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Montreal

Testing expands in hard-hit Mauricie, as authorities try to gauge spread of virus

The MauricieCentre du Qubec has been among the regions of the province most seriously affected by the pandemic,outside the greater Montreal area. To date, there have been 1,887 cases and 176 deaths.

Public health hopes to reach broader population and respond quickly to potential outbreaks

This decontamination unit from the Shawinigan fire department has been revamped to offer curbside COVID-19 testing in the Mauricie-Centre du Qubec region. (Radio-Canada)

Health authorities in the Mauricie region hope by bringing testing right to residents' doorsteps, they will be better able to trackthe spread of COVID-19.

A Trois-Rivires city bus and a decontamination unit from the Shawinigan fire department have been revamped to offer curbside testing, startingin the region's larger cities this week.

A third mobile unit is already in use in the Drummondville area.

Karine Lampron, the assistant director of primary care services for the CIUSSS MauricieCentre du Qubec, said the region is currently doing about 700 tests a day but has the capacity to process 1,300 tests in its lab.

The hope is the mobile units will up numbers by 150 to 200 tests a day and allow public health to target testing to areas considered potentially at risk.

"When the unit comes to a neighbourhood, the team will go ringing doorbells, talk with people about their health, and if they have symptoms, we'll invite them to be tested," Lampron said.

She said the mobile teams will do preventive work as they travel, reminding people of the measures they need to take to keep the virus from spreadingand what symptoms to watch for.

Lampron said the mobile unit operating in Drummondville has already provided an added public health benefit: the team doing door-knocking there has come into contact with people who are dealing with mental health issues like stress and anxiety.

Those people might have slipped through the cracks without that encounter,Lampron said, and they're now getting help.

Karine Lampron of the CIUSSS Mauricie-Centre du Qubec says anyone who is showing symptoms of COVID-19 can be tested at one of the mobile units without an appointment. (Radio-Canada)

Region hard hit by COVID-19

The mobile units will be able to respond quickly to reports of potential cases in CHSLDs, businesses or schools, and authorities are promising test results within 24 hours.

The MauricieCentre du Qubec has been among the regions of the province most seriously affected by the pandemic,outside the greater Montreal area. To date, there have been 1,887 cases which amounts to70 per 10,000 population, the fourth-highest infection rate in the province and 176 deaths.

Many of those deaths have been in long-term care homes, notably at CHSLD Cloutier-du-Rivage in Trois-Rivires, where anactive outbreak has killed 31 residents to date, and atCHSLD Laflche in Shawinigan, where 44 residents died.

Shawinigan Mayor Michel Angers said the crisis sparked by COVID-19 at the CHSLD Laflche is unlike anything he's seen in his ten years as mayor.

"You're in a situation where you can't get control of this invisible enemy that's affecting the entire community," he said.

Although the number of new cases in the region is showing signs of slowing, Angers said more testing in the general population is crucial.

"The reopening is causing people to get lax about physical distancing, and that slacking off could mean we'll be hit by a second wave.''

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