Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 cases will go up as Alberta reopens many activities: health experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2020 06:26 PM
  • COVID-19 cases will go up as Alberta reopens many activities: health experts

Health experts say it makes sense for Alberta to take the next step in reopening its economy, but warn there will be an uptick in COVID-19 cases due to an inability to physically distance in some situations.

Premier Jason Kenney announced Tuesday that everything from casinos, gyms and arenas to spas, movie theatres and pools will be allowed to reopen starting Friday.

More people will be allowed to book campsites and sit in restaurants at the same time.

Fifty people will be allowed to gather indoors and up to 100 will be able to congregate outside.

Experts both within and outside Alberta said the province's COVID-19 numbers support moving forward and lifting restrictions.

"The most impressive number to me is that we've been doing about 4,000 tests a day and about a half a per cent are positive — this is an incredibly low number," said Dr. Christopher Mody, who's the head of microbiology, immunology and infectious disease with the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary.

"I don't know anywhere else in the world where ... they are getting that kind of number."

Alberta has said it is among the world leaders in per-capita testing. To find and reduce future outbreaks, people can now be tested for COVID-19 even if they are asymptomatic.

Dr. Colin Furness, an epidemiologist and assistant professor at the Faculty of Information and Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto, said testing is part of Alberta's narrative.

"It's way ahead of everybody on a per capita basis and staying out in front," he said. "It was eye popping."

Furness said he initially felt anxiety when he saw how much Alberta was reopening Friday, but then he looked at how few new cases the province is reporting each day.

Alberta reported 47 new cases Wednesday, bringing its number of active cases to 371. Of those, 42 people are in hospital — including six in intensive care. So far 151 people have died.

Furness said he questions whether the province will be able to scale up its testing even more to deal with the fact it will get more cases.

"You are plowing ahead with major increases in physical contact between people that's obviously quite purposeful," he said. "I'm not going to say it's bad ... but you really want to brace for an uptick in cases.

"You will be successful if you are able to come down like a bag of hammers every time there's a new case, doing the contact tracing and testing really aggressively."

Dr. Stephanie Smith, an infectious disease expert at the University of Alberta, agreed it makes sense for the province to move forward but admitted she's a bit anxious about how it will play out.

"It's confusing," she said. "They're saying you can open up and there's no restrictions on restaurants but you need to maintain physical distancing. It's hard to actually do both of those.

"Rightly or wrongly, my anticipation is that a lot of the physical distancing will disappear."

Smith said she expects to see more cases, but hopes it doesn't result in higher admissions to hospitals and intensive care units.

"I think we can probably weather it."

All three experts said large gatherings with strangers — including in restaurants, places of worship and casinos — are the biggest risk.

They suggested people wear masks indoors where physical distancing isn't as easy.

"Everyone needs to look at how much risk they are willing to take, really," said Smith. "Restaurants are open, but does that mean you should necessarily go? If you are in a higher-risk category ... then it might not be the safest thing to do.

"There's still risk out there."

MORE National ARTICLES

Hope Floats: Alberta Town Ravaged By Flood Rolls Out Parade Float For COVID-19

HIGH RIVER, Alta. - A parade float parked on a downtown street in High River, Alta., seems strangely out of place in a world dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.    

Hope Floats: Alberta Town Ravaged By Flood Rolls Out Parade Float For COVID-19

N.S. Woman Describes Struggles Of A Beloved Father On Ventilator With COVID-19

The daughter of a Nova Scotia man relying on a ventilator to breathe wants Canadians to know that COVID-19 can deny loved ones the ability to hold one another in their time of deepest need.

N.S. Woman Describes Struggles Of A Beloved Father On Ventilator With COVID-19

Covid-19 Spreads To Vulnerable Communities As New Provinces Report Deaths

COVID-19 continued its unforgiving march into new areas of the country on Monday, sweeping through long-term care homes and religious communities, as two provinces reported their first deaths linked to the virus.

Covid-19 Spreads To Vulnerable Communities As New Provinces Report Deaths

The Latest Developments On Covid-19 In Canada

The latest news on the COVID-19 global pandemic (all times Eastern):    

The Latest Developments On Covid-19 In Canada

Canada's Spy Service CSIS Moves Quietly Ahead With Data-crunching Plans: Documents

Canada's Spy Service CSIS Moves Quietly Ahead With Data-crunching Plans: Documents
OTTAWA - Canada's spy agency is moving quietly ahead with plans to collect and use databases containing personal information about Canadians, newly released documents show.    

Canada's Spy Service CSIS Moves Quietly Ahead With Data-crunching Plans: Documents

Prime Minister Announces New Partnerships With Canadian Industries To Fight COVID-19

Canadian businesses and manufacturers are stepping up to fight the COVID-19 pandemic. The Government of Canada is working with these companies to ensure our health care workers have the tools they need to care for Canadians across the country.

Prime Minister Announces New Partnerships With Canadian Industries To Fight COVID-19