Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau isolating after COVID-19 exposure

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2022 10:51 AM
  • Trudeau isolating after COVID-19 exposure

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he is isolating at home after learning that he was exposed to someone who had tested positive for COVID-19.

The prime minister said in a tweet Thursday morning that he learned about the exposure the night before, after he had been at a news conference on Parliament Hill with three top ministers.

Trudeau's office says the exposure happened after the event and that no staffer or minister in range of the prime minister are isolating.

Trudeau said the result of a rapid antigen test he took was negative, but he is following local public health rules and isolating for five days.

He said he will be working from home during that stretch.

"I feel fine and will be working from home," he wrote in the tweet. "Stay safe, everyone — and please get vaccinated."

Staying home for five days will mean the prime minister will not be able to appear in person when the House of Commons returns Monday from its winter break.

Ottawa Public Health guidelines say anyone who does not have symptoms of COVID-19 and tests negative on a rapid antigen test does not need to self-isolate unless they are doing so because of a close contact, like a symptomatic household member.

Trudeau is fully vaccinated and received his booster shot at a local Ottawa pharmacy three weeks ago.

Several of Trudeau's cabinet ministers have had to isolate in recent weeks after positive tests, or because they were potentially exposed to the virus.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland was forced in mid-December to deliver her economic update remotely after two members of her team tested positive on rapid tests.

A few days later, Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly announced she had tested positive on a rapid test and was isolating.

Joly and Freeland were at the news conference with Trudeau on Wednesday, along with Defence Minister Anita Anand. She too had to cancel a trip to Washington, D.C. and isolate after a member of her staff tested positive in mid-December.

The news conference came at the end of a cabinet retreat, where ministers joined remotely.

Trudeau was not scheduled for any in-person events Thursday. He was to call foreign leaders and address the Liberal caucus remotely.

Meanwhile, isolation rules are changing in Saskatchewan. The government said that starting Friday, close contacts of people who test positive will not be required to self-isolate.

The government said it is revising its public health order as it shifts to treating the COVID-19 Omicron variant like other common respiratory viruses such as influenza.

Dr. Saqib Shahab, the province's chief medical health officer, said Omicron is so transmissible that many people who have been able to dodge COVID-19 will get exposed.

"So many of us, on any given time, are notified as a close contact and it's really not feasible for us to isolate every time we're a close contact," he said Thursday.

The change will help children stay in school and workplaces to remain staffed, Shahab said.

All residents who get COVID-19, immunized or not, will need to self-isolate for five days. That eases a 10-day isolation requirement that had been in place for the unvaccinated.

Parents and caregivers will no longer be required to report positive cases to schools, but students are expected to stay home for their entire isolation period.

Ontario tweaked some of its reopening rules to allow snacks and drinks at cinemas, theatres, arenas and concerts when they reopen next week with capacity limits.

Initially, the plan was that food and beverages at those venues wouldn't be allowed until Feb. 21.

Premier Doug Ford announced last week that with public health indicators starting to show signs of improvement, restrictions would be eased in phases starting Monday.

Indoor social gathering limits are to increase to 10 from five and restaurants will be able to reopen their dining rooms at half capacity.

Some non-urgent surgeries are to resume as well.

The province also released guidelines for who is eligible for the antiviral Paxlovid to treat COVID-19. Ontario received its first shipment last week. Health Minister Christine Elliott has said the drug will be used for adults at highest risk: the immunocompromised, unvaccinated people 60 and over, and unvaccinated Indigenous people 50 and over, or who have one or more risk factors.

Public health measures were also being loosened in New Brunswick. Starting Saturday, public venues will be able to operate at half capacity and indoor dining will be permitted at restaurants, also capped at 50 per cent, among other rules.

Premier Blaine Higgs said students are to return to in-person classes Monday. Over the last two weeks, 2,000 portable air filters were placed in 60 schools, he said.

Chief medical officer Dr. Jennifer Russell said the province feels confident moving back to less strict measures because residents held to the rules, which helped blunt the rise of COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations.

In Quebec, officials reported a significant drop in the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, but 56 new deaths were linked to the virus.

The Health Department said there were 3,153 patients in hospital and those in intensive care dropped to 235, which was 17 fewer than the day before.

The number of infected patients being admitted has dropped by almost one-quarter over the course of a week, said a report by a Quebec government health-care research institute.

The drop, based on data collected between Jan. 15 and 21, was observed in "all age groups and all regions," the report said.

Active cases of COVID-19 appeared to be peaking in First Nations communities, said Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu. The ministry reported 599 active infections across the country.

But booster rates are lagging behind the rest of the country. Fewer than 20 per cent of First Nations adults have received a third shot compared with 41 per cent in the general population.

MORE National ARTICLES

519 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

519 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
There are 3,171 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 218,001 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 191 individuals are in hospital and 81 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

519 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

Highlights from Freeland’s fiscal update

Highlights from Freeland’s fiscal update
The cost of resettling Afghan refugees in Canada is expected to be $1.3 billion over six years, starting in the current fiscal year, and $66.6 million in future years. Last week, Immigration Minister Sean Fraser said he expects it will take two years to fulfil the government's promise to bring 40,000 Afghan refugees to Canada.

Highlights from Freeland’s fiscal update

B.C. detects 44 cases of COVID-19 variant Omicron

B.C. detects 44 cases of COVID-19 variant Omicron
The cases are included in new infection modelling released today that also shows overall COVID-19 cases rising on Vancouver Island, driven by outbreaks at the University of Victoria and a religious gathering in the northern part of the island.    

B.C. detects 44 cases of COVID-19 variant Omicron

Military will act quickly on Arbour plan: minister

Military will act quickly on Arbour plan: minister
The Liberal government tapped Arbour last April to lead a detailed review and come up with better ways to address sexual assault, harassment and other misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces.

Military will act quickly on Arbour plan: minister

Singh would back Bill 21 court challenge

Singh would back Bill 21 court challenge
The NDP leader said Tuesday he always believed the law was discriminatory but has hardened his stance on court action following the case of a teacher in Chelsea, Que., who was reassigned because she wears a hijab.

Singh would back Bill 21 court challenge

Liberals ready to release economic update

Liberals ready to release economic update
While the Bank of Canada has a mandate to keep inflation in check, the government agreed Monday it plays a role in helping the central bank maintain inflation around its two-per-cent target.

Liberals ready to release economic update