Stomach bug ends session early at popular N.B. summer camp - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:43 AM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Stomach bug ends session early at popular N.B. summer camp

Camp Glenburn, a large summer camp on the St. John River, had to end its latest session early because a stomach bug infected many campers and some staff.

YMCA says camp on the St. John River will be disinfected before next group's arrival on Sunday

A sign that says
Camp Glenburn closed this week to disinfect after a stomach-bug outbreak spread through the popular kids' destination in the Kingston area of southern New Brunswick. (CBC)

A Nova Scotia parent says he doesn't hear from his kids' summer camp in southern New Brunswick unless something is wrong.

So when he got a call on Tuesday, a little over a week into a two-week session for his kids at Camp Glenburn, on the St. John River, he knew it was bad.

Sean Myles said he was toldhis 11-year-old daughter had been vomiting and had a fever. He was asked to pick her up at the Kingston-area camp as quickly as possible.

"We're really thankful that they're prepared," he said. "You receive a call like that from a camp, as a parent, of course, you're very concerned, but they made it very clear, very quickly that she was OK."

A smiling man in front of greenery
Sean Myles, of Wolfville, N.S., had to pick his kids up from camp in New Brunswick because of the outbreak. His daughter caught the illness. (Submitted by Sean Myles)

The bug that spread through Glenburn and infected at least 13 campers, according to Public Health, has not yet been identified.

Since Myles lives in Wolfville, N.S., he recruited the help of family to get his daughter to Moncton, where he picked her up.

The next day he received another call. His son needed to be picked up because the camp was shutting down for the remainder of the session because of a stomach-bug outbreak.

This time, Myles's brother, who lives in Fredericton, hopped in hiscar and picked up his own kids and Myles's son as well.

Shilo Boucher, president and CEO of the YMCA Southwestern New Brunswick, which runs the camp, said organizers contacted Public Health as soon as campers started to show symptoms of a stomach bug,which included vomiting and diarrhea.

The outside of a white building with a small sign that says
A 2018 file photo, taken during a norovirus outbreak at Camp Glenburn, shows the outside of the infirmary where campers are sent when they are sick. (CBC)

On Wednesday, she said, the camp was advised to shutdown for disinfecting before the next group of kids was scheduled toarrive on Sunday.

Public Health, which is monitoring the outbreak,told CBC News it gave test kits to the YMCA to determine what the illness is. In the meantime, children and staff who areunwell were encouraged to see their primary care providers if their symptoms persisted or worsened.

Boucher said there arealways illnesses that goaround with a group of 150 campers, but Public Health and an on-site nurse are involved with keeping things running smoothly.

"This is just one of those things that's happening, and our understanding is it's happening across the region in terms of a virus," she said.

"So we're just lucky we caught it early and we only [had to] close camp for a couple of days to make sure that we could do the deep sanitization."

It isn't the first time that a stomach illnessshut down Camp Glenburn.

In 2018, an outbreak of norovirus ripped through the popular summer camp, forcing kids and staff to be sent home early. Camp officials disinfected the camp, but after the new group of campers came in, the camp closed for a second time and didn't reopen for the rest of the summer because of the outbreak.

Boucher said they learned a lot from thatoutbreak. She said the camp has since bought a fogger sanitizing machine that they usedduring the COVID-19 pandemicto get into the camp's nooks and crannies. She said additional hand sanitizer stations were also added.

A man poses with a young girl. A group of kids are in the background.
Jon Holt and his oldest daughter, Molly, pose together after she spent two weeks at Camp Glenburn a couple of weeks ago. (Submitted by Jon Holt)

Myles said he thinks the plan to shut down the camp was reasonable given the illnesses.

Jon Holt, the parent of another camper, agrees. Two of his daughters attended this summer, and one of them was at the session that ended early.

"Obviously she was disappointed," he said, of his 10-year-old daughter.

"She understood that it was for the best. She doesn't want to get the gastro. She's had a gastro bug before.She knows what it's like, and she knows that it's highly communicable."

Since his daughter didn't catch the bug, a few kids in his Fredericton neighbourhood organized a "camp make-up day" at one of their houses with activities and crafts.

"They're making the best of it."

Holt said he would much rather get a call from camp asking for him to pick up his kids as aprecaution thanget a call that there was an outbreak days ago that had spiraled out of control.

Camp Glenburn is a special place for Holt's family. His oldest daughter has been there six times, his youngest has been three or four times and his wife was a counsellor there when she was younger.

"It's a tradition in our family," he said. "It's one of their favourite places on Earth."