A Montreal long-term care home transferred 20 residents to local hospitals on Sunday after a COVID-19 outbreak at the facility drew concern from officials and families this week.
Francine Dupuis, associate president and director general of the local health agency, said 18 residents of Maimonides Geriatric Centre who tested positive for COVID-19 were sent to Hotel Dieu Hospital.
Two other residents were sent to Montreal’s Jewish General Hospital, while 10 residents were sent back to their rooms at the facility after being checked by a physician.
“What we want is the safety of our residents, which is why we made this decision,” Dupuis said in an interview.
The transfers came a day after the health agency announced plans to close a COVID-19 hot zone at Maimonides — which had 30 COVID-positive residents — to try to stem the spread of the virus.
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Dupuis said the outbreak began after an asymptomatic caregiver entered the facility and later tested positive for COVID-19.
“Once there’s one person, it’s like a fire; it goes very fast. People get infected very fast,” she said.
The situation has raised concerns among residents’ relatives and loved-ones, who staged a protest outside the centre on Thursday to demand more support.
As of Nov. 28, ten residents had died at Maimonides during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Health Department data.
Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubé said Thursday that he had asked for a report on the situation and on whether additional staff is needed.
Quebec long-term care homes were hit hard during the first wave of the pandemic last spring. Many facilities were under-staffed and in some cases, personnel moved between centres — allowing the virus to spread more easily.
The province reported 1,395 new infections and 12 additional deaths linked to the novel coronavirus on Sunday, bringing the total since the start of the pandemic to 141,038 cases and 7,033 deaths.
Canada’s top public health officer, Dr Theresa Tam, has raised concerns about a surge in COVID-19 infection rates among older Canadians.
In a statement on Sunday, Tam said people “aged 80 years and older currently (have) the highest incidence rate” across the country.
She also said more and larger outbreaks are happening in long-term care homes, among other places, and urged people to reduce their contacts with others to prevent the virus from spreading further.
In Montreal, Dupuis said the health agency now intends to make it mandatory for caregivers to have a negative COVID-19 test result before they enter long-term care homes.
“The government is also allowing us now to make it compulsory for the staff, which was not the case before,” she said, adding that gaps are still inevitable.
“But at least we’ll be tougher in our control system.”