Windsor Regional Hospital testing all patients for COVID-19 on admission - Action News
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Windsor

Windsor Regional Hospital testing all patients for COVID-19 on admission

Windsor Regional Hospital says it has implemented stronger infection control procedures amid a COVID-19 outbreak, includingtesting all patients for COVID-19 as they are admittedand five days into their stay.

Patients receive second test on day 5, chief of staff says

A COVID-19 outbreak was declared at Windsor Regional Hospital on Dec. 17. (Tom Addison/CBC)

Windsor Regional Hospital says it has implemented stronger infection control measures amid a COVID-19 outbreak, includingtesting all patients for COVID-19 as they are admittedand five days into their stay.

"We are taking all the precautions that we need to to prevent further spread,"Dr. Wassim Saad, chief of staff at Windsor Regional Hospital, told CBC Radio's Windsor Morning.

He explained that if a patienttests negative twice, then tests positive, the hospital will be able to conclude that theinfections would likely have been acquired in the facility as opposed to the community.

A COVID-19 outbreak was declared at the hospital's Metropolitan Campus on Thursday.

The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit said eight people have tested positive on the hospital's 4N floor, which is a 32-bed non-surgical unit.

The cases are part of a cluster that was announced on Dec. 11. Six of those affected are staff members and two are patients.

Dr. Wassim Saad says the hospital has undertaken stronger measures to protect patients and staff amid a COVID-19 outbreak. (Michael Hargreaves/CBC)

The unit affected was one of the hospital's COVID-19 units, with about 60 per cent of the patients positive for virusat the time, Saad said.

The two patients diagnosed with COVID-19 were negative while they were in hospital but tested positive about a week after being discharged, he said.

"Because the incubation period for the virus included some part of their hospital stay, as well as time in the community, itreally is very difficult if not impossible to determine whether they acquired it while they were in hospital or in the community," he said.

The hospital doesn't have evidence of transmission between patients or between staff and patients, Saad said.

While there have been dire warnings from local health officialsabout the effects of COVID-19 on hospital capacity and outbreaks within hospitals exacerbating the issueSaad said the affected unit represents just five per cent ofcapacity.

"So it's not really affecting our role right now," he said.