With fast-moving NEWS about COVID-19, we created this page to share our latest stories and facts about the epidemic in and around Calgary.
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Researchers at Duke University in North Carolina compared the effectiveness of 14 face masks and facial awnings to prevent the drops other people expel as they speak. Each canopy was tested 10 times through a speaker and 3 to 4 speakers. Test subjects were asked to say the word “Stay healthy, other people.”
“We have shown that when other people talk, small drops are expelled, so the disease can spread when speaking, without coughing or sneezing,” said Martin Fischer, one of the study authors, associate professor of studies at Duke, in a press release. . “We’ve also noticed that some facial coatings have been much more successful than others in blocking ejected particles.”
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Two cases of COVID-19 have been detected at a day care center in southwest Calgary, the province’s leading fitness officer said Monday.
The news comes when Alberta continued to register more than a hundred new instances consistent with COVID-19 day over the weekend.
Alberta fitness officials said if infections at BrightPath Richmond Childcare Center at 5275 Richmond Rd. SO. known over the weekend involving young people or staff.
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Edmonton organizations oppose city mask exemption cards, for fear that they will be misused and cause further non-compliance.
Old Strathcona Business Association EXECUTIVE Cherie Klassen said she was surprised to hear about card exemptions, just a week after the rule went into effect and without any consultation with the city before the resolution was taken. Klassen, who is also co-chair of the Edmonton Business Improvement Area Board, expressed his fear of the card as an escape for those who do not need to wear a mask and increased pressure for corporations seeking to implement mandatory masking policies.
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Lethbridge College makes the indoor mask mandatory as it welcomes some academics for the fall.
The masks will be from August 17.
The school previously announced this summer that many courses will be presented online in the fall. Students with “lab and learning delight” systems on campus will want masks, while workers won’t want masks in their offices as long as they can be at a physical distance.
“We constantly compare the latest data from Alberta Health Services and the Alberta government to what we can and deserve to do to better protect everyone who visits our campus,” Dr. Paula Burns, President and CEO of Lethbridge College, said in a statement. . Array “Mandatory masks are a way in which we can make a smooth difference and protect in addition to everyone who wants to be on our campus”.
On Friday, the mask was in facilities owned by the city of Lethbridge.
Alberta’s medical director of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, gave a talk about the COVID-19 pandemic in Alberta.
Latest numbers – COVID19AB from @CMOH_Alberta: -More than 10300 recoveries -66 in the hospital, 14 in USI-5 plus deaths in the last 72 hours, two in Good Samaritan Southgate-More 26000 tests since Friday-108 new instances on Friday 101 Saturday Array 48 on Sunday
She says they are putting in place measures for that waiting time and speeding up the procedure in the coming weeks. COVId19AB
You can see the full update below.
The Good Samaritan Southgate Care Center, the site of Alberta’s deadliest COVID-19 outbreak, has been exempt from regulations preventing its staff from running at health care facilities.
Edmonton Long-Term Care Home has had trouble controlling the spread of the virus since it first tested positive on June 13. The first death occurred a month later. On Sunday, there were 26 deaths related to the epidemic at home.
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Coronavirus infections in young Americans increased to 40% in the latter part of July, according to a report from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association, bringing the total number of infections during training years to 8.8% of all cases in the United States. .
The report, which includes knowledge from 49 states, comes amid a heated debate about whether schools will reopen in the fall. While the outbreak of infections contradicts President Donald Trump’s statement that young people are “virtually immune,” knowledge also shows that infections in the training years are a disproportionately small percentage of the global epidemic in the United States.
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Federal Liberals protect their resolve to entrust the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation with oversight of a small business aid program that is struggling with the COVID-19 pandemic.
Opposition conservators questioned why CMHC, rather than the Canadian Revenue Agency, was guilty of administering Canada’s emergency ad hiring program, as the for-profit company administers several other pandemic-related programs.
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Conditions in the COVID-19 quarantine unit at the Edmonton Remand Center are so depressing that inmates are not frank about possible symptoms of concern about mandatory two-week confinement, a former prisoner said.
Since the outbreak, all inmates entering the detention centre, as well as those admitted to the infirmary, must spend at least two weeks in quarantine.
In an affidavit filed on July 25, Darcy Mohamed described his 14 days in the center’s quarantine unit as “hell.” He described being locked up with a cellmate for nearly 40 minutes a day with no books, television or anything to pass the time.
His cellmate killed himself, he said.
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Emergency segregation orders, border closures, social estrangement, and mandatory lockdowns are expensive and costly, but this will at least look at theories like never before about why crime actually happens and how it can be predicted and reduced.
The COVID-19 pandemic is “the greatest criminological experiment in history,” according to influential American criminologist Marcus Felson. “It’s like an herbal lab,” Felson says in an interview, and we’re all subjects locked up in this dystopian scan.
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Alberta Health Services has published a list of pharmacies offering asymptomatic tests for COVID-19.
Alberta’s health medical director, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, announced Thursday that the program is now open to any pharmacy that wants to participate and can meet the protection requirements.
“Only other people without symptoms and without known exposure can be checked in a pharmacy,” Hinshaw added. People with symptoms are asked to book an AHS electronic check.
Disinformation about COVID-19 poses a risk to public safety, says a university of Calgary researcher who believes empathy can take a long time to prevent its spread.
Dr. Sajjad Fazel, an expert in public fitness, said the spread of incorrect information about COVID-19 is “endemic” and that fitness professionals face this developing challenge as the pandemic continues.
“You have to perceive where someone comes from. If someone has had a bad joy with the health care or government formula and has that kind of trust or mistrust, just telling them it is or that it’s stupid is not the right way to go,” Fazel said.
“I tell other people not to target the user who disseminates erroneous data. Point to the data itself.”
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Saudi Arabia will soon begin Phase III clinical trials on about 5,000 more people for a COVID-19 vaccine developed through CanSino Biologics Inc. of China, a spokesman for Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Health said Sunday.
Last month, the co-founder of CanSino said the company in talks with Russia, Brazil, Chile and Saudi Arabia will launch a phase III trial of the Ad5-nCOV candidate vaccine.
The vaccine uses an innocent, bloodless virus called adenovirus type five (Adfive) to send the genetics of coronavirus to the body.
Researchers said last month that the CanSino vaccine, developed in conjunction with China’s army study unit, gave the impression of being and inducing immune responses in maximum subjects.
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The new coronavirus infections in the United States were on track to exceed five million on Sunday, as the White House and Congress discussed how to expand financial aid measures for millions of Americans amid the economic consequences of the pandemic.
The virus continues to spread in almost every parent region of the country. The southern and western states are still suffering from outbreaks that began in early summer, while others in the Midwest are dealing with new spikes.
As the milestone of the infection approached, Congressional Democrats and White House officials clashed over President Donald Trump’s new executive moves to address the economic consequences of the pandemic. Negotiations on a third pandemic aid package lasted for weeks with little sign of progress, and the disorder was completely visual as officials exchanged beards on Sunday morning news broadcasts.
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Teachers, coaching assistants and other K-12 school staff say they will face the difficult burden of tracking students for physical distance and masking to lessen the threat of COVID-19 this fall.
After the province announced the full reopening of schools last July, Alberta’s medical director of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, announced this week that the mask will be mandatory for students and in grades from the fourth to the twelfth when physical distance is not possible.
He explained that if young people paint quietly and well aside in an office, without facing others, they can take off their mask. But if academics move around the classroom or technicians or educational assistants to ask questions, the mask will have to be put back on.
Hinshaw presses students to wash their hands before and after removing their mask, adding that “teachers are the experts” and that they would know more productive when students can simply take off their mask or not.
But educators representing teachers, training assistants, and other staff such as librarians, receptionists, and psychologists say the province wants to provide clearer commands and minimum criteria for all schools.
“This simply doesn’t reflect the truth of our classrooms,” said Jason Schilling, president of the Alberta Teachers Association.
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Other young people in Preston have been suggested not to “kill Grandma” amid reports that almost some of the new cases of coronavirus in the city occurred among others over 30 years of age or younger.
New restrictions were put in place after families mingled in bars and houses were accused of a construction in the cases.
But citizens warned that the restrictions would not be taken seriously, as pubs were still busy on Friday, despite government intervention a few hours earlier.
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MONTREAL – For Politimi Karounis, August is dedicated to buying new backpacks, pencils and notebooks for her two primary school-aged children as they enthusiastically prepare to meet with friends and teachers.
But this year, just weeks before the first day of school, Karounis said there was a sense of uncertainty in his circle of relatives around Quebec’s plan to reopen all schools by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“There is no better decision, but as a government, make a call, recognize people’s anxiety, recognize parents and say, “Listen, we hear them, this is what we’re going to do,” said Karounis, who lives west of Montreal. He said in a recent interview.
Karounis is one of dozens of parents in Quebec who express fear about the government’s goal of all K-9 students physically returning to elegance at the end of the month.
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