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New Brunswick

Doctor linked to Campbellton COVID-19 outbreak was planning to leave his practice

The doctor at the centre of theCOVID-19 outbreak in the Campbellton region was planning to leave his practice before the outbreak started, according to the head of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New Brunswick.

Dr. Jean Robert Ngola had tendered his resignation, effective Aug. 1, says College of Physicians and Surgeons

Dr. Jean Robert Ngola, also known as Dr. Ngola Monzinga and as Jean Robert Ngola Monzinga, has worked in Campbellton since 2013 and has about 2,000 patients, roughly 1,500 of them active. (Guy LeBlanc/Radio-Canada)

The doctor at the centre of theCOVID-19 outbreak in the Campbellton region was planning to leave his practice before the outbreak started, according to the head of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New Brunswick.

Dr. Jean Robert Ngola had tendered his resignation to the Campbellton Regional Hospital, effective Aug. 1, said Dr. Ed Schollenberg, the registrar of the provincial licensing body for doctors.

It was dated May 19, said Schollenberg, who was copied on a May 21 letter from the hospital, accepting Ngola's resignation.

The first case in the COVID-19 cluster was publicly reported on May 21.Before then, it had been two weeks since the province had an active case of the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus.

Dr. Jean Robert Ngola had tendered his resignation to the Campbellton Regional Hospital, effective Aug. 1. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

There are now15peopleinfected, including two new cases announced Wednesday, someone in their 40s and someone in their 60s.

One case is linked to a close contact of "a previously identified case," Public Health said in a news release,and the other one is an employee oftheManoir de la Valle, a long-term care facility in Atholville, where five elderly patients in an Alzheimer's unit and a personal support worker previouslytested positive.

A third employee who lives in Quebec has also tested positive, but will be counted in Quebec's statistics.

Five people remain in hospital, including one in intensive care.

Schollenberg doesn't know what Ngola's plans wereafter roughly sevenyears of practisingin Campbellton. Buta doctor who gives up their hospital privileges can no longer practise in the province, he said.

Eight days after giving his notice, Ngola, who is also known asNgola Monzingaand as Jean Robert Ngola Monzinga, was suspended by the Vitalit Health Network. The province has since asked theRCMP toinvestigate atrip hetook to Quebec and his failure to self-isolate todetermine whether charges are warranted.

Dr. Ed Schollenberg, registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of New Brunswick, said all he knows about the case are the two letters he received - notice of Ngola's resignation and notice of his suspension. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

Ngola, in his first media interview since the outbreak started,told Radio-Canada's program La Matinaleon Tuesday he's not sure whether he picked up the coronavirus during thetrip to Quebec or from a patient in his office.

He made an overnight return trip to Quebec to pick up his four-year-old daughter becauseher mother had to travel to Africa for her own father's funeral, he said.

Maybe it was an error in judgment.Who hasn't made an error in judgment?- Jean Robert Ngola

He drove straight there and back with no stops and had no contact with anyone, he said, and none of his family members had any COVID-19 symptoms at the time.

He did not self-isolate upon returning, he said. He went towork at the CampbelltonRegional Hospital the next day.

"Maybe it was an error in judgment," said Ngola, pointing out that workers, including nurses who live in Quebec, cross the border each day with no 14-day isolation period required.

"Who hasn't made an error in judgment?" he said.

Ngolasaidhe decided to speak out because he's become the target of racist verbal attacks daily and false reports to police, and he feels abandoned by Public Health officials.

Emailsevery day but no complaint

Schollenberg said he was advised by Vitalit of Ngola's suspension the same day it took effectbut was not given any information about the reason.

"It wasn't until it became widely known that we found out what this was related to," he said. "I know what I know from the media."

Although Schollenberg has received "a few [emails] every day since all of this started" from citizens calling on the college to suspend Ngola, he said he can't practise anywhere in the province while he's suspended by Vitalit.

The college can't launch an investigation without a formal complaint, said Schollenberg. Usually, it's a patient who files such acomplaint.

"That still might happen, I don't know. It's perfectly open for somebody, if they think he was the source of their infection, they could complain to us."

But the college would have limited access to information from the hospital, he said.

The college could also generate its own complaint, said Schollenberg. "But on the other hand, if you're going to complain, you've got to have some facts. And the only information I have is either the stuff that's on social media or the stuff that's been reported."

The infected Alzheimer unit at the Manoir de la Valle in Atholville has its own entrance and there is no contact between it and the attached independent living apartments, the facility's owner has said. (Serge Bouchard/Radio-Canada)

Twelve of the province's 15cases have been linked to the travel-related case to date, Public Health officials have said. One case remains under investigation.

The policy for any health-care workerswho travel outside the province for any reason is to self-isolate for 14 days, New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health, Dr. Jennifer Russell, has said. "It is mandatory."

Ngola did not say during Tuesday's interview what he told officials at the New Brunswick border about his reason for travel, or what they told him about requirements to self-isolate upon entering the province.

Nor did he indicate what, if any, followup he had from border officials.

CBC News has been unable to reach him to clarify. His voice mailbox is full.

On Tuesday, he said he received a call from a Public Health official on May 25 informing him a patienthe had seen on May 19 had tested positive for COVID-19.

He cancelled his shift at the hospital that night and got a test for himself and his daughter, he said. Neither of them were showing symptoms, but they both tested positive.

Campbellton ER toreopen Friday

The Campbellton Regional Hospital, which has been "basically shut down"since May 27 when a third case was confirmed, will gradually reopen, starting with the emergency department, the Vitalit Health Network announced on Wednesday.

The ERis scheduled toreopen on Friday, but only between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.

"We have sufficient nursing staff and physicians to partially reopen," president and CEOGilles Lanteigne said in a statement.

Whenever possible, Vitalit asks people to contact their family doctor, nurse practitioner or Tele- Care 811 before going to the emergency department, he said.

The situation will be reassessed early next week.

"I want to reassure the public that all control measures are in place to ensure the safety of patients and staff in the emergency department and throughout the facility," said Lanteigne.

Ambulatory care services and non-urgent, or elective,surgeries,remain suspended, but will also be reassessed early next week, he said.