Quit socializing for next month to stop COVID spread, Quebec health minister pleads - Action News
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Montreal

Quit socializing for next month to stop COVID spread, Quebec health minister pleads

Health Minister Christian Dub is asking Quebecers to keep to themselves and avoid all social gatherings for the next 28 days.

Christian Dub expands orange zone around Montreal to include most suburbs

Limit gatherings for a month, says Quebec health minister

4 years ago
Duration 0:52
Health Minister Christian Dub says the second wave can be controlled if Quebecers make a "special effort" to cut back on social gatherings for the next 28 days.

Quebec Health Minister Christian Dub is asking the public to avoid social gatherings for 28 days.

Dub said the province's public health experts believe that, if transmission can be minimized for two consecutive two-week stretches, the second wave of the virus will be contained.

"I insist on this," he said Friday."It is for a month."

He said the public should take it "one day at a time."(He later added that, if the public had already started avoidinggatherings a day earlier, when he made a similar plea, then there's only 27 days left.)

Dub also moved the entire greater Montreal region into the heightened, orange level of alert on Friday, given what the health minister described as an increasingly worrisomesituation.

The change applies to parts of the Laurentians, Lanaudire and the Montrgie. Dub said an increase in cases, outbreaks and hospitalizations prompted the move.

No region has been driven into the red alert level, which would mean further restrictions, even though Montreal public health is preparing for the possibility.

But the designation no longer carries as much meaninggiven that, for the past two days,Dub hasurged Quebecers in all parts of the province to avoid getting together.

The province reported 637 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, the highest daily number since May 21, while the number of hospitalizations also climbed for the sixthconsecutive day.

'Please, take the call'

The province also conducted more than 36,000 tests on Friday, the most ever in a day. The increase, coupled with ahigher number of positive results, has put a strain on the province's contact tracers.

Contact tracing is viewed by experts as a crucial tool in both understanding how the virus is spreading, and containing outbreaks.

In recent weeks, public health workers have complained that people weren't picking up the phone, in part because their caller ID was blocked.

Dubhas estimated that up to 30 percent of people contacted due to potential exposure don't pick up the phone.

On Friday, Dubannounced that now, when health workers call to give a test result or get in touch with someone who may have been exposed, the caller ID will show "Sant publique."

"Please, take the call," he said.

No plans to close bars, restaurantsor schools

Despite the rise in cases,the provincehas no immediate plans to close bars, restaurants or other businesses.

Quebec's public health director, Dr. Horacio Arruda, said doing so wouldn't necessarily mean a decrease in outbreaks.

He said that people who would otherwise go out for dinner, where the distancing rules are in effect, could end up having a party at their home, where the potential for spread is greater.

Arruda also reiterated that the province hasno plans to close schools and that they have not been a major source of transmission.

As of Thursday, there were 1,163 cases across the province's network of 3,089 public and private schools. There are more than 1 million students in the province.

Universit de Montral epidemiologist Hlne Carabinsaid that, for now at least, the government's decision is understandable.

"In most of those cases, the case was not acquired at school. It was acquired in the community,"she said.

"The data is still very new. It's an emerging disease so it's difficuilt to know, but from what we have seen so far it doesn't look like school is a really big source."

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