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British Columbia

B.C. woman relieved she won't need to quarantine every time she returns from California cancer treatments

Ottawa confirmed Tuesday patients receiving "essential medical services" in a foreign country will not have to undergo tests and mandatory quarantines.

Anna Nyarady travels between Vancouver and L.A. monthly to take part in a clinical trial

Anna Nyarady, pictured at her home in Vancouver on Feb. 17 where she is currently in quarantine. Nyarady estimates she has spent three-quarters of the last 12 months in quarantine because she travels regularly to the States to take part in a clinical cancer trial. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Cancer survivor Anna Nyaradyestimates she has spent about 75 per cent of her life in quarantine since March 2020.

Nyarady,who hadStage 4 colon cancer, lives in Vancouver, B.C., and travels every monthto Los Angeles to participate in a clinical trial she has been a part of for more than two years. While she is now considered cancer-free, Nyarady's treatment is ongoing, and, if she misses a session, she says she will be cut from the clinic.

All of that international travel means Nyarady has to quarantine for 14 days every time she returns home and gets only about four days a month to enjoy outside of clinics and confinement. Along with other Canadians in similar situations, she has been advocating for Ottawa to consider her travel essential so she can be exempt from federal testing and quarantine rules.

That change camethis week.

On Tuesday, Federal Public Safety Minister Bill Blair announced patients who need medical treatment in another country will nothave to follownew COVID-19 testing and quarantine rules required for those entering Canada.

"I am relieved and ecstatic," said Nyarady, speaking Wednesday on CBC's The Early Edition.

On Tuesday, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said people receiving 'essential medical services' in a foreign country will not have to undergo tests and mandatory quarantines if they have a written statement from a licensed health-care practitioner in Canada. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

Nyaradysaid it has been incredibly stressful during the pandemic to try tomake it to her appointments while working with reduced flight schedules and having to quarantine for a set length of time between sessions.

"Knowing that I am not going to miss my treatments and I can travel without all the logistical issues ... it's a major relief," said Nyarady.

North Vancouver resident Kimberly Muise, who travels to the same L.A. clinic as Nyarady every monthto take part in an immunotherapy clinical trial to treat Stage 4 cervical cancer, told CBCchief political correspondent Rosemary Barton on Sundaythat a mandatory quarantineat the traveller's expense wouldalsobe a significant financial burden.

As of Feb. 22, travellers returning to Canada muststay in a hotel, at a cost of up to $2,000 for the three-day hotel stay, while they wait for results of a COVID-19 test.

Nyaradysaid she understands Canadians may have concerns about people entering the country for any reason right now, but thatpeople with pre-existing conditions travelling for health reasons are likely doing everything possible to minimize risk.

"We would do everything in our power to keep ourselves safe," said Nyarady."If we don't contract it, we won't be exposing anyone else to it."

With files from The Early Edition