N.B. COVID-19 roundup: Teachers union asks province to reconsider in-person high school classes - Action News
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New Brunswick

N.B. COVID-19 roundup: Teachers union asks province to reconsider in-person high school classes

A person age 60 to 69 has died of COVID-19, the second New Brunswicker to die of the disease this week

Jennifer Russell stands by return to full-time in-person classes for high school students

Woman at podium
Dr. Jennifer Russell, New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health, says the variant first reported in the U.K. is the biggest challenge yet in theCOVID-19 pandemic. (Government of New Brunswick)

Latest

  • One new death in Edmundston region
  • 8 new cases in three zones
  • Confirmed case in Edmundston daycare
  • Variant the biggest challenge
  • 140 active cases
  • List of exposures
  • What to do if you have a symptom

The teachers' union is asking the province to reconsider delayingfull-time in-person high school classes Monday because staffare concerned for their safety and not all supply teachers will be vaccinated.

Co-presidentof the New Brunswick Teachers' Federation Rick Cuming said some teachers are "terrified" of returning to full-time classes because of the recent variant outbreaks.

"If the COVID variant is going to be present in most communities we're not sure that right now is the correct time to have everybody coming back face-to-face," he said. "We know that's the best place for studentsto be educatedbut we're not sure it's the safest place at this point.

The province recently said only "long-term" supply teachers were included in the first stage of the vaccination. This leaves outsupply teachers not booked for more than 90 days in one place, said Cuming.

"We feel that they should have been vaccinated," he said.

The return to in-person classes does not include Zone 4, which is in the red phase of recovery.

Cuming said he has not heard any indication the planned return to high school in-person classes will be reversed over the weekend.

New Brunswick Teachers' Federation co-president Rick Cuming says it's not likely all high school supply teachers will be vaccinated by the time high school students return to full-time in-person classes Monday. (Hadeel Ibrahim/CBC)

But New Brunswick's chief medical officer of healthdefendedthe return to daily in-person classes next week, despite concerns about highly transmissible variants of COVID-19, which are now affecting younger adults in a more serious way.

"We have worked since the beginning of the pandemic, since the beginning of the school year, very closely with education in terms of their operational planning and we will continue to support them as needed," Russell said in an interview Friday with Information Morning Fredericton.

Daily in-personclassesresume on Monday after an academic year that so far has required most high schools to offerstudents alternating days of in-person learning.

Russell said that every time there is a new riskof COVID-19,Public Health works to mitigate it.

Since the closure of in-person classes last year, Public Health tookmany factors into account, Russell said, notingthe negative impacts of staying at home outweigh the positive.

"We're balancingall of the risks with what has been affecting students very negatively from a mental health perspective, from an education perspective and from a developmental perspective," she said.

Russell said a school will close when cases ofCOVID-19 pop up.

Cuming said some schools will delay their opening by one or two days to make sure the teachers who were vaccinated will have their full two weeks of post-vaccination time. He said all full-time high school teachers are vaccinated, but that doesn't stop them from being vectors of spread.

"Teachers don't feel their concerns have been addressed," he said. "Teachers are really concerned about safety."

Cuming said the union is also recommending that the province return all schools in red zones to total virtual learning.

"The safest method to deliver curriculum in a red zone is remotely," he said.

One new death, 8 new cases, confirmed case at daycare

Another person has died of COVID-19 in the province,the second New Brunswicker to die this week of the disease.

In a news release, Public Health said a person between 60 and 69 has died as a result of COVID-19 in the Edmundston region, Zone 4.

The deathbrings the total number of COVID-related deaths in the province to 32.

Earlier this week, on Tuesday, Luc Blanger died of COVID-19 in the Edmundston region.

At age 38, Belanger was the youngest person to die of COVID-19 in New Brunswick,with the previously recorded youngest death being a person in their 40s.

Luc Blanger, 38, of Saint-Basile in Zone 4 died of COVID-19 on Tuesday. (Bellavance Funeral Home/Radio-Canada)

8 new cases in three zones

Eight new cases of COVID-19 were reported on Friday, six of them in the Edmundston region, Zone 4.

The cases break down in this way:

Moncton region, Zone 1, one case:

  • An individual 50 to 59. This case is under investigation.

Fredericton region, Zone 3, one case:

  • An individual 40 to 49. This case is travel-related.

Edmundston region, Zone 4, six cases:

  • An individual 19 or under
  • An individual 20 to 29
  • An individual 30 to 39
  • An individual 40 to49
  • An individual 60 to69
  • An individual 80 to 89

Of the six Zone 4 cases, three are under investigation and three are contacts of a previously confirmed case.

The number of confirmed cases in New Brunswick is 1,694. Since Thursday, 13 people have recovered for a total of 1,521 recoveries.

There have been 32 deaths, and the number of active cases is 140. Nineteen patients are in hospital, including 13 in an intensive care unit. In total, 265,235 cases have been conducted, including1,151 since Thursday's report.

There are currently 140 active cases in the province. (CBC News)

Confirmed case at Edmundston daycare

A positive case of COVID-19 has been confirmed atGarderie des P'tits Amisin Edmundston, Public Health said in a news release Friday.

The child-care centre was closed Friday and contact tracing is underway, the release said, and anyone who has been in close contact with this case will be notified by Public Health."If you do not hear directly from Public Health, you have not been identified as a close contact."

Vitalit postsdaily status updates for Edmundston hospital

Vitalit Health Network has begun posting status reports of the situation at the Edmundston Regional Hospital. On its vitalite.ca website under "news" on the main page, Vitalit notes thereport will be "updated on a regular basis as the situation evolves."

The report notes information on the number of hospitalized patients, number of patients in intensive care,patient transfers and more. Friday's status update contained the following information:

  • Number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients: 12
  • Number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care: 7,all on respirators
  • Number of patients on the COVID-19 Unit: 5
  • Number of intensive care beds: 9
  • Number of COVID-19 patients transferred to another hospital: 2 patients transferred to Fredericton, 1 on April 6, and 1 on April 7.

"Very concerning:" COVID-19 variants move as fast as vaccination efforts, Russell says

3 years ago
Duration 4:15
Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Jennifer Russell urges eligible New Brunswickers to vaccinate as soon as they can.

Variant remains biggest challenge

New Brunswick's chief medical officer of health says the variant that originated in the U.K.is the biggest challenge yet in theCOVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. Jennifer Russell said the variant is more transmissible andaffects younger people with more severe symptoms, requiring more hospitalizations and ICU admissions.

"This variant spreads to the contacts of contacts, sometimes before the first cases identified," Russell said.

As of Thursday, New Brunswick had 119 cases of the variant that originated in the U.K. Of those,46 people have recovered and 73 cases are still active.

That rise in cases means more people are being asked to self-isolate, with requirements that both contacts and contacts of contacts isolate if a variant case is involved.

Russell says it's a race against time to get everyone in New Brunswick a first dose of vaccine.

The goal for first doses is now June 15, moved up about two weeks from the earlier deadline of July 1.

But between now and then, a lot of people are at risk of contracting thevariant if there's an outbreak in their area. In the meantime, the vaccine is more likely toprevent hospitalizations, ICU admissions and death.

"There will be people who will get COVID-19," Russell said. "They will hopefully be asymptomatic or verymildly symptomatic.

List of exposures

Public Health has identified a potential public exposure to the virus at the following locations:

Edmundston:

  • April 5 at 11 a.m., Shoppers Drug Mart, 160 Hbert Blvd.
  • Royal Bank, 48 Saint-Franois St.
  • March 31 between 12 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Scotiabank, 75 Canada Rd.
  • March 30 between 12 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Scotiabank, 75 Canada Rd.
  • March 29 between 8:45 a.m. and 4 p.m. Scotiabank, 75 Canada Rd.
  • March 22 between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. Sparta Progressive Gym, 113, 44thAvenue D

Saint John:

  • April 1, 2021, between 6p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saint John YMCA, 191 Churchill Blvd.

What to do if you have a symptom

People concerned they might have COVID-19 symptoms cantake a self-assessment test online.

Public Health says symptoms shown by people with COVID-19 have included:

  • Fever above 38 C.

  • New cough or worsening chronic cough.

  • Sore throat.

  • Runny nose.

  • Headache.

  • New onset of fatigue, muscle pain, diarrhea, loss of sense of taste or smell.

  • Difficulty breathing.

In children, symptoms have also included purple markings on the fingers and toes.

People with one of those symptoms should:

  • Stay at home.

  • Call Tele-Care 811 or their doctor.

  • Describe symptoms and travel history.

  • Follow instructions.

With files from Elizabeth Fraser, Hadeel Ibrahim, Information Morning Fredericton