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Some employees at Atholville long-term care home with COVID-19 outbreak live in Quebec

Some employees at the long-term care facility in Atholville where four Alzheimer's patientsand a night worker have tested positive for COVID-19 live across the border in Quebec, says the facility's owner.

CEO believes no workers at facility are still travelling from neighbouring province

The Manoir de la Valle in Atholville has four residents and an employee who have tested positive for COVID-19. (Serge Bouchard/Radio-Canada)

Some employees at the long-term care facility in Atholville where four Alzheimer's patientsand a night worker have tested positive for COVID-19 live across the border in Quebec, says the facility's owner.

But Dr. Guy Tremblay, the president and CEO of the Quebec-based Lokia Group, said he doesn't believe any employees are still travelling between provinces.

"I don't think so," he said during a telephone interview from Quebec on Monday.

And while some of the Manoir de laValle's personal care attendants haveon occasion worked at the Lokia Group's other two facilities in the areaSugarloaf Manor in Campbellton and Sunrise Manor in Dalhousie none did in the days leading up to the outbreak and none are now, he said.

There are 12 active cases of COVID-19 in the Campbellton region, all linked to a family doctor who travelled to Quebec and didn't self-isolate for the mandatory 14 days when he returned.

No new cases were confirmed on Monday, but the number of people at the Campbellton Regional Hospitalincreased to four, up from three, including one patientin intensive care.

The affected Manoir de laValleresidentsinclude three people in their 80s and one in their 70s from the18-bed Alzheimer's unit.

Tremblay said the COVID-positive personal care attendant had social contact with the infected doctor on May 20.

She workedthree night shifts May 22, 23 and 24 with no symptoms beforetesting positive for the respiratory disease on May 29, and is now self-isolating at home, he said.

All of the residents and staff havesince been tested, but will be closely monitored for the next two weeks and retested if any symptoms develop.

The roughly 90 residents and 40 employees at the Campbellton and Dalhousiefacilities will be tested in the coming days, along with those of all long-term care facilities in the region, also known as Zone 5, Public Health officials have said.

In the meantime, Tremblay, who is a surgeon, said the Manoir staff and health officials are doing everything possible to limit the spread of coronavirus.

Unit isolated

The infected Alzheimer unit has its own entrance and there is no contact between it and the attached independent living apartments, he said.

And ateam of extramural staff is running the special-care side after 10 ofthe 29 regular workers left amid fears of the outbreak.

"As soon as we knew that COVIDwill be there, many staff are just scared about that and they just advised us that they [would] not be on the next shift on the floor," said Tremblay.

With a good care plan, he is optimistic the facility will pull through the outbreak "without much problem," noting some people can be COVID-positive without being sick, even the elderly.

"But at the same time you shouldn't close your eyes because you never know what's going [to happen]the next day, or the next hours because that bad virus can create a very bad situation."

With files from Information Morning Fredericton