Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ottawa ready to help co-ordinate provincial testing, contact tracing: Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 May, 2020 08:04 PM
  • Ottawa ready to help co-ordinate provincial testing, contact tracing: Trudeau

Provinces looking to reopen their economies will need to scale up and co-ordinate testing and contact-tracing to contain future outbreaks of COVID-19, says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

During a call among Trudeau and provincial premiers Thursday evening, the premiers stressed the need for tracing that reaches beyond provincial boundaries as COVID-19 restrictions begin to be eased and people begin to travel more.

This will require collaboration among the provinces on how this work is done — efforts that Trudeau said Friday the federal government is prepared to help with.

"There will be more travel because of a reopened economy and we need to make sure we have coherence in our approach across the country on both testing and contact tracing, which is something we talked about a lot last night," Trudeau said of the Thursday discussion.

But he said a national approach will require the provinces to be willing to work with Ottawa on a collective effort.

Canada's chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said in a news conference of her own that contact tracing is "one of the absolute cornerstones" of Canada's public health strategy in managing the spread of the virus.

While this work is done at the local level, she said the federal government has offered support.

She also noted there have been increasing discussions about technological applications that could help.

"There are some jurisdictions that have begun to try some of this and are sharing some of the lessons," she said.

South Korea has begun aggressively testing and tracing thousands of people who went to bars and nightclubs in Seoul after a cluster of new coronavirus cases emerged in its capital. Some of this tracing has involved contacting telecom companies to gain location information of people who were in those clubs to determine who might have been infected.

While Canada is looking to work with provinces and different organizations on a national approach to contact tracing, Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains said protecting Canadians' privacy will be central.

"The architecture around privacy principles will be a key feature of any tool that we work with and move forward on," he said.

"As we look at other jurisdictions, we want to be driven by a Canadian solution based on Canadian values and privacy will be front and centre."

Earlier this month, Ontario Premier Doug Ford called for a national plan for contact tracing, noting that each province has been approaching this work differently.

"The federal government is offering to work very closely with the provinces on expanding massively both our testing and our contact-tracing and we certainly hope that the provinces will work with us on that because everywhere across the country, as we reopen, we need to be hypervigilant to possible resurgences of COVID-19," Trudeau said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Arrests Made, Tires Slashed On Patrol Cars In Northern B.C.: RCMP

Arrests Made, Tires Slashed On Patrol Cars In Northern B.C.: RCMP
VANCOUVER - First Nation leaders were among dozens of people arrested as police enforced injunctions against protesters across the province late Monday and Tuesday.    

Arrests Made, Tires Slashed On Patrol Cars In Northern B.C.: RCMP

Halifax Council Studies Quiet Fireworks Displays To Avoid Alarming Veterans

Halifax Council Studies Quiet Fireworks Displays To Avoid Alarming Veterans
 A Nova Scotia city councillor is pushing for quiet fireworks in Halifax out of concern the noise is alarming veterans and people on the autism spectrum.

Halifax Council Studies Quiet Fireworks Displays To Avoid Alarming Veterans

Acquittal Quashed: Homeowner Who Gunned Down Car Thief To Be Tried Anew

TORONTO - A homeowner who gunned down a would-be car thief seconds after a driveway confrontation will again have to stand trial on second-degree murder, Ontario's top court ruled on Wednesday.

Acquittal Quashed: Homeowner Who Gunned Down Car Thief To Be Tried Anew

Prepare For New Coronavirus Like An Emergency, Health Minister Advises

OTTAWA - Health Minister Patty Hajdu is encouraging Canadians to stockpile food and medication in their homes in case they or a loved one falls ill with the novel coronavirus.    

Prepare For New Coronavirus Like An Emergency, Health Minister Advises

Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran
TORONTO - A woman in her 60s who recently travelled to Iran has become the fifth person to contract the novel coronavirus in Ontario, as the province's monitoring of the virus widens.

Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions
Bill C-7, introduced Monday, would remove a provision in the four-year-old assisted dying law that restricted the procedure to those whose natural death is "reasonably foreseeable" — a restriction that was struck down as unconstitutional by a Quebec court last fall.

Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions