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Small team, 'big impact': N.L. medical volunteers depart for Ontario

A nine-person team of health-care professionals boarded a plane on Tuesday morning, heading to Toronto to help manage a surge in critically ill COVID-19 patients.

Nine-person team set to begin work in Toronto Wednesday

Dr. Allison Furey, an emergency physician at the Janeway children's hospital in St. John's, is a member of a nine-person team from Newfoundland and Labrador set to start work in Toronto on Wednesday. (CBC)

In a short farewell at a St. John's airport hangarTuesday morning, a contingent of Newfoundland and Labradorhealth-care workers spoke of what's ahead as they fly toToronto in an effort to alleviate a few of their counterparts dealing with a crushing surge of COVID-19 cases.

"They're struggling, and they have been for over a year," said Dr. Allison Furey, amember of a nine-person teamwho will be deployed in downtown Toronto's University Health Network starting on Wednesday.

Furey has spent the last 11years volunteering on medicalrelief trips to places such as Haiti, along with her husband, Premier Andrew Furey, who long before turning to politics founded the international medical relief organization Team Broken Earth.

"When an opportunity comes to help your own country, I'll raise my hand for that," she told reporters.

The Ontario aid teamis comprised of three doctors, five nurses and a nurse practitioner. Eight of them boarded a Hercules C-130 military aircraft in St. John's,with the ninth member picked up en route in Deer Lake.

All are volunteers.Critical care nurse practitioner Jennifer Hinks saidshe could not say no when the magnitude of theneed that Ontario faced became clear.

After working the front lines of two waves of the pandemic in Newfoundland and Labrador, Hinkssaid she is ready to face the third.

WATCH | Dr. Allison Furey andJennifer Hinks talk about their medical mission to work in Toronto hospitals:

'We're all linked to each other,' says Ontario-bound nurse from N.L.

3 years ago
Duration 0:50
A nine-member health-care team from Newfoundland and Labrador is headed to Toronto to give some relief to medics swamped by patients with COVID-19.

"We've been very fortunate in our province to regain our strength and our physical and mental well-beingin between waves, and unfortunately the health-careproviders across the country, such as those in Ontario, just haven't had that time," she said.

The volunteers came together after Ontario Premier Doug Ford asked for help to deal with a soaring caseload of severely ill patients, as well as caseloads fuelled by highly contagious virus variants.

After arriving in Toronto, members of the team spoke to local reporters, who asked among other things why people from Newfoundland and Labrador are known for their generosity.

"I think that people in Newfoundland have big hearts," Allison Furey said.

"They have a lot of energy, and it's just the way that Newfounlanders are. They are giving to their communities, both locally and in their own country and abroad."

Ready to work

Tuesday's team ismeant to be a trial run for additional support.

Various members will stay anywhere from 10 days to three weeks, with one person slated to remain until the end of May. They have been matched with their counterparts already, Andrew Fureysaid Tuesday, so that they canbegin "working almost immediately" in critical care units.

A medical team from Newfoundland and Labrador arrived Tuesday on a military transport plane at Pearson International Airport in Toronto. They will be working with the University Health Network in downtown Toronto. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press )

"It's a small team, but small teams can have big impacts," hesaid.

"This is an example of Newfoundlanders and Labradorians stepping up to answer the call, and Ithink we should all be collectively as a province proud of these individuals and their families for making this sacrifice to help the Canadian collective effort," he said.

They're set to help the Torontohospitals manage ICU cases and staffing pressures, according to Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott.

AndrewFurey, an orthopedic surgeon, said he helped his wife pack the night before, and added that he felthe was missing out on the relief effort.

"There is a passion there that you can't get rid of, just because you take on a new role.So there is a big part of me that wishes Iwas going," he said.

This Hercules C-130, seen here in St. John's, transported the team. The federal government is paying for the team's Ontario mission. (Patrick Butler/Radio-Canada )

According to Andrew Furey, between 20 to 40 Newfoundland and Labrador workers volunteered to go.

The team is funded by the federal government. All members have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

On Monday, Ontario reported 3,510 new cases of COVID-19, while Newfoundland and Labrador had four.

Read morefrom CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Peter Cowan and Patrick Butler

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