National Post

Canada better prepared for virus

SARS LESSONS

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • Canadians have no need to worry about the prospect of mass quarantine­s, even in the likely event the coronaviru­s is discovered here, public health authoritie­s said on Friday.

They said scary images coming from a now isolated Wuhan, a Chinese city with 11 million people, will not be repeated here.

“Absolutely not,” Dr. Peter Donnelly, with Public Health Ontario, said. “If a case comes here, and it is probably likely that we will have a case here, it will still be business as normal.”

In addition to Wuhan, where the outbreak has been concentrat­ed, China has shut transporta­tion in 12 other cities home to more than 36 million people. Streets, malls and other public spaces have turned eerily quiet, masks are mandatory in public, and some hospitals have run low on medical supplies.

Toronto’s medical officer of health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, urged people to consult credible informatio­n sources on the outbreak. Good places include websites of the Public Health Agency of Canada, Public Health Ontario and Toronto Public Health, she said. “I ask members of the public to rely on evidence-informed, credible sources of informatio­n when you’re looking for updates.”

So far, the coronaviru­s is reported to have killed more than two dozen people and made hundreds of others ill. Symptoms can mirror those of the cold and flu, including cough, fever, chest tightening and shortness of breath, but can worsen to pneumonia.

While no cases have been reported in Canada, concerns about the virus have stirred memories of the SARS outbreak in 2003 that killed 44 Canadians and saw Toronto turn temporaril­y into something of an internatio­nal pariah after the World Health Organizati­on issued a travel advisory warning people to avoid the city.

Donnelly said the situation is now very different from then. Authoritie­s, he said, are much better prepared than they were for SARS: Communicat­ions are more robust, hospitals have better isolation facilities, and a reliable test is available to detect the coronaviru­s within 24 hours.

“This was a disease unknown to science only two weeks ago and we now have the full genetic fingerprin­t of the virus and we have a test, which is specific and reliable,” Donnelly said.

Health officials were also working with the National Microbiolo­gy Lab in Winnipeg to develop an even quicker test.

The federal government has beefed up measures at major airports in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal. Visitors are now being asked about any travel to Wuhan in the past 14 days and a positive response would trigger further investigat­ion.

De Villa stressed the importance of good hygiene to prevent virus transmissi­on. Simple steps include washing hands thoroughly, covering coughs and sneezes, and staying home if you’re ill.

Canada’s chief medical officer has said the chances of an outbreak here were low. Health officials note the common cold comes from the same family as the latest coronaviru­s and that influenza virus kills thousands of Canadians every year.

On Friday, Quebec health officials said coronaviru­s tests on six travellers from China under observatio­n in Montreal and Quebec City hospitals had come back negative.

Dr. Horacio Arruda, Quebec’s director of public health, said earlier in the week the six had landed in Quebec with symptoms associated with the illness.

“There’s no reason for fear because sometimes the epidemic of fear is greater than what is going on,” he said.

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