'Don't do it': N.S. woman warns against foreign travel after testing positive for COVID-19 in Thailand - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:39 AM | Calgary | -11.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

'Don't do it': N.S. woman warns against foreign travel after testing positive for COVID-19 in Thailand

Brittany MacKeigan, who is double vaccinated, says she felt safe travelling to Thailand until apositive COVID-19 test landed her in quarantine.

'If I knew what I know now, I would never have left Canada,' says Sydney woman

Brittany MacKeigan, left, and her cousin Taylor Hoban, right, tested positive for COVID-19 in Thailand recently. (Brittany MacKeigan )

A Nova Scotia woman is warning people about thehazards of travelling internationally during a global spike in COVID-19 casesfuelled by the Omicron variant.

Brittany MacKeigan, who is double vaccinated, said she felt safe travelling to Thailand over the holidaysuntil apositive COVID-19 test landed her in quarantine, away from her travel partner, some 13,000 kilometres from home.

"Don't do it. Don't travel during ...a heightened outbreak, because it causes nothing but issues," said the Sydney woman, who remained in Thailand as of Monday.

"If I knew what I know now, I would never have left Canada."

MacKeigan arrived in Thailandon Christmas Day to visit her cousin, Taylor Hoban, who works in the country as a teacher and would otherwise have been alone for the holidays.

The Canadian government renewed its advisory against non-essential international travel on Dec. 15 as Omicron cases surged, after quietly lifting the advisory in October.

Felt reassured by precautions

MacKeigan said she felt safe going to Thailand becauseall visitors are tested for COVID-19 upon landing and anyone wishing to travel through the Phuket region, where sheintended to travel, had to be double vaccinated.

Like many other Canadians during the pandemic, MacKeigan had lost money after cancelling a previous vacation and did not want to call off another trip. She said keeping her cousin company over Christmas seemed like a good enough reason to travel.

But when the cousins made their way to the island of Koh Phangan on MacKeigan's fifth day in the country, they were asked to take another COVID-19 test. Hoban was negative, but MacKeigan who had no symptoms tested positive.

The cousins were taken to this area before they were separated after testing positive for COVID-19. (Brittany MacKeigan)

She and her cousin weretaken away in an ambulance beforebeing separated. MacKeiganquarantined in a locked room without air conditioning in a building next to a hospital.

"I get into the room, I put my bag in there and then I can hear'click, click' behind me," said MacKeigan, who stayed in the room for almost two days and had no contact with anyone, except during food deliveries.

'Absolutely nocommunication'

Hoban, who had yet to test positive, was taken to what MacKeigan described as a "COVID house" to isolate.

She said Hoban was placed with people who had tested positive, and MacKeigan didn't understand why the two weren't kept together.

"We were both in situations which nobody was communicating to us.... they were very, very uncomfortable situations to be in," MacKeigan said.

"I had absolutely no communication with the outside world."

One of MacKeigan's food deliveries during her stay in quarantine. (Brittany MacKeigan/CBC)

MacKeigan said after nearly two days, and with the help of Hoban's Bangkok teaching agency, the two were reunited andsent to a"hospital hotel"a set of private bungalows with other travellers who were isolating. Hoban had tested positive by then.

MacKeigan was released from hospital Monday and hopes to fly home in the next few days. She said she had to pay 67,000 baht or about $2,500 Cdn.

She said her insurance company will cover the cost of her stay, but she hasto pay out of pocket to leave. She said the government told her she needed chest X-rays before she was discharged, despite not having any symptoms.

MacKeigan said she tried tocontact the Canadian Embassy, but it was closed to all but emergency situations over the New Year's holiday.

"I couldn't get through to the embassy through regular means until [after New Year's].And they got back to me right away and they were fantastic," she said.

With files from Brittany Wentzell