22 out-of-province doctors for Vitalit did not fully self-isolate after travel - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 01:39 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

22 out-of-province doctors for Vitalit did not fully self-isolate after travel

Twenty-two doctors from outside New Brunswick have worked for theVitalit Health Network since the COVID-19 pandemic began without fully self-isolating for 14 days after travelling, says president and CEOGilles Lanteigne.

So-called locums did not have isolation exemptions, but are essential to maintain services, says CEO

Locums for Vitalit have been allowed to isolate at work after arriving in New Brunswick, even though they have contact with patients and other health-care workers there. (iStock)

Twenty-two doctors from outside New Brunswick have worked for theVitalit Health Network since the COVID-19 pandemic began without fully self-isolating for 14 days after travelling, says president and CEOGilles Lanteigne.

Almost all of the doctors, known aslocums, who fill in on a temporary basis,have worked in the northern part of the province, he said, including ninein the Campbellton region, where there is an outbreak of 28 active COVID-19cases and where, last week,the province recorded its first deathrelated to the respiratory disease.

The locums, who came from Quebec (16), Ontario (four), Nova Scotia (one) and B.C. (one), had contact with patients and other health-care workers because of the nature of their work, said Lanteigne.

But they were tested and monitored regularly and followed several "rigorous" conditionsto limit the riskof transmission. For example, they did not use the same washrooms as other people or eat in shared spacesand had toself-isolate when they were not at work.

"I think we managed it well,"said Lanteigne. "We were able to maintain some of the services that we deemed essential,"despite a shortage of New Brunswick physicians, he said, noting about a quarter of emergency room shifts in the northern part of the provinceare filled by locums.

"And there was no situation which led to propagation of the COVID" from the locums usedbetween March 15 and June 1, based on thecontact tracing conducted by Public Health.

Provincial officials have linked the Campbellton outbreak, which started May 21, to amedical professional who travelledto Quebecfor personal reasons and returnedto work at the Campbellton Regional Hospital without self-isolating.

Dr. Jean Robert Ngola, who has had a family practice in the region since 2013,has been suspended byVitalit, and the province has asked the RCMP to investigate whether charges are warranted.

The Campbellton region, Zone 5, remains in the orange phase of the COVID-19 recovery plan, with 28 active cases, but the rest of the province has moved into another level of the yellow phase of recovery, with just one active case in the Moncton region, Zone 1, as of Wednesday. (Government of New Brunswick)

Four new cases in the Campbellton region were announced Wednesday, including two people in their 80s and two people in their 50s.

Twoare residents and two are staff attheManoir de la Valle, a long-term care homein Atholville, where 13 other elderly residents and four employees in the Alzheimer's unit havealso tested positive. ResidentDaniel Ouellette, 84, died last Thursday.

At least one of the new cases is outside the Alzheimer's unit, where all the previous cases had been contained,Dr. Jennifer Russell, the province'schief medical officer of health,told reporters.

A loneconfirmed caseof COVID-19 in the Moncton region a temporary foreign worker in their 20sis unrelated to the outbreakin the Campbellton region.

The individual,whobrings the province's total number of active casesto 29, was following the mandatory 14-day isolationand has had minimal contact with others, Russell said.

New policy triggered by 'concerns'

Vitalitdid not obtainisolation exemptions from WorkSafeNB for any of the22 locums, who fillin during an illness, absence or staffing shortage, said Lanteigne. "At that time, it was not required," he said.

Of the 22 locums:

  • Nine have worked in the Restigouche, Campbellton region (Zone 5).

  • Eight have worked in the Acadian Peninsula, Chaleur region (Zone 6).

  • Four have worked in Edmundston, Saint-Quentin region (Zone 4).

  • One has worked in Moncton, Beausjourregion (Zone 1).

It was May 19 that the province's pandemictask force decided that "locums,short-term residents who are unable to self-isolate for 14 days prior to starting work,would be subject to WorkSafeNB's work-isolation policy,"said Department of Health spokesperson Bruce Macfarlane.

The four-person task force created in April and given authority over all aspects of the health-care system's response, including health authorities,"had concerns" aboutthe number of locums coming in from outsidethe province, he said in an emailed statement.

Itdiscussed the issue on May 14 and decided it neededto "understand the volume of locums, the volumes of the different categories of residents, where they're coming from and for how long as well as the risks and impacts of bringing them into the province and their self-isolation requirements."

Bruce Macfarlane, Department of Health spokesperson, said the Pandemic Task Force issued a directive May 28 to make it clear that any health-care worker, living in New Brunswick and working in a New Brunswick health-care facility must self-isolate for 14 days upon their return to the province. (CBC News file photo)

It also wanted a consistent policy for locums applied by the two regional health authorities Vitalit and the Horizon Health Network, said Macfarlane.

Under the WorkSafeNB work-isolation policy, the requests for exemptions must be submitted to WorkSafeNB two weeks in advance for approval and be accompanied by a plan explaining the measures that will be taken to reduce the risks, he said.

Vitalit andHorizon areresponsible to have "an operational plan to support/manage" the locumswhile they are in the province,he added.

Horizon follows full isolation

The "small number" of locumsHorizon hasbrought infrom outside New Brunswick since thepandemic began have allbeen subject to 14 days of mandatory self-isolation,said Dr. Edouard Hendriks, vice-president, medical, academic and research affairs.

Out-of-province locums were not eligible for theisolation exemptionduring the red and orange phasesof the province's COVID-19 recovery plan, according toHorizon spokespersonKris McDavid, "only since the implementation of the yellow phase."

Horizon currently has fourlocumsfrom Ontario working within the organization two in Moncton, one in the Miramichi region and one in the Fredericton/Upper River Valleyregion.

"Each of them have completed the required 14-day isolation period prior to beginning work," Hendrikssaid in an emailed statement.

The Horizon Health Network's use of locums from outside New Brunswick has been 'very limited' since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and the coinciding restrictions on interprovincial travel, said Dr. Edouard Hendriks, vice-president of medical, academic and research affairs. (CBC)

Horizon anticipates the need for morelocums this summer, he said.

If they have to be brought in from other provinces and "should the need be such where a 14-day self-isolation period isn't possible," Horizon will apply to WorkSafeNBfor "work-isolation,"Hendriks said.

Under this policy,locumswould beauthorized to go directly to and from workbut required to self-isolate when not in the workplace for the first 14 days of their employment.

In addition, any locums coming into the province from so-called hot zones,where there are a significant number of COVID-19 cases would be tested for the coronavirus, and must remain in isolation until the test result is known.

No contact allowed

Asked to clarify what the isolation requirements for locums werebefore the task force's May 19 directive, Macfarlane replied, "This question should be addressed to the RHAs."

WorkSafeNBalso would not clarify the isolation requirements and exemptions for locums and other health-care workers.

The media relations representative said no one was available for an interview and directed CBC News to the operational plan,Embracing the New Normal. "It will provide you with information that may answer your questions. Also, there are several FAQs," the unnamed person said in an email.

The online document says people entering New Brunswick for work for a fixed period must self-isolate for 14 days before starting work, "unless the worker is a person entering New Brunswick under an arrangement with an employer previously approved by WorkSafeNB."

An employer must, among other things, ensure that anyworkers from outside New Brunswick self-isolate within the provincefor 14 days, or submit a plan at least 15 business days before they arrive that ensures for 14 days after they arrive that they are:

  • Isolated from any New Brunswicker while they travel to and from their accommodations and worksite.
  • Required to remain at their accommodations and isolated from contact with any New Brunswicker during work hours and while off duty.

"Failing to comply with these requirements could result in significant fines plus a victim surcharge and administration fees," the 22-page document, dated May 8, states.

7 applications for exemptions

Vitalit has submitted seven requests for exemptions to WorkSafeNB, said Lanteigne.

Asked about Horizon's position that locums never qualified for exemptions before, he replied, "Well, it was different here."

Locums did qualify, he said, providedthey went through a work-isolation. "Because otherwise, some services would have been closed."

Vitalitalways tries first to find a New Brunswick doctorwho can provide a required service, said Lanteigne.

If aNew Brunswick doctor isn't available, Vitalit assesses whether the service in question is essential or could be temporarily suspended because of a lack of staff, he said.

Due to the physician shortage in New Brunswick, the Vitalit Health Network must frequently use locums from outside the province, said president and CEO Gilles Lanteigne. (Michel Corriveau/Radio-Canada)

"We are not in an easy situation, I think people understood this last winter," said Lanteigne, referring to the contentious emergency room reforms, which would have closed six rural hospital emergency departments overnight but were cancelled about public outcry.

Although Vitalit relies on locums largely to fill ER shifts, it has also called upon a gynecologist/obstetrician, apediatrician, apsychiatrist, someone in medical imagingand asurgeon this year, he said.

Obviously, if we have a choice between a hotspot and not a hotspot, we're going to take physicians that is not from a hotspot.- Gilles Lanteigne, Vitalit president and CEO

If a serviceis deemed essential and must be maintained, Vitalitwill then find a locum from outside the province.

"Obviously,if we have a choice between a hotspot and not a hotspot, we're going to take physicians that is not from a hotspot,"said Lanteigne.

But looking at the list of 16 locums from Quebec, he noted six were fromQuebec City, four from Montreal, three fromBas-Saint-Laurent and three from theGasp region.

"So we're very careful, but you know, as I mentioned,risk-free is not an option here," he said.

"I think that people have learned that any travel can have consequences," he added, referring to the case of the doctor at the centre of the Campbellton outbreak.

"What I can tell you is that we make sure that our policies and procedures related to work isolation are respected."

Chief medical officer of health Dr. Jennifer Russell also sits on the pandemic task force with Dr. Gordon Dow, an infectious disease specialist at Horizon; Dr. Nicole LeBlanc, Vitalit's chief of staff; and the chair, deputy minister of health Grald Richard. (Ed Hunter/CBC file)

On May 28,New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health Dr. Jennifer Russell told reporters she wanted to "clarify the current policy aroundhealth- workers travelling outside the province.

"If any health-care worker living in New Brunswick and working in a New Brunswick health-care facility leaves the province for any reason any reason whatsoever it is mandatory that they self-isolate for 14 days upon their return,"before going back to work, she said.

The province's pandemic task force had issued a directive to health-care workers that same day "to provide clarity," Department of Health spokesperson Bruce Macfarlaneconfirmed to CBC News.

"There were anecdotal reports that reflected confusion between the federal government's exemptions for essential workers at the international border and the provincial requirement for all New Brunswickers to self-isolate upon their return to N.B.," he said in an emailed statement.

Some exceptions

Despite Russell's blanket statement, there areexceptions to the mandatory self-isolation for health-care workers who live and work in New Brunswick.

A health-care workerwhocrossesthe border to provide care to a New Brunswick residentwould beexempt, said Macfarlane, citing as an example a paramedic who transports a patient by ambulance to a hospital in another province.

Health-care workerswho liveoutside New Brunswickbut commuteto the province regularly as an employee or medical staff member of a health-care facilitywould also be exempt.

"These individuals are reminded of the need to travel directly to and from their destination/work/accommodation, follow all guidelines for infection prevention and control and the use of personal protective equipment (PPE), self-monitor for symptoms, avoid close contact with vulnerable individuals (for whom they are not caring) and follow the guidance of the chief medical officer of health."

Stricter to protect most vulnerable

Asked why the isolation requirements are stricter for New Brunswick health-care workers who take a trip outside the province than for those who commute or for locums, he said the people most vulnerable to COVID-19 depend upon the services provided by New Brunswick's health-care workers on a regular basis.

"We need to ensure that patients and long-term care residents are protected as much as possible. With only a few exceptions, their work rarely takes them outside of the province.

"Non-essential travel has not been permitted under the mandatory order for some time, so there should be no other reason for them to leave."

Doctor speaks

Ngola, who is also known asNgola Monzingaand as Jean Robert Ngola Monzinga, told Radio-Canada'sLa Matinaleon June 2 that 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 he drove straight there and back with no stops and had no contact with anyone, and none of his family members had any COVID-19 symptoms at the time.

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

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

He said he's not sure whether he picked up the coronavirus during thattrip to Quebec or from a patient he saw on May 19 who later tested positive for COVID-19.

At a news conference May 27,Premier Blaine Higgsdid not identify Ngola, but described his actions as "irresponsible."

With files from Radio-Canada