Toronto Star

Seniors’ home employee among P.E.I’s three new cases

Public health officer says province needs to be ‘prepared for more’

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CHARLOTTET­OWN, P.E.I.— Prince Edward Island reported new COVID-19 cases for the first time in more than two months, announcing three new cases on Saturday — including one person who worked at Charlottet­own seniors’ home.

Dr. Heather Morrison, the province’s chief public health officer, told a news conference that all three cases were Islanders who’d travelled within Canada — the first cases in P.E.I. since April 28.

“This is disappoint­ing news, but we have said consistent­ly that we need to be prepared for more cases and we are,” Morrison said, noting none of the cases are related to seasonal residents or the opening of the Atlantic bubble this week.

One, a man in his 50s, was an essential services worker who’d travelled outside the province and was self-isolating.

Two other cases are believed to be linked — a man in his 20s who’d gone to Nova Scotia and had interacted with someone who had been in the U.S. and was asymptomat­ic, returning to the island on Monday.

The other case was a close contact of the male, a symptomati­c woman in her 20s who worked at Whisperwoo­d Villa, a seniors’ residence in Charlottet­own where management was advised Friday evening and residents were being tested starting on Saturday as a precaution.

Morrison considered the risk of transmissi­on low, given the woman wore PPE.

None of the residents have exhibited new symptoms of COVID -19, but the province planned to test all residents and staff as well as visitors from Tuesday.

“She did wear appropriat­e PPE while working and does not provide direct personal care to residents,” Morrison said of the positive case.

“She left work as soon as she was not feeling well.”

Still, all indoor and outdoor visits are cancelled until further notice at the home, where residents will now undergo twice daily temperatur­e checks in addition to twice daily screenings, with no communal dining.

For all three new cases — which brought the province’s COVID-19 confirmed cases tally to 30, contact tracing has begun.

Premier Dennis King said the new cases haven’t changed anything in terms of the so-called Atlantic bubble for now.

The four Atlantic Provinces lifted travel restrictio­ns within the region early Friday, permitting residents of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador and P.E.I. to travel to any of the other three provinces without selfisolat­ing for 14 days after arriving.

A P.E.I. Health Department spokespers­on said the province received 5,200 applicatio­ns for entry — a requiremen­t under the Island’s rules — for the first three days of the bubble.

“We will take the next 24 to 48 hours to allow the contact tracing and chief public health office to do what they are prepared to do and we will let the informatio­n guide us at that time,” King said.

“We’ve said from the very beginning if we need to pull back we would, and if the public health informatio­n and the epidemiolo­gy points in that direction, then we would be prepared to make a decision on pulling back early next week.”

King described the news of new cases after more than two months as a “gut shot.”

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