Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Announces First Covid-19 Death, Looking Into Virus At Doctors' Bonspiel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Mar, 2020 07:01 PM
  • Alberta Announces First Covid-19 Death, Looking Into Virus At Doctors' Bonspiel

EDMONTON - Alberta has announced its first death linked to COVID-19 and says it's tracking down 72 curlers who attended a doctors' bonspiel that included a person who now has the novel coronavirus.

 

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, said Thursday the curlers were part of a Western Canadian doctors bonspiel last Thursday through Saturday in Edmonton.

 

The event also included a banquet with 45 people, and Hinshaw said the person who appeared to have spread the virus was someone who had recently come back from Las Vegas.

 

At that time, the province allowed gatherings of more than 50 people but urged those who did so to practise safe distancing measures. Such gatherings have since been banned.

 

"We know those doctors came from across Western Canada," Hinshaw told a news conference.

 

"We're working with the organizer, with Saskatchewan, to make sure that all those doctors who attended that bonspiel are aware that there now seems to have been transmission at that event.

 

"Anyone who attended that (bonspiel) is needing to self-isolate for 14 days."

 

One of those curlers is Dr. Allan Woo, president of the Saskatchewan Medical Association.

 

Woo, in a letter to members, said he tested positive for the virus Wednesday night and believes he caught it at the bonspiel.

 

"The risks of this pandemic are far too real," he wrote. "I hope my personal situation serves as a signal for all health-care workers, and others, to be vigilant about their health.

 

"Everyone needs to take precautions and self-monitor for any symptoms."

 

Woo is one of four new presumptive cases of COVID-19 in Saskatchewan, which has a total of 20 cases.

 

Alberta reported 27 new cases Thursday, bringing its total to 146.

 

Hinshaw said an Edmonton-area man in his 60s with underlying medical conditions died late Wednesday from COVID-19, the disease linked to the virus.

 

She said the man appeared to have contracted the virus in the community and there was no link established between him and people who had recently returned to Alberta from abroad.

 

"This individual was admitted in the ICU in the Edmonton zone on March 12," Hinshaw said.

 

"As heartbreaking as this news is, it was expected. This is a dangerous virus. While most people who become ill with COVID only experience mild symptoms, it can make others very sick."

 

Three students at three different schools in the Calgary Catholic School District are also among the positive cases. Classes at all schools in the province were cancelled Sunday.

 

District spokeswoman Tania Van Brunt said staff were alerted about the three cases Thursday, and health officials are notifying those impacted.

 

Alberta has taken numerous steps to contain the virus and help get people through the economic downturn.

 

Public recreation facilities, casinos, bingo halls, bars, museums and art galleries are closed, joining shutdowns in schools and post-secondary institutions.

 

The province has introduced an aid package that includes $50 million to help those self-isolating with $573 per week until federal aid begins April 1.

 

The legislature is to hold a rare Friday sitting to pass legislation to streamline emergency powers.

 

Government house leader Jason Nixon said the bill is meant to ensure better co-ordination between Alberta and municipalities, as the province works to reduce the spread of the virus.

 

He said it is the only planned emergency legislation tied to the outbreak, but that things can change quickly.

 

The legislature is to continue sitting next week, but with a reduced schedule of bills to pass.

 

Opposition house leader Heather Sweet said the NDP's overarching goal is to help the government pass whatever is necessary to help Albertans during the outbreak.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Military Looking To Boost Ability To Respond To More Natural Disasters: Vance

Military Looking To Boost Ability To Respond To More Natural Disasters: Vance
OTTAWA - Gen. Jonathan Vance says the Canadian military will take a hard look at how to respond to the skyrocketing number of requests for assistance with climate-related emergencies.    

Military Looking To Boost Ability To Respond To More Natural Disasters: Vance

First Person: Getting Home From Poland, In Covid-19 Lockdown

First Person: Getting Home From Poland, In Covid-19 Lockdown
POZNAN, Poland - When my wife and I left Canada on March 3 destined for her ailing mother's hospital bedside, we never imagined that we would face the prospect of being in Europe and watching country after country go into various forms of lockdown — or that we would be directly affected by it.    

First Person: Getting Home From Poland, In Covid-19 Lockdown

Alan Kurdi's Aunt Has Mixed Feelings After Sentencing In His Case

Alan Kurdi's Aunt Has Mixed Feelings After Sentencing In His Case
VANCOUVER - The aunt of three-year-old Alan Kurdi says she has mixed feelings after three people were sentenced in the human smuggling case that resulted in the deaths of her nephew, his brother and mother as they fled Syria in 2015.    

Alan Kurdi's Aunt Has Mixed Feelings After Sentencing In His Case

BC Ferries Allows Passengers To Remain In Vehicles To Deal With Covid-19

BC Ferries Allows Passengers To Remain In Vehicles To Deal With Covid-19
The ferry service says the decision to allow passengers to remain in their vehicles will be accompanied by new safety measures.    

BC Ferries Allows Passengers To Remain In Vehicles To Deal With Covid-19

Homeless Vulnerable To COVID-19 Need Help From Governments: Advocates

Homeless Vulnerable To COVID-19 Need Help From Governments: Advocates
Chrissy Brett said social distancing to reduce the risk of spreading the novel coronavirus is difficult for people who are housed in crowded spaces and lining up in groups to use bathrooms and get food.    

Homeless Vulnerable To COVID-19 Need Help From Governments: Advocates

Canadian Travellers Trying To Return Trapped By Border Closures For COVID-19

Nikita Singh and Marco Tenaglia are calling every government office and embassy they can to try and find out how — or if — they will be able to leave Peru and get back to Toronto.

Canadian Travellers Trying To Return Trapped By Border Closures For COVID-19