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Nova Scotia

N.S. COVID experts question Alberta's race toward normality

'What you're seeing is Alberta just not doing infection control anymore at even a basic level' but experts agree restrictions on travellers from Alberta aren't necessarily the answer.

But further restrictions on travellers from Alberta aren't necessarily the answer

Calgarians enjoy an outdoor concert series that wrapped up on Wednesday, the same day the province announced sweeping changes to its COVID-19 public safety measures. (Rachel Maclean/CBC)

Two Nova Scotians who work in epidemiology and infectious disease say they're concerned aboutAlberta's movetoward eliminating COVID-19 public health measures, but say it doesn't make sense for Nova Scotia to implement further restrictions on travellers coming from that province.

"The cases will go up.The number of people getting sick will go up," Dr. Lisa Barrett, an infectious disease researcher and clinician at Dalhousie University, said of the potential impact of the changes on Alberta.

"That does concern me because it feels like at a policy level, people are just tired and they're making decisions that used to be science-based and they just arereversing things without really considering that a little bit more information and a little bit more time over the next six months would be a far better, informed way of doing this."

On Wednesday, Alberta announced it will significantly loosen COVID-19 safety measures over the next two and a half weeks.

Starting today, contact tracers are not notifying close contacts of people who testpositive, quarantiningfor close contacts is recommended rather than mandatoryand asymptomatic testing of close contacts is no longer recommended.

Alberta's chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, delivers an update on the COVID-19 situation in Alberta. On Aug. 16, that province is lifting the isolation requirement for people who test positive for COVID-19. (Chris Schwarz/Government of Alberta)

Starting Aug. 16, people in Alberta who testpositive will not be required to isolate and mask mandates will be lifted. On Aug. 31, COVID-19 testing will no longerbe available at assessment centres, but will be available in hospitals and inprimary care settings such as doctor's offices.

Barrett said measures such as maskingand testing are "easy things" that don't prevent people from socializing.

"Why would we get rid of those right now? I'm at a loss to understand why we have to treat this like business as normal until we know that business should be normal. I don't feel reassured about that yet."

Despite that, Barrett said it doesn't make sense for Nova Scotia to place further restrictions on those entering the province from Alberta.

"I don't think it's a province-specific thing that I advocate for," she said. "I'm saying I think it's too early for us to roll back in any province yet."

Dr. Lisa Barrett, an infectious disease researcher and clinician at Dalhousie University, says introducing Alberta-specific travel restrictions is not the answer. (Colleen Jones/CBC)

Barrett said despite increasing vaccination rates across Canada, there are many vulnerable people both vaccinated and unvaccinated who are still at risk.

"Basically, by going with this plan right now, we're accepting that those people, those most vulnerable, are going to be put at higher risk for getting the infection,"she said. "Vulnerable people shouldn't have to pick up the slack when we have tools to prevent it. That's silliness."

Nova Scotia has a track record of being prudent with COVID-19 measures, Barrett said, and she hopes those measures will be reintroduced "early and fast" if there's a threat from Alberta or elsewhere.

Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia's chief medical officer of health, was not available for an interview on Thursday about whether the province was consideringnew restrictions for those travelling from Alberta.

Nova Scotia has many rotational workers who travel between Alberta andNova Scotia, as well as family members in Nova Scotia who travel to Alberta for visits.

'We're going to be dealing with outbreaks'

Kevin Wilson,an epidemiologist working in clinical data management and analysis, saidAlberta's sweeping changes are"at the absolute extreme end" of the speed of transition toward normality.

"What you're seeing is Alberta just not doing infection control anymore at even a basic level."

Like Barrett, he said cracking down on visitors to Nova Scotia from Alberta isn't necessarily the answer.

"I don't think it's really an Alberta-specific problem," said Wilson. "It's Alberta, but then the next time it's B.C. or Quebec or P.E.I., or, you know, wherever else.... I think in the long run, we're going to be dealing with outbreaks."

Rather than placing restrictions such as isolationrequirements for people from certain provinces, Wilson simply wants to see Nova Scotia come up with a plan for handling future outbreaks no matter wherethe source once reopening is complete.

"Once they get to the end, is there a mechanism for them to take a step back?"

In a news release Wednesday, the Alberta government said the changes will bring its COVID-19 measuresin line with those used for influenza and other viruses, and notedthat its vaccine rateswill help reduce the risk of infection and severe outcomes.

About 64 per cent of Albertans have received one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, and almost 55per cent are fully vaccinated. Those vaccination rates are lower than Nova Scotia's, where nearly 76 per cent of the population has one dose and 61 per cent have two doses.