Mandatory masking coming back to Kingston's hospitals - Action News
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Mandatory masking coming back to Kingston's hospitals

Face coverings are now required in all public-facing areas of Kingston General Hospital and Hotel Dieu Hospital. They'll be required at Providence Care Hospital starting Monday.

Visitor policy isn't affected, but more measures could be added if virus rates rise, hospitals say

Blue and black surgical masks are shown in a messy pile on top of each other.
Kingston Health Sciences Centre and Providence Care have both announced masks will be mandatory at their facilities. (Radio-Canada)

Mandatory masking is returning toKingston's hospitals.

Citing "rising COVID-19 prevalence" in the region, Kingston Health Sciences Centre (KHSC) announced the immediate return to masking in a media release shared Thursday.

That means masks arenow required in all publicareas of Kingston General Hospital andHotel Dieu Hospital, which fall under its guidance.

Providence Care Hospital will also move to mandatory face coverings starting Monday, pointing to the rising rateof the virus and other respiratory illnesses in the area.

In all three hospitals, masks are also mandatory in areas where physical distancing between staff isn't possible, according to media releases from both hospital systems.

"The challenge is we're dealing with people who have different perceptions of where we are with COVID-19," said Dr. Gerald Evans, director of infection prevention andcontrol at KHSC.

The move is meant to remove some of the guesswork around masking, he said.

"We're trying to make it uniform," Evans explained

The hospitals have reintroduced masking in order to do everything they can to protect patients, staff, volunteers and visitors, he added.

It's an escalation that comes roughly three weeks afterKHSCmade masksnecessary to visit units with high-risk patients, including the emergency department and urgent carecentre.

A 'very different picture' than summer

Evans pointed to test positivity and outbreaks, saying they've shown a rise in the prevalence ofCOVID-19in the community since mid-August.

"Current regional data indicates that test positivity has risen from 10.1 per centto 21.5 per centin the past 10 days," read a media release from KHSC, though itnotes wastewater evidence suggests the spike could bea "short-lived rise in COVID-19 cases."

For comparison, Evansreferenced the summer, saying at some points Kingston had no outbreaks,test positivityin the single digits and few patients with the virus in hospital.

"That's a very different picture than what we're seeing right now," he said.

Evans said health officials recognize people were adversely affected by the pandemic, adding he understands a move back to masking could be difficult for some.

A statue of a bearded man holding a scroll and wearing a robes is shown in the foreground. A revolving door can be seen behind it, along with a banner showing a nurse and patient posing for a photo.
Masks are now required in public areas at Hotel Dieu Hospital in Kingston. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

He said the most common question he's fielding from colleagues right now is, "How long is this going to go on for?"

The short answer is, it's tough to know, said the infectious disease expert.

However, he added, there are signs from other countries like the U.S. and Denmark, which also saw a recent rise in COVID-19, that their case numbers may be starting to drop.

"The rise could go on for a while through the fall, but there's also an expectation we may be at peak and if that's the case, it may drop off in the next few weeks," Evans said.

The changes at KHSC don't affect itsfamily or visitor policy, which currently allows two people to be at a patient's bedside at any time.

But both hospital systems saidmore COVID-19 prevention measures could be reintroduced if indicators of the virus continue to rise.