Alberta’s top doctor says she recognizes measures to contain the spread of COVID-19 in schools are a big inconvenience to families.
Dr. Deena Hinshaw says if a student goes to school while infectious, all their classmates must typically stay home for 14 days.
Hinshaw says gathering more information about who is most at risk of contracting the novel coronavirus at school will help the government take a more targeted approach in the future.
She says there are 42 cases linked to 35 schools, where someone was in the building while infectious.
There are six schools with two or more infections — four in Calgary, one in Edmonton and one in Lethbridge — but there’s no indication the virus spread within those institutions.
Alberta added 418 new COVID-19 cases from Friday to Sunday.
On Monday, the province reported 1,538 active cases, 37 people in hospital and seven in intensive care.
There was one additional death over the weekend, bringing that total to 254.
Nearly 19,000 tests were completed on Saturday, but Hinshaw said not to expect numbers that high on a daily basis.
Hinshaw said the daily numbers are “higher than what would be ideal,” but the health-care system is able to manage the caseload.
She said there’s no particular threshold that would trigger tougher public health measures.
“We need to look at not just the number of cases, but where the cases are being spread, who is impacted by the cases,” she said.
“As long as we’re able to maintain our case numbers at a relatively steady rate — keeping around that 100 cases per day, ideally slightly lower — we’re going to be able to manage this and be able to balance making sure that we have minimal impact on the other issues that people are dealing with.”
The Alberta government’s school status map on COVID-19 outbreaks can be found here.
Provincial COVID-19 updates for September 14:
- A total of 15,833 people have been infected with the virus. The earliest known COVID-19 case in Alberta was detected in a blood sample collected on Feb. 24. The first case was announced on March 5.
- Of those cases, 14,041 people have recovered, or roughly 88.6 per cent of all cases.
- There have been 418 new cases reported across Alberta since Sept. 11.
- There are 1,538 active cases in Alberta.
- There are 37 cases hospitalized, with seven people fighting the virus in intensive care units.
- There has been one new death related to COVID-19 since Sept. 11, bringing Alberta’s total to 254.
- 46,127 tests for COVID-19 were completed since Sept. 11: 12,757 on Sept. 11, 18,919 on Sept. 12 and 14,451 on Sept. 13.
- To date, 1,130,828 tests for COVID-19 have been carried out on 877,000 people.
COVID-19 in Fort McMurray:
- There have been 16 new recoveries in Fort McMurray since Sept. 11, bringing the total recoveries to 143 since the first case was reported in the city on March 19.
- There have been 13 new actives cases found in Fort McMurray since Sept. 11, bringing the known total to 51.
- There has been one death in Fort McMurray.
COVID-19 in rural areas:
- There is one new COVID-19 case in Wood Buffalo’s rural areas, keeping the total active cases at four. Two cases are in Fort McKay.
- There has been one new recovery in Wood Buffalo’s rural areas, bringing the total to 59 recoveries.
- AHS has not confirmed which rural communities had active COVID-19 cases, only community leaders have.
- Fort McKay’s First Nation and Métis leaders have made it mandatory to wear masks in the community.
- There have been no deaths in the RMWB’s rural areas.
Local COVID-19 outbreaks:
- An outbreak at Canadian Natural’s Albian site was declared after five workers tested positive for the virus on Aug. 13.
- A precautionary outbreak was declared at the Northern Lights Regional Health Centre’s Medical unit when a patient tested positive on Aug. 21.
- An outbreak at the Syncrude site north of Fort McMurray was declared on Sept. 3 when 11 workers tested positive for the virus. As of Sept. 14, 15 workers have COVID-19 while 13 have recovered.
- An outbreak at Suncor’s base plant was declared on Sept. 4 after five workers tested positive for the virus.
- An outbreak is declared when five people at a public site, such as a workplace, test positive for COVID-19. At continuing care centres, the number is two. However, AHS chose to declare a precautionary outbreak when one person tested positive for the virus at the Northern Lights Regional Health Centre.
- An outbreak is over when no new COVID-19 cases have been reported after 30 days.