No new cases of COVID-19 as health officials continue call for testing - Action News
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No new cases of COVID-19 as health officials continue call for testing

The source of a five-case cluster in St. John's is still under investigation, the Health Department said Monday, as it asks patrons of three downtown establishments to seek testing.

Source of 5-case cluster in St. John's still under investigation

There is still no confirmed source of a small cluster of COVID-19 cases announced last week in the Eastern Health region. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Public health officials in Newfoundland and Labradorare continuing theirinvestigation into a cluster offive COVID-19 cases in the Eastern Health region, while reporting no new cases Monday.

Those five cases were announced, rapid-fire, last week. It's not clear yet to contact tracers how the initial infection occurred, the Department of Health said in an update.

As it investigates, the department is reiterating its request that anyone present atthree establishments in downtown St. John's, duringthe specified dates and times listed below, to call 811 to arrange testing:

  • The Duke of Duckworth,325 Duckworth St., on Jan.20 from 3:30 p.m. to closing time.
  • The Rose and Thistle Pub,208 Water St., on Jan.20 from 4:30 p.m. to closing time.
  • Piatto Pizzeria & Enoteca,377 Duckworth St., on Jan. 22from 6p.m. to closing time.

There are 13 active cases of the illness, with 10 of those in the Eastern Health region. One person is in hospital, the department said.

A suspected case linked to a daycare, also in the Eastern Health area, has not yet been confirmed, according to the update. No children or staff at that daycare have tested positive.

Since March, 408 people have contracted the virus, and80,287 people have been tested.

As of Wednesday, the province had administered 10,080 doses of vaccine, with an update expected this week.

Labrador-Grenfell Health said Saturday that due to national delivery delays of the Moderna product,it would postpone its immunization program for seniors that had been scheduled for Feb. 8.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called those delays "temporary" in a media conference last week.

The country is also contending with aplanned upgrade to the Pfizer-BioNTech manufacturing plant, which has also led to shipment delays across Canada.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador