Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Opens COVID-19 Isolation And Treatment Centre For Homeless

The Canadian Press, 23 Mar, 2020 07:45 PM

    OTTAWA - A local recreation centre in Ottawa has become an isolation and treatment centre for homeless people with confirmed or suspected cases of COVID-19.

     

    The centre opened Monday near the city's Byward Market, which is a few blocks east of Parliament Hill. The facility has been filled with beds, linens, medical supplies and everything someone would need to serve out their isolation period.

     

    Already, three people are expected stay there in isolation while they await test results.

     

    The centre was set up because the national plan to fight COVID-19 doesn't apply to people who are homeless.

     

    "The whole strategy is based on the assumption that people will seek care when they need it, and that they’ll self-isolate," said Wendy Muckle, president of Ottawa Inner City Health, which provides health care to the national capital's vulnerable population.

     

    She said homeless populations may be at greater risk of contracting COVID-19, and are likely to have worse outcomes because of underlying health conditions.

     

    They're also less likely to seek help because many already have symptoms associated with virus, such as difficulty breathing, she said.

     

    "There's no confirmed positive in the homeless community, but there will be," she said. "We feel pretty good that we got this set up before we had any confirmed cases."

     

    It's also difficult to self-isolate in a crowded shelter.

     

    During the H1N1 outbreak in 2009, providing a space for homeless people to self-isolate was easier because single rooms could be set aside within existing shelters. That has become more difficult because of the growing number of people relying on shelters or sleeping outside.

     

    "Now you have people piled up like firewood in the shelters," Muckle said. "There's no space to put anybody."

     

    The treatment and isolation centre will offer assessments by nurse practitioners and mental health workers, as well as 24-7 health services to those in isolation.

     

    The idea is to test and treat people early to make sure the hospital isn't inundated with cases, Muckle said.

     

    Inner City Health also has experience with managed alcohol and opiates programs, so people with addictions are less likely to leave the centre before their isolation is through.

     

    The Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness estimates as many as 35,000 people are homeless on any given night in Canada.

     

    Other cities have taken steps to keep the novel coronavirus from running rampant through their homeless communities.

     

    In Alberta, Premier Jason Kenney pledged front-line workers, medicine and funding to help the homeless. The Edmonton Expo Centre has been set aside for overflow.

     

    Meanwhile Toronto, which already has a confirmed case of COVID-19 in the homeless community, has set aside hotel rooms so homeless people have a place where they can isolate.

     

    Muckle said what sets Ottawa apart is the integrated ways homeless people can get tested.

     

    Inner City Health launched a mobile assessment van to test people in the community.

     

    Typically, only people who are symptomatic and have recently travelled outside the country or been in contact with a confirmed case are tested for the virus in Ottawa. Those requirements have been relaxed somewhat for the homeless population.

     

    They can also be assessed by paramedics and other homeless health outposts across the city in addition to the hospital and Ottawa's main assessment centre.

     

    Muckle's group says several tests for homeless people have already been administered and people are still waiting for results.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    China, Russia Interfering With Canadian Affairs, Watchdog Report Says

    China and Russia are meddling in Canadian affairs, a national security-and-intelligence watchdog says in a new report that cites evidence of "significant and sustained" foreign interference directed at Canada.

    China, Russia Interfering With Canadian Affairs, Watchdog Report Says

    Wilkinson Says He Will Dump Speculation Tax Even Though Cmhc Confirms It’s Working: NDP

    Wilkinson Says He Will Dump Speculation Tax Even Though Cmhc Confirms It’s Working: NDP
    BC Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson confirmed on Wednesday that he is planning to give real estate speculators a $185 million tax break by eliminating the Speculation and Vacancy Tax if he is elected premier, says the NDP.  

    Wilkinson Says He Will Dump Speculation Tax Even Though Cmhc Confirms It’s Working: NDP

    Permanent Residents Admitted To Canada Will Increase By 10,000 Annually

    The 2020‒2022 Immigration Levels Plan tabled in the House of Commons on Thursday by Marco Mendicino, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, proposes an increase of 10,000 in the number of permanent residents admitted to Canada each year: from 341,000 in 2020 to 351,000 in 2021 and 361,000 in 2022.

    Permanent Residents Admitted To Canada Will Increase By 10,000 Annually

    Delta Police Issue List Of Top 10 Collision Hot Spots

    The area encompassing the bottom of Nordel Way hill, and the Nordel Way on and off ramps to Highway 91, was the place in Delta where you were most likely to have a collision in 2019.

    Delta Police Issue List Of Top 10 Collision Hot Spots

    Delta Police Release Composite Sketch Of South Asian Suspect In Indecent Act

    Delta Police Release Composite Sketch Of South Asian Suspect In Indecent Act
    Police are issuing a composite sketch of the suspect from a January 31, 2020 incident in North Delta Park.

    Delta Police Release Composite Sketch Of South Asian Suspect In Indecent Act

    Possible COVID-19 Exposure At Dental Conference In Vancouver, Health Officials Warn

    Vancouver Coastal Health is notifying attendees of the Pacific Dental Conference 2020 at the Vancouver Convention Centre about a possible exposure to COVID-19 on March 6.

    Possible COVID-19 Exposure At Dental Conference In Vancouver, Health Officials Warn