London's top doctor worried about post-Thanksgiving virus spread - Action News
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London

London's top doctor worried about post-Thanksgiving virus spread

Western University's residences looked more like airport terminals Tuesday, with students carrying luggage and hugging their parents goodbye after a Thanksgiving long weekend where people were told to stay home and keep gatherings small to limit the spread of coronavirus.

Out of town Thanksgiving visits will only cause more outbreaks, says London's top doctor

A line of cars is parked near the front entrance outside Essex Hall Tuesday at the Western University campus as students return following Thanksgiving weekend. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Public health officials had urged people to keep familygatherings small and, if possible, virtualthis Thanksgiving weekend to reduce potential spread of the coronavirus.

But on Tuesday, Western University's residence parking lots were bustling asstudents returned to a campus that had been deserted most of the weekend.

"It's not on my floor yet, so I'm really not too worried about it," said Cal Lewis, a student who lives in London Hall and visited family.

He learned the news over the weekend that his residence is the first Western University residence to declare an outbreakafter four students tested positive.

"I'm just going to stay on my floor and do what I can to keep safe."

"We trust him," said his mother Kristen. "He's doing a good job."

Out of town visits will cause more outbreaks, says doctor

A man says goodbye to a student outside the Ontario Hall residence on Tuesday. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Mackie said with one outbreak at London Hall, it's only a matter of time before there aremore.

"To hear that a lot of people went home for Thanksgiving, that's disappointing,"Dr. Chris Mackie, the medical officer of health for the London region, told CBC Radio One's London Morning Tuesday.

"When people are indoors, especially in tight groups in places with poor ventilation, that's where you see cases spread very quickly," he said. "You need to be sitting right beside somebody for a significant amount of time."

A staff member at Ontario Hall cleans a window while wearing personal protective equipment Tuesday. Western University has stepped up its sanitizing measures in all student residences since the pandemic began. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

"We know for sure that will cause cases and potentially outbreaks elsewhere. You have a residence that's in outbreak, that means people would have been infectedlast week and now they're going home to family, so that's concerning."

Mackie said symptoms of coronavirus take anywhere from two to five days to materialize, meaning if someone either caught or spread the virusat a family gathering on Sunday, the soonest symptoms would start to appear would be Tuesday or Wednesday.

Mackie said it will take another one to two weeks to see the number of new cases acquired during the Thanksgiving weekendshow up in the numbers.

He added that chances are, things are only going to get worse, especially as the weather gets colder.

"The reality is there is no reason to believe things would slow down. The modified stage two that's been enacted in Peel, Ottawa and Toronto has not been enacted here, at least not yet."

"We're likely to see more close contact indoors and more spread over the next few weeks until some additional public health measures have been put into place."

While residences were humming with students being dropped off by their out of town parents, Western University's COVID-19 testing centre seemed empty Tuesday. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Whether any additional health measures will be coming to Western University residences to protect students from each other and their out of town families isn't clear.

Western's vice-president of housing, Chris Alleyne, said in a written statement that pandemic protocols are in place at the school's on-campus residences.

They include increased sanitization efforts, plexiglass barriers, physicaldistancing measuresandface covering requirements in hallways. Students in residence are not allowed to visit other residences on campus and can't invite guests from outside the residence system into their homes.