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PEI

P.E.I. looking at 'alternative strategies' to address high COVID-19 testing demand

Health P.E.I.'s chief nursing officer says the provinceis using new approaches to tackle the high demand for COVID-19 testsand is looking at coming up with more.

Measures include using small, private health-care team to help tackle testing demand

Some COVID-19 testingclinics on P.E.I. had to shut their doors early due to high testing volumes over the weekend. (Brittany Spencer/CBC)

Health P.E.I.'s chief nursing officer says the provinceis using new approaches to tackle the high demand for COVID-19 testsand is looking at coming up with more.

Marion Dowling said Monday the sustained surge in new cases has stretched resources at COVID-19 testing clinics and labs to the limit.

"We're getting to a point where we should start thinking about alternative strategies," she said.

P.E.I. announced 21 new cases Monday, bringing the active total to 89.

Some testingclinics had to shut their gates early due to high volumes over the weekend.Dowling said the province had to contactsome distributors for additional testing supplies because of the demand for increased testing.

Islanders have also been experiencing long lineups at testing sites the last couple of weeks.

"We do feel for people who are waiting in line and waiting to be tested because we do know that people are quite anxious to get that done," Dowling said.

Additional staff have been helpingdeal with the surges, but Dowling said different factors limit the amount of tests that can be collected on a given day.

"There's alsomore work to do all of the completed lab testing and provide those completed results to the chief public health officer, so the increased number of confirmed cases also adds to the workload," she said.

A small, private health-care team thathas run testing clinics outside P.E.I. is beingusedto help alleviate the issue. Dowling said if things go well, they could hire more third-partyteams in the future.

A call for volunteers

Meanwhile, Access P.E.I. in Charlottetown was out of rapid testing kitson Monday. Schools will no longer be handing them out, as they're now closed for winter break.

Dowling said rapid tests will still be available. The Chief Public Health Office will decide how and when they will be given out.

A call has also gone out to government employees to volunteer to put those rapid testing kits together this week, so they can get as many of them as possible in the hands of Islanders forthe holidays.

With files from Brittany Spencer