Test results for Nigeria traveller in Ontario isolation due Sunday - Action News
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Test results for Nigeria traveller in Ontario isolation due Sunday

Test results on a patient being treated in a Brampton, Ont., hospital after returning from Nigeria with fever and flu-like symptoms are due within the next 24 hours, Ontario's health ministry said on Saturday.

Ebola outbreak in West Africa has hospitals taking extra precautions

Patient isolated with flu-like symptoms at Toronto-area hospital

10 years ago
Duration 2:57
Hospital in Brampton, Ont., is taking extra precautions after a patient who had recently visited Nigeria was brought in with fever and flu-like symptoms

Test results on a patient being treated in a Brampton, Ont.,hospital after returning from Nigeriawith fever and flu-like symptomsare due within the next 24 hours, Ontario's health ministry said on Saturday.

Samples from the patient, who recently came to Canada from Nigeria, have been sent to the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg.

"The patient is currently in isolation and is being treated for a fever and other flu-like symptoms," the ministry said in a statement. "This action was taken as a precautionary measure and results of the testing are expected within the next 24 hours."

Nigeria is one of the countries affected by thelargest and longest ever recordedEbola outbreak in West Africa, which has killed at least 961 people since March, according to the World Health Organization. The WHO has confirmed four new Ebola cases in Nigeria, which has declared a state of emergency amid the outbreak.

The patient has been isolated at William Osler Health Systems Brampton Civic Hospital, which Peel Region health officials stress is purely precautionary given the patients travel history.

Dr. Eileen de Villa with Peel Public Health saidthe patient is showing a fever and other flu-likesymptoms.

"I am aware that we are currently testing a patient who recently travelled from West Africa. Initial signs and symptoms of Ebola are similar to many more common diseases,"Ontario Health Minister Dr. EricHoskins said in a release Friday night.

"One such disease relevant to African travel is malaria. There are currently no confirmed cases of Ebola in Ontario."

Hoskins said he is in close contact with the chief medical officer of health and they are closely managing the situation.

Reassuring Canadians

Allison McGeer, a microbiologist and infectious disease consultant at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, said that "although it feels odd,"seeing the precautions currently being taken at Brampton Civic should reassure Canadians.

"Its unlikely that were going to see cases of Ebola virus that come to Canada,"McGeer told CBC News. "But its important that we are precautionary about it, that we have systems in place to detect people.

"And the people those systems are going to detect are people whove travelled, probably not even to high-risk areas in those countries, but to those countries and who now have malaria or influenza or one of the many other diseases that can give you a fever."

When two American aid workers who contracted the virus in Liberia were brought to Atlanta for treatment, it fuelled concerns about the possibility of Ebola arriving in North America.

Health officials say safeguards in place

A person who tests positive for Ebola would be immediately isolated, and prohibited from national or international travel until two blood tests conducted at least 48 hours apart return with negative results. After that, there would be no international travel allowed until at least 21 days after exposure.

But public health officials have been reassuring Canadians that unlike viruses like SARS or even the flu, Ebola doesn't spread easily through casual contact or the air. One can only become infected though direct contact with infected bodily fluids.

Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) said it has operational procedures in place on how to process travellers with potential communicable illnesses.

"Among other things, the CBSA instructs Border Service Officers to maintain an appropriate distance when speaking with travellers, don personal protective equipment if necessaryand to regularly wash their hands," saidCBSA spokesperson Anna Pape.

Risk to Canadians 'very low'

"There are no confirmed cases of Ebola in Canada and the risk to Canadians remains very low. In fact, there has never been a case of Ebola in Canada, thanks in part to Canadas close monitoring of the situation and international involvement in rapid diagnostic testing and health surveillance," Health Canada said in a statement issued Friday night.

There are no confirmed cases of Ebola in Canada and the risk to Canadians remains very low.- Health Canada

Even if a case were to come to Toronto or other Canadian cities, the risk of it spreading remains low in part due to the method by which it's passed on and also because of Canada's preparedness, according to JasonTetro, a microbiologist and author ofThe Germ Code.

Tetro recently wrote the blog entry "Canada,Don't Worry About Ebola"in theHuffingtonPost.

"I'm not concerned. I already know that Canada is prepared," Tetro said."In truth, weve led the world when it comes to being prepared for these types of outbreaks," he added, referencinghow public health officials reacted to an Ebola scarein March, when a Saskatchewan man returned from Liberia and later became ill.

Tetro said that the country's readiness has a lot to do withtheSARS Commission in 2003, which made a number of recommendations following theoutbreak that year of severe acute respiratory syndrome. Those recommendations included askingtwo key questions of travellers coming back to Canada: "Where did you go, and what are you feeling right now?"

Hoskins also commented on Canada being adequately prepared Friday.

"From the beginning of the outbreak in West Africa we have taken steps to ensure our health system is prepared should a returning traveller be suspected of having the disease,"Hoskins said.

"With the experience and lessons learned from the SARS epidemic, our hospitals have sophisticated infection control systems and procedures to protect health providers, patientsand all Ontarians, and are fully equipped to deal with any potential cases of Ebola."

With files from Reuters and The Canadian Press