said Monday the plan is to monitor leading indicators such as new case numbers, test positivity rates and how many new infections result from each case.

“Those almost act as sort of an emergency brake,” she said. “If we meet those hospitaliz­ation numbers, but all of our leading indicators are escalating in a concerning way, then we would pause our move forward — and we may indeed need to move backward.”

The number of people in hospital with COVID-19 provincewi­de is below 600, down from the above-900 levels of late December and early January.

So, as of next Monday, Premier Jason Kenney has said some restrictio­ns will be eased on indoor fitness centres, school sports and restaurant­s and bars.

If hospitaliz­ations drop below 450, the rules could be loosened for retail, community halls, hotels, banquet halls and conference centres.

Casinos, museums, movie theatres, places of worship and adult sports could have relaxed measures if hospitaliz­ations drop below 300.

If there’s a drop below 150, a wide array of activities from amusement parks to funeral receptions could open up.

There would be increments of at least three weeks between each stage.

Dr. Christophe­r Mody, who heads the department of microbiolo­gy, immunology and infectious diseases at the University of Calgary’s Cumming School of

Medicine, said if the goal is to ease restrictio­ns while protecting the health-care system, the Alberta government is taking the right approach.

“Hospitaliz­ations are good for lifting restrictio­ns,” he said. “But they’re the wrong indicator when you’re imposing restrictio­ns.”

If, all of a sudden there’s a surge in cases as new, more transmissi­ble virus variants take hold, the government can’t wait for hospitaliz­ations to go up before acting, he said. “The ship has already sailed.” Dr. James Talbot, an adjunct professor of public health at the University of Alberta, said it takes at least a month before a change in restrictio­ns affects hospitaliz­ation numbers, so the government’s three-week window is too short.

Nor does looking at a single provincial number account for whether hospitals in a certain area are overwhelme­d.

Talbot added there’s less room for error with the risk of new variants first identified in the U.K. and South Africa spreading in the community.

As of Monday, Alberta had identified a total of 51 cases of both variants. Six cases in three unrelated households don’t have a clear link to travel.

The more the original virus replicates, the greater the chance more dangerous mutations may emerge, Talbot said.

“By opening up, you’re adding oxygen to the fire,” said Talbot, who also cochairs the Edmonton Zone Medical Staff Associatio­n’s COVID-19 committee. “That means that the climb will be steeper than it was before.”

 ??  ?? Deena Hinshaw
Deena Hinshaw

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