Kingston-area residents could take COVID-19 case No. 62 as a warning against unnecessary travel, even within the province.
On Wednesday afternoon, Dr. Kieran Moore, medical officer of health for Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington Public Health, would not say where the individual had travelled but that residents should avoid travelling to areas with a significant number of cases, such as Ottawa or the Greater Toronto Area.
He added that no one with whom the person interacted was diagnosed with COVID-19, but they did visit individuals who showed symptoms. Those individuals are now being tested by their local health unit.
“That is going to be our new way of getting COVID-19,” Moore said. “Someone is going to have to leave here, be in contact with someone who was pre-symptomatic or symptomatic, and that is our main risk right now.”
He said a number of the local cases had travelled to larger centres and contracted the virus.
“We have such a low risk from Belleville to Brockville that it has to be imported and it has to be from somebody visiting a higher-risk area,” Moore said.
Most travel within the country and all travel within the province is still technically allowed. Dr. Moore urged travellers to call ahead to screen whomever they’re visiting. He said to ask if anyone is showing symptoms and to assess whether anyone involved with the visit is at risk for contracting COVID-19 — such as the elderly or immune-deficient.
He noted that if anyone is showing symptoms, they should be tested immediately and the visit should be postponed until the results come back negative.
During those visits, there should still be no more than five people present, and physical distancing and proper hand hygiene should be practised at all times, Moore said.
“One example (locally) we heard that a person had 22 different contacts that we’re tracing, but they’re all outside of KFL&A,” Moore said. “Because people think they can go back and socialize. That’s not the truth. … We cannot let our guard down. If we do, the virus will come back again, and again, and again.”
In the end, Dr. Moore said travellers simply need to look at one of the many maps available to see what areas are COVID-19 hot spots.
“Toronto still has a significant amount of cases every day. They still have ongoing outbreaks,” Moore said. “Look at the areas within Ontario that have active cases, you should be able to realize where there is community spread, and there is still community spread in York, Durham, Toronto, Hamilton, Waterloo, Windsor, Lambton. All those communities are mapped on multiple websites as still having risk.”
He said that when looking at the infected areas, residents should multiply their number of confirmed cases by at least five to get a true figure of how many cases of COVID-19 are actually in the area.
He said travel should really be limited to urgent trips.
“It is very difficult to get COVID-19 in our community at present, we have such a low endemic rate,” Moore said. “If anyone is going to get risk COVID-19, the risk is much higher as soon as you leave Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington.”