Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Health workers heading to COVID-19 hot zones

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Apr, 2021 04:52 PM
  • Health workers heading to COVID-19 hot zones

Dozens of health professionals from both the military and federal public service are being deployed to some provinces as the relentless third wave of COVID-19 in Canada continues.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says help is on the way to Ontario and Nova Scotia already and discussions are underway with Alberta.

That includes 60 Canadian Armed Forces service members deploying to Nova Scotia to help out at COVID-19 testing centres.

That province is reporting a record-breaking 96 new cases today, the day after the previous record was set with 66 new cases.

Trudeau says federal support is paying for six nurses and three doctors from Newfoundland and Labrador, who will arrive in Ontario today to help in hospitals in the Greater Toronto Area. A second team will replace them in two weeks.

And he says military personnel will be mobilized in Ontario in the next few days, after the Forces carried out its assessment of what the province needs on Monday.

The military intends to deploy nine intensive-care nurses and three multipurpose medical teams.

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says there are also 62 federal health "human resources" who are volunteering to help in Ontario, and the Canadian Red Cross is sending 13 more nurses with ICU experience.

Another 30 people from the Red Cross are being offered, but Blair didn't specify what expertise they bring.

Trudeau says sending "women and men in uniform to help in Ontario is a serious step" and that Ottawa made this choice "because the situation requires it."

Trudeau says the federal government has also reached out to Alberta on what support the province might need. Alberta is nearing a record number of patients in the ICU, most of them under the age of 60.

He says if other provinces have health professionals they can send to help out in hot zones, Ottawa will support that too.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Police investigate that city's 4th homicide

Vancouver Police investigate that city's 4th homicide
Police were flagged over in the unit block of West Hastings Street for reports of a man possibly suffering from a drug overdose just after 10 p.m. on April 4

Vancouver Police investigate that city's 4th homicide

A man's body pulled out of a Surrey home fire

A man's body pulled out of a Surrey home fire
Firefighters say crews were called from both Surrey and Delta to the area of 96 Avenue and 117 Street. 

A man's body pulled out of a Surrey home fire

Two Vancouver restaurants get business license suspended for breaking COVID19 rules

Two Vancouver restaurants get business license suspended for breaking COVID19 rules
Both the restaurants did not comply with the tougher restrictions announced by the Province and Dr. Bonnie Henry last week.

Two Vancouver restaurants get business license suspended for breaking COVID19 rules

What do we know about the P.1 variant?

What do we know about the P.1 variant?
As of April 1, there have been 483 cases of the P.1 variant across the country, with the majority of them — 379 — in B.C., Health Canada says.

What do we know about the P.1 variant?

Home sales set another record for the month of March in Lower Mainland

Home sales set another record for the month of March in Lower Mainland
Demand was most pronounced in rural and suburban areas. Delta – South saw a 195.8 per cent increase in sales over 2020 – the largest increase in Metro Vancouver.

Home sales set another record for the month of March in Lower Mainland

Online vaccine booking to open in B.C

Online vaccine booking to open in B.C
The news comes as case numbers spike in B.C. with a record-high daily total on Saturday of 1,072 new infections and an outbreak on the Vancouver Canucks hockey team.

Online vaccine booking to open in B.C