Last May, Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford said anyone applying for a COVID-19 check can simply take a check: “You may not be denied, you don’t want an appointment, just report. “To what he deserves to add now: “As long as you can to take a full day off and hold your bladder for more than six and a half hours. “
This is the time when reports imply that some others have been forced to wait, as the call for exams has increased by 30% in recent weeks, amid a sharp increase in the cases shown and more than one million young people returning to school. .
The province is now working to locate tactics to increase the number of controls that meet 50,000 consistent controls in the day, compared to more than 25,000 recently carried out daily, over the next month. It has become increasingly transparent that simply getting others through the door is a serious challenge: many Ontarioers have said they have been denied the closure of the centers for a day.
Many Ontarions had denied them
In fact, Ontario is not the only province that has scaled up to develop screening capacity as young people return to day care and school and the season of respiratory virus is coming: Quebec and British Columbia have also reported spikes in screening demand. treat others right now: a clear reminder to the rest of Canada that things can change in a short time and temporarily overwhelm existing systems if they’re not ready.
Unfortunately, around this pandemic, Canadian governments and public fitness officials have been too reactionary rather than proactive in implementing mandatory public fitness measures. Back to school is a smart example. When most of them closed in mid-March, many think they could reopen within a few weeks, but in May or June, it was transparent to virtually everyone that peak schools would not reopen until September.
This would have been a good time for local education ministries and school forums to start making plans for the fall; Instead, across much of the country, they seemed to be taking an extended summer vacation, leaving vital negotiations on how to get the Young people back to school safely through August. The result is a wave of provincial and federal termination announcements in late August, and major projects to modernize aging ventilation systems in thousands of schools and acquire an outdoor area just weeks away.
In the midst of all this, it has been transparent to all that there would be a massive build-up in the call for evidence, given that the fall flu season would worsen through a wave of expected moments and parents who would be desperate to change However, this has surprised Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott, who admitted this week that “we expected a build-up in the queues , but maybe not right now.
And things will only get worse. Not only in terms of the number of other people who are likely to request controls in autumn and winter, but also in terms of demanding logistical situations to safely monitor all those other people during the bloodless winter months. doors for 4 hours in fine weather; another is to expect young people and the elderly to do so when mercury reaches -30 degrees Celsius.
Ontario Medical Director Dr. David Williams said Monday that the province is looking for tactics to address the problem, adding the hunt to discover how others can wait internally safely, but even the existing system, which requires others. Standing indoors with other people who are more likely to be inflamed than the general population, and answering a lot of questions before a nurse puts a tampon in their nose, is a risky thing. contract the virus in the control centers, especially since it will not appear on the check they have just received.
Things get worse
As several infectious disease experts pointed out on those pages last week, another major challenge is the number of other people with little threat of infection, but still looking for evidence, to feel better about their social activities, or regardless of social networks. This is a challenge that you want to solve through data campaigns, but we will still see a massive increase in the number of young people who have been sent home from school and want to be tested.
So now governments are fighting. Last week, new verification centers opened in Edmonton and Laval, Quebec. Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault said his province is being implemented to expand verification facilities and laboratory capacity, but suffers to obtain mandatory supplies. Ottawa has announced that it will offer federal laboratories to help reduce the accumulation of checks across the country. And Ontario is contemplating asking pharmacies and personal laboratories to help ease the burden of public hospitals.
Most likely, all of this is mandatory to meet the next building on the test call, as are other answers, such as expanding test drives, in all likelihood employing the empty parking masses of enclosed hockey arenas in throughout the country, and expanding the number of centers that accept reservations. One thing is for sure: without the ability to test, this country will not be able to control a wave of moment imaginable, which may allow the virus to stop.
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