Hamilton Public Health waiting for details from Ontario's new COVID-19 testing strategy - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:36 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Hamilton

Hamilton Public Health waiting for details from Ontario's new COVID-19 testing strategy

Premier Doug Ford's calls for anyone and everyone to get tested for COVID-19 has Hamilton's medical officer of health waiting for answer on how to manage various aspects of the new testing protocol.

The lack of details from the plan is prompting more questions than answers

Dr. Elizabeth Richardson, Hamilton's medical officer of health, said the city is waiting on the province to provide details on its new testing strategy. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford's calls for anyone and everyone to get tested for COVID-19 has Hamilton's medical officer of health waiting for answers on how to manage various aspects of the new testing protocol.

In a virtual media briefing on Monday, Dr. Elizabeth Richardson said the city hasn't received any details of the provincial government's new testing strategy.

When asked about if asymptomatic people need to self-isolate after being tested for the virus, Richardson said for now, they are still using policies that say anyone getting tested for COVID-19 must self-isolate until they get a negative result even if those policiesmay not need to apply to everyone any longer.

"These are some of the thingswhen we get the full testing strategy, which we expect anytime now, we'll get those little items clarified," she explained.

"For those who are asymptomatic who may not have had contact, itmay no longer make sense for that to happen."

While Richardson said they knew the province would introduce a revamped testing strategy, they still don't have many answers.

At a news conference Sunday,Premier Doug Ford saidanyone who feels they need a test will be able to get itat one of the province's 129 COVID-19 assessment centres, even if they are asymptomatic.

A memo from the Ministry of Health, however, raised questions about whether that is indeed the case. The memo, circulated Sunday, suggests that contact with a confirmed or suspected case of COVID-19 is among the requirements for a test to proceed.

It did not specify what levelof a person's contact with a confirmed or suspected case would be necessary for a test to be administered.

Ford said on Monday the province plans to launch "the next steps" of its testing strategyin the coming days. The first steps of that plan began this weekend, he said, with testing of hospital workers symptomatic or not and inmates and staff in correctional facilities.

Ontario COVID-19 testing to focus on 'hot spots' in three regions, says premier

4 years ago
Duration 1:09
Premier Doug Ford says the testing will be narrowed to some postal codes that are 'lighting up like a Christmas tree' and need greater attention.

Ford also askedpeople who live in Ontario's COVID-19 "hotspots" toget tested for the virus but officials won't specifywhich neighbourhoods have been hardest hit.

Amid the inconsistent messages from the province, oneof the questions for the cityis whether Hamilton has the resources in place to handle a surge in testing.

"It's likely we'll see an uptick and we are seeing an uptick in the people who want to go [get tested] ... if we continue to see a large number of people, we're definitely going to need additional ways of doing testing through those assessment centres, either another site or some way to lengthen hours," Richardson explained.

"We're going to continue to work on it to see how we can do this,but there are a large number of other partners being engaged with this now besides the ones that existed up until now."

Despite provincialcalls for rapid testing of anyone who wants it, Richardson said assessment centres are still booking appointments to avoid any confusion and are looking to speed up that process.

With files from CBC News