Keep social circles tight, Etches pleads amid surging COVID-19 numbers - Action News
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Ottawa

Keep social circles tight, Etches pleads amid surging COVID-19 numbers

Ottawa's medical officer of health is pleading with residents to reduce the number of people with whom they're in close contact as new cases of COVID-19 continue to surge.

52 new cases, 4 more deaths confirmed in Ottawa Tuesday

Close contacts behind Ottawas rise in COVID-19 cases, OPH says

4 years ago
Duration 1:03
Vera Etches, Ottawas medical officer of health, says residents must lower the number of people they interact with in order to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

Ottawa's medical officer of health is pleading with residents to reduce the number of people with whom they're in close contact as new cases of COVID-19 continue to surge.

In a virtual COVID-19 update on Tuesday, Dr. Vera Etches said contact tracing data shows transmission of the virus is primarily taking place at private social gatheringsincluding family get-togethers, after-work drinks and larger parties.

"We all need to reassess these behaviours," Etches cautioned. "We've seen how just one person with cold-like symptoms who attends a small get-together can lead to 40 people testing positive in a short period of time."

Etches reiterated provincial guidelines advising people to limit their social circles to10, and warned against mixing with anyone not already in that"bubble."

Large gatherings with close contact, even with the same school friends, are not a good idea.- Dr. Vera Etches

"My strong recommendation is to prioritize your household members and any essential supports, such as child-care workers, the neighbours that help you, grandparents," Etches said. "But keep your distance, wear masks and stay outside with anyone else."

Etches said families with children at school need to be extra careful about socializing with others.

"Large gatherings with close contact, even with the same school friends, are not a good idea," Etches said.

That means seeing people without masks on while you're closer than two metres apart for more than 15 minutes is risky and not recommended, particularly indoors.

The plea comes as Ottawa added four more deaths to its COVID-19 death toll on Tuesday and new infections continue to surge. Etches saidOttawa Public Health (OPH) is particularly concerned about a resurgence of COVID-19 among residents of long-term care homes.

Long waits for testing

During Tuesday's teleconference, public health officials pledged to address long waitsat the city's COVID-19 testing centres. There were long lineups again Tuesday morning outside the Brewer Arena site, with hundreds of people waiting when the doors opened at 9 a.m.

Citing unprecedented demand, the agencies managing testing in Ottawapromised Monday to extend hours at both the Brewer location and theCoventry Road drive-thru site to 12 hours a day.

Dr. Alan Forster, vice-president of innovation and quality with The Ottawa Hospital, said there are more parentsbringing their children to get tested as schools across the city resume classes.

"We're having to adjust and react and make sure we have the ability to meet the demand for a group of four or five people showing up together where you have children and adults mixed together," Forster said.

WATCH | Frustration with the wait for a test:

Residents frustrated with long lines at COVID-19 testing sites

4 years ago
Duration 0:38
People in Ottawa lined up at the citys Brewer Arena assessment centre more than 90 minutes before it opened on Tuesday morning.

Forster said he hopes hours will be extended at the Brewer and Coventry Road siteswithintheweek and wants to add hours at the two other clinics.

He said officials are also considering an online appointment system for Brewer, similar to what's already in place at the drive-thru site, and that a mobile testing unit is being set up for testing at schools.

Forster also put out a call to retired health-care professionalsincluding former nursesto help bolster existing staff at the testing sites, at leastuntil demand drops.

Once the improvements are in place, Forster said he hopes testing capacity is boosted to about 3,500 per day from last week's average of 2,000 per day.

Steep climb in active cases

Ottawa Public Health (OPH) reported 52 newly confirmed cases and just 20 resolved cases on Tuesday, leaving 362 active cases in the city, a steep climb from recent weeks.

There have been 160 cases confirmed in Ottawa this week, up from 154 last week. By way of comparison, there were 124 in all of June.

Ottawa has now had3,387 confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 2,753resolved. As of Tuesday, 272 deaths have been linked totheillness.

If there was any good news in Tuesday's report, it's that the number of people being treated for COVID-19 in Ottawa hospitals is in decline. There were just nine patients in hospital Tuesday, nonein intensive care.

Once again, the new cases are split relatively evenly among different age groups.

The reports from OPH don't necessarily reflect how many people tested positive for COVID-19 on the day they're made public; rather, they indicate the number of new cases OPH is notified of as of 2 p.m. the previous day.

Provincewide, Ontario logged 251 new caseson Tuesday, placing Ottawa's numbers disproportionately high.

Quebec's 292 new casesreported Tuesday represent that province's highest daily count sinceMay 31.

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