Friday 31 December 2021

Private clinics open to partnering with N.B. to address COVID testing backlog

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/covid-19-testing-backlog-new-brunswick-1.6300771

 

Private clinics open to partnering with N.B. to address COVID testing backlog

Province reported backlog of about 3,490 PCR test requests Friday

As the province reported a backlog of about 3,490 requests on Friday, representatives from Distribution Ad Valorem and SRX Health Solutions said the companies would be open to partnering with the government to boost its testing capacity.

"It would be our pleasure to help the government and support the Canadian people in whatever capacity we can," said Stephanie Nazywalskyj, spokesperson for SRX Health Solutions, which operates a COVID-19 testing centre in Moncton, in addition to others across the country.

"It's of huge interest, but whether the government will respond very favourably, we don't know yet."

Marie-Pierre Beaubien, president of Distribution Ad Valorem, said her company would also be open to partnering with the province on testing.

The company operates testing centres at the airports in Fredericton, Moncton and Saint John, where clients pay a fee to receive either a rapid antigen test or a PCR test.

Currently, PCR test samples have to be sent to a lab in Nova Scotia to be processed, but Beaubien said the company will be able to boost its capacity in the next few days after acquiring a machine that will allow it to independently process PCR tests in Moncton.

Distribution Ad Valorem, which offers PCR testing at New Brunswick's three largest airports, would be open to partnering with the provincial government to bolster its COVID-19 testing capacity, said company president Marie-Pierre Beaubien. (Submitted by Distribution Ad Valorem)

"We haven't had any discussion on [partnering] with Public Health of New Brunswick, but if they do approach us in that case, we'll be open to have discussions on that if we do have the capacity of helping them," she said.

The Department of Health didn't respond Friday when CBC News asked if it was open to partnering with private companies to boost testing capacity in the province.

The province has experienced backlogs in its COVID-19 testing capacity off and on throughout the pandemic. It became significantly worse in recent weeks, when record numbers of new cases were reported almost daily, including 572 on Thursday.

On Wednesday, Public Health reported a backlog of about 2,500 requests in the Saint John region, 450 in the Fredericton region and 150 in the Moncton region. Though the backlog dropped to about 2,200 in the Saint John region on Thursday, it climbed to 750 in the Fredericton region, and 540 in the Moncton region.

In a news release Thursday, the province said more resources and extended hours have been allotted to the Saint John assessment centre to help clear the backlog, and members of the Canadian Red Cross are on site to assist.

Other provinces have seen similar strains on testing, forcing some to limit who they offer lab-based PCR tests to.

Facing the same problem, the Manitoba government announced Wednesday that it had struck a deal with Winnipeg firm BioScision Diagnostics. The company says it has offered to process as many as 1,000 tests per day.

MLAs urge action on combating backlog

As the Omicron variant led to surging case numbers in other parts of the world, the provincial government should have taken notice and bolstered its testing capacity early, said Edmundston-Madawaska Centre MLA Jean-Claude D'Amours, who serves as Opposition health critic for the Liberals.

Even in his riding, where no backlogs have been reported, residents have complained of waiting more than 100 hours to receive results, he said.

D'Amours said turning to the private sector might not be the perfect solution for addressing the backlog, but it might be necessary.

"The first thing that the provincial government needs to do is to look around what the other provinces are doing in the country," D'Amours said.

"And I know that in some cases, they are asking for any resources to help. If those resources are coming from the private sector, is that the perfect solution? Probably not, but what else … can the government present to us that will solve the actual situation?"

Liberal health critic Jean-Claude D'Amours said the government should have acted earlier to bolster its PCR testing capacity. (CBC)

Green Party Leader David Coon said provincial health workers have been working flat out during the pandemic, and the current backlog appears to be a result of the Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre in Moncton hitting a "ceiling" in its testing capacity.

With that, the province should respond by using the Saint John Regional Hospital's lab to analyze samples, Coon said, adding he wasn't opposed to seeking help from the private sector.

"I think at this point, whatever arrangements can be made to ensure that we eliminate the backlogs and keep ahead of the testing should be done," said Coon.

"The sooner we can get the capacity increased for the PCR test, the better. It's an essential tool. It's an essential tool not only to ensure people are isolating, but to ensure people [know when they] can return to to work."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aidan Cox

Web reporter/editor

Aidan Cox is a web writer for the CBC based in Fredericton. He can be reached at aidan.cox@cbc.ca and followed on Twitter @Aidan4jrn.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

 

40 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos
Methinks everybody is out for the big COVID score N'esy Pas?
 
 
Graeme Scott
Reply to @David Amos: Nothing wrong with that. See a demand for a service or product, provide that service or product, make money. That's how our economy works.
 
 
Gerald Celente
Reply to @Graeme Scott: That is definitely how the pharmaceutical companies work. Profit is the driving factor in production - not health. They could just as easily be making and selling Agent Orange. Wait a minute... What about Monsanto and Bayer?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Graeme Scott: Methinks there is no doubt the greedy people you admire will get a lot more of our Health Care Funds now that your hero Higgy has tested positive for COVID-19 and non-urgent surgeries cancelled much to the chagrin of many folks who need bypass etc N'esy Pas?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Gerald Celente: Bingo
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
phil mckay
Conservatives have defunded our healthcare system so it doesn’t work….and then sell it off piece by piece
 
 
Graeme Scott
Reply to @phil mckay: Do the math. The Liberal Party of Canada has been in power federally for a majority of the years since Medicare came into being in the '60's. They share equal blame for the decline in federal funding of medicare from 50% at it's inception to near 20% today.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Graeme Scott: How do you explain Higgy et al refusing to give me a Medicare Card and the doctors he adore demanding that I pay them in advance for their tests on my old ticker???  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jimmy Belafonte
Cha ching
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Jimmy Belafonte: Well put

 
 
 
 
 
Rob Sense
Fear the evil private sector...mouhahaha!
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Rob Sense: I am too dumb to know fear and my Labrador puppy does not have enough sense to get out of the rain. However we are just wise enough to never trust anything a politician, taxman, lawyer or cop claims. Methinks that makes us typical Maritimers N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
 
 
Jimmy Belafonte
Grifters gonna grift.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Jimmy Belafonte: Par for the course
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Rick MacMillan
It didn't take long for the vultures to land. Keep your grubby hands off our health care, please.
 
 
Colin Seeley
Reply to @Rick MacMillan:
Should read like take your hands off our grubby health care.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Colin Seeley: I thought you were a nurse???
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Michael Cain
PCR test samples have to be sent to a lab in Nova Scotia to be processed? kidding, right?
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Reply to @Michael Cain: The PCR tests that are administered by the private company are sent to NS. The CHUDGLD in Moncton is only processing tests administered by the province.
 
 
Michael Cain
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: yup, that's what it reads
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: Do you have a stake in this wicked game?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Family angered by 'no service disruptions' claim as surgery cancelled a 6th time

 https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/saint-john-regional-hospital-covid-1.6300593

 

Family angered by 'no service disruptions' claim as surgery cancelled a 6th time

Daughter fears dad could die waiting for surgery and an ICU bed at Saint John hospital, where 95 staff are off

Earlier that day, Horizon Health Network had confirmed that 95 health-care workers were off work "due to COVID-19 related reasons."

However, no outbreaks had been declared and there has been "no disruption to services," Margaret Melanson, vice-president quality and patient-centred care with the Horizon Health Network, said Wednesday.

That statement surprised Sharp, and angered his daughter, Alicia Sharp.

"I hope that it's a misunderstanding," she said, "but services are being disrupted, whether that's what they want the general public to believe or not."

Sharp said her father has been waiting for two weeks for an available ICU bed so that he can have quadruple bypass heart surgery.

On Thursday morning, it was cancelled a sixth time.

"Every time it's been cancelled either because there's no ICU beds or there's no ICU nurses to staff the ICU beds," she said. "He could very well die waiting for the surgery."

CBC News has reached out to Horizon Health Network for updates on the staffing shortages and COVID-19 situation at Saint John Regional Hospital.

As of Wednesday, there were 95 health-care staff off work at Saint John Regional Hospital related to COVID-19. (CBC)

More health-care staff expected to be on sick leave

On Thursday afternoon, Public Health reported a record 572 COVID-19 cases in the province.

In a news release, Health Minister Dorothy Shephard said the province was preparing for the possibility of more health-care staff absences, and said mitigating the impact on the health system "is the top priority."

"Regional health authorities and Extra-Mural/Ambulance New Brunswick continue their efforts to prepare the system for both an increase in hospitalizations and the possibility of more health-care staff out on sick leave," Shephard said, adding that New Brunswickers should stay away from emergency departments unless absolutely necessary.

Public Health also reported that there are 40 people hospitalized with COVID-19, 16 of them in ICU. 

"The rate of people hospitalized and in ICU continues to most greatly impact people who are unvaccinated," the department said Thursday.

Meanwhile, Sharp said her family has no choice but to continue to hope for the surgery to proceed, but they're angered by how the situation has been aggravated by people who have chosen not to get vaccinated.

"[My father] followed all the rules all through COVID, he's triple vaccinated, we've kept our bubble small," she said. "It's frustrating to see that the people who haven't followed the rules all along still take priority."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marie Sutherland is a web writer with CBC News based in Saint John. You can reach her at marie.sutherland@cbc.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

 

74 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
 
 
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated
What if Higgy needed a bypass? 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
David Amos
When is enough enough?
 
 
Dave Peters
Reply to @David Amos: I'm think April 2022.
 
 
Dave Peters
Reply to @Dave Peters: thinking  







Jerry Higgins
Everything is ok. YOU CANT HANDLE THE TRUTH. Why? Truth is in short supply due to COVID!
 
 
Rob Sense
Reply to @Jerry Higgins:
Facts are MIA also
 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Jerry Higgins: Oh So True 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Rob Sense: Yup 
 

 

Too Too Funny No Comment Section Allowed



 
 
 

N.B. COVID-19 roundup: Premier tests positive for COVID-19; non-urgent surgeries cancelled

Province can expect up to 100 COVID patients in hospitals if 1,000 cases per day is reached in January

New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs has announced he has tested positive for COVID-19 after completing a rapid test. 

Higgs participated virtually in a news conference Friday morning to update the public on COVID-19 testing, isolation and contact tracing in light of the dominant Omicron variant.

The premier said he came into close contact with others who were positive and is now awaiting a PCR test result. Higgs, who had received two doses of AstraZeneca vaccine and a booster shot, said he is experiencing mild cold-like symptoms in the form of a cough, sore throat and head congestion. He is isolating with his family.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau conveyed his best wishes Friday for the premier's recovery. 

 

Sorry to hear that you’ve tested positive for COVID-19, @PremierBHiggs - though I’m glad your symptoms have been mild. As you and your family isolate, and as you recover, Sophie and I are keeping you all in our thoughts.

"At the current rate of growth, we could see as many as 1,000 new cases every day within a week," said Health Minister Dorothy Shephard at the news conference.

She said while hospitalization numbers remain relatively low, that is likely to change in the days ahead.

WATCH | N.B. braces for major impact from Omicron: 

N.B. braces for major impact from Omicron

8 hours ago
Duration 6:15
Fearing that cases of the Omicron variant will overwhelm New Brunswick hospitals, Health Minister Dorothy Shephard announced Friday that they will move to emergency services only. 6:15

The provincial government announced that non-urgent and elective surgeries and procedures are being cancelled due to the strain on the province's health-care system from the COVID surge.

"We're on the precipice of the most serious situation our province has seen since the COVID-19 pandemic began," Shephard said.

The minister was not able to provide a figure for the number of procedures that are now cancelled. The provincial update came as New Brunswick once again broke its record for new COVID-19 cases.


https://youtu.be/_Fxql3qloqk

On Friday, the province announced 682 new cases. Active cases now total 3,522.

There are 45 people in hospital with 21 in intensive care. Of those in hospital, 29 are over the age of 60 and 11 people are on a ventilator. No one under 19 is currently hospitalized.

A person between the ages of 50 and 59 in the Saint John region has died as a result of COVID-19.

As well, Correctional Service Canada has confirmed that three inmates and seven staff members at Atlantic Institution in Smiths Crossing have tested positive for COVID-19. 

The new cases reported Friday break down this way:

Moncton region, Zone 1

  • 228 cases.

Saint John region, Zone 2

  • 265 cases.

Fredericton region, Zone 3

  • 43 cases.

Edmundston region, Zone 4

  • 100 cases.

Campellton region, Zone 5

  • 3 cases.

Bathurst region, Zone 6

  • 26 cases.

Miramichi region, Zone 7

  • 17 cases. 

Changes in booster eligibility, PCR testing, isolation requirements 

The province announced that in January it will reduce the age eligibility for those seeking a booster vaccination dose.

To preserve the supply of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine needed for future booster clinics for those aged 12 to 29, groups that are currently eligible for boosters will be offered Moderna, regardless of which vaccine was administered for previous doses.

PCR testing has been limited to select groups as of Tuesday at 11:59 p.m.

For those who are symptomatic, but under the age of 50 and do not live in a vulnerable setting, they are advised to take point-of-care rapid tests.

A positive rapid test will be treated as a positive result for COVID-19 and people will be asked to register their result through a new form that will be available online next week. They will also need to follow new isolation guidelines.

PCR tests will now be reserved for:

  • People in areas at highest risk, including health-care workers and those who live or work in long-term care. facilities, homeless shelters and correctional facilities.
  • People who are symptomatic and aged 50 and over.
  • People who are symptomatic and immunocompromised or pregnant.
  • People who need a PCR test for travel.
  • People who are identified as a priority by Public Health.

Isolation requirements have also changed for individuals who are either vaccinated or unvaccinated and their vaccinated, asymptomatic, close household contacts.

Vaccinated people who have tested positive will need to isolate for five days, while those who are unvaccinated will need to isolate for 10 days.

Close contacts outside of a household will be asked to mask continuously, avoid vulnerable settings and people, and limit their contacts as much as possible for at least 10 days.

Upon release from isolation, people must wear a mask continuously and avoid vulnerable settings and gatherings for the next five days. If a close contact develops symptoms, they will be directed to take a rapid test, unless they meet the requirements for a PCR test.

Due to the high number of cases and lack of resources, contact tracing among the general public is no longer feasible. Instead, people who test positive will be asked to notify their close contacts and members of their household. Case and contact tracing will be reserved mostly for people in vulnerable settings to help prevent transmission among those who are most likely to be hospitalized.

Hospitals reduce services

Both the Horizon Health Network and Vitalité Health Network are reducing services and managing bed capacity to adapt to staffing challenges in managing the pandemic. 

Horizon says 59 surgeries have been cancelled since Dec. 20, and noted that 468 staff members cannot work due to COVID-19. The breakdown includes: 

  • 300 staff members in the Saint John area.
  • 75 staff members in the Fredericton/Upper River Valley area.
  • 67 staff members in the Moncton area.
  • 26 staff members in the Miramichi area.

All Horizon hospitals are at over 90 per cent occupancy, except for the Upper River Valley Hospital in Waterville.

  • Non-urgent medical procedures and elective surgeries will be postponed, unless patients are contacted by Horizon to re-schedule.
  • Non-urgent ambulatory outpatient clinic and professional services are to be postponed. This includes: laboratory services, blood and specimen collection and diagnostic imaging appointments.

For Vitalité hospitals, the following services are being maintained or have been changed:

  • Inpatient care and services: Care and services provided to inpatients will be maintained in all hospitals.
  • Emergency departments: All emergency rooms will be open.
  • Surgical services: Reduced activities; elective surgeries will be postponed.
  • Ambulatory care services: Reduced activities.
  • Oncology and hemodialysis services: Services will be maintained.
  • Professional services (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, audiology, nutrition, respiratory therapy, etc.): Reduced activities.
  • Medical imaging services (x-rays, scans, etc.): Reduced activities.
  • Phlebotomy (bloodwork): Patients can come in for their blood tests.

General visits are still completely prohibited in all hospitals. Exceptions are in place for patients who are eligible for a designated support person, unless otherwise stated for specific hospitals. 

Return to classroom delayed

Beginning Jan. 11, all students from kindergarten to Grade 12 will begin learning from home until Jan 21.

Education and Early Childhood Development Minister Dominic Cardy announced a delay to in-class learning for all students until the week of Jan. 17, when the decision will be reassessed.

In the coming days, the minister said there will be discussions with schools and staff on how to support vulnerable students and families who rely on school services. 

The current interim measures for school sports and extracurricular activities will remain in place during this time.

Thursday 30 December 2021

CPP premiums set to rise in January, a bigger jump than planned

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/cpp-premiums-bump-january-1.6300439


CPP premiums set to rise in January, a bigger jump than planned

Changing contribution rates now would require approval from Parliament and 7 provinces

Here's a rundown of what's happening.

Why CPP premiums are going up

The increase is part of a multi-year plan approved by provinces and the federal government five years ago to boost retirement benefits through the public plan by increasing contributions over time. The increases started in 2019.

A KPMG note in November said the maximum employer and employee contributions will hit $3,499 each in 2022, an increase from $3,166 this year. For self-employed contributions, the maximum amount will be $6,999, up from $6,332.

What makes 2022 different (or the same as 2021)

The pension plan requires contributions to go up alongside the upper limit on earnings that are subject to those premiums.

For next year, the earnings ceiling, known as the yearly maximum pensionable earnings or YMPE, was supposed to be $63,700, an increase of $2,100 from the 2021 limit. But the actual amount is going to be higher at $64,900, for a 5.3 per cent increase, which is the largest in three decades.

The reason is due to the pandemic's lingering effects on the labour market.

The formula to calculate the earnings limit looks at what people are earning on average each week, and compares changes between 12-month periods that end June 30.

What has happened during the pandemic is that average weekly earnings have jumped because there are fewer people working in lower-paying jobs. Without them, the average increase appears more dramatic than what it is.

What happens next

Federal Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole had called on the government to push off this year's bump, saying it wasn't the right time for another premium increase with inflation driving up the cost of living for consumers, and many small businesses still trying to build back their revenues.

Any changes to contribution rates or the earnings ceiling where contributions top out would need the approval of Parliament and seven provinces representing at least two-thirds of the national population — a higher bar than what's required to amend the Constitution.

So premiums are going up.

But there's more

The changes to the Canada Pension Plan aren't done. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has asked Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland to work with provinces to increase by 25 per cent the amount paid out in CPP benefits to widows and widowers.

EI premiums are going up as well once a two-year federal freeze on increases thaws next year. Premiums are set to rise thereafter from $1.58 per $100 of insurable earnings, to $1.83 by 2027. The yearly increases are the maximum amount allowed by law and need to go up to refill the EI fund after it was drained by pandemic-induced demand.

The government's fall economic statement projected that the EI account would come back to balance by 2028.

 

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices


 
5925 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
 
 
 
 
David Amos
Methinks KPMG should make note of the irrefutable fact that everybody knows why I don't believe anything they say about anything N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
David Amos
Methinks KPMG should make note of the irrefutable fact that everybody knows why I don't believe anything they say about anything N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
Derrick Diggar
Reply to @David Amos: Why would anybody know or care what you believe about anything?
 
 
Ian Wright
Reply to @Derrick Diggar: I care
 
 
Derrick Diggar
Reply to @Ian Wright: So what?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Derrick Diggar: Google David Amos CRA KPMG
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Ian Wright: Thanks
 
 
Derrick Diggar
Reply to @David Amos: No.
 
 
Ian Wright
Reply to @Derrick Diggar: yup so what
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Derrick Diggar: Too afraid to do so? 
 
 
Shea Fox
Content deactivated 
Reply to @David Amos: Shouldn't you be suing a lawyer in the states or something?
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated 
Reply to @Shea Fox: Clearly you know why
 
 
 




 
Robert William Trusted by a Community Administrator.
Content deactivated  
Many boomers are retiring soon, libs are getting ready for the boooooom.
If you haven't saved by now, sorry, you're sheet out of luck.
A tracker, beside my name, ignore.
 
 
 
mcnally duncan
Content deactivated  
Reply to @Robert William:
are they tracking you ? are you considered a subversive ? LOL
 
 
Robert William Trusted by a Community Administrator.
Content deactivated  
Reply to @mcnally duncan: yes, lol.
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated  
Reply to @Robert William: C'est Vrai 
 

 https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/cpp-premiums-bump-january-1.6300439#vf-8976100021598

Long lineups, fraying nerves as sites run out of rapid test kits

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/rapid-test-kits-lineups-public-health-1.6299995

 

Long lineups, fraying nerves as sites run out of rapid test kits

Horizon apologizes for frustrating and futile waits, says supply is 'insufficient to meet demand'

As the province grapples with record COVID-19 case numbers and the developing Omicron-variant threat, testing backlogs have grown and residents have been told to lean on free rapid tests to help curb transmission.

Dr. Jennifer Russell and Premier Blaine Higgs both urged New Brunswickers last week to acquire a supply of rapid test kits before the holidays, saying a significant number of recent cases were initially detected through rapid testing.

But for many, the tests are proving hard to come by.

Saint John resident Charles Waddell said he took time off work Wednesday to drive to the mobile site in Grand Bay-Westfield after two futile previous attempts to get rapid tests at Saint John's Diamond Jubilee Cruise Terminal.

When he got there, "there were cars lined up for half a kilometre," Waddell said.

"An hour and 10 minutes into waiting in this line, cars are driving by yelling things out the window. … They're saying 'There's no tests, they're not even set up, nobody even showed up.' "

Waddell said he later heard via social media that the kits had not arrived at the Grand Bay-Westfield site, and that the cruise terminal site was also out of kits.

Residents shared similar frustrations in other regions, posting on social media that the Fredericton site had run out of tests by mid-afternoon Wednesday.

In Edmundston, former mayor Cyrille Simard told CBC News that the pickup location at Edmundston Regional Hospital had also run out.

"I passed by to get some tests at [3 p.m.] and was told to come tomorrow as they ran out," Simard said.

Waddell questioned why this sort of pertinent information wasn't made available on the Horizon Health Network or government of New Brunswick websites.

"Me, I'm old, I'm in my 50s, I'm not even on social media," he said. "So I wasted a big part of my day."

People line up to pick up rapid tests in Fredericton last Tuesday. On Wednesday, the Fredericton test pickup site ran out of tests less than two hours after it opened. (Mrinali Anchan/CBC News)

Not enough test kits available, Horizon says

Public Health did not immediately respond to emailed questions Wednesday about whether there's a shortage of the rapid test kits in the province. 

Russell said last week that there was no shortage of kits, and that more would be delivered in the coming weeks.

"Right now we have 189,000 kits or 1.5 million tests on hand," she said at a Dec. 21 news conference. "We anticipate another 500,000 tests this week and another 750,000 tests arriving the first week of January."

However, Horizon said Wednesday that not enough test kits are being delivered to its pickup locations.

"Horizon can confirm the number of Point of Care Test (POCT) kits being supplied to our hub and mobile pickup locations is insufficient to meet the current public demand," community vice-president Jean Daigle said in an email.

Daigle said Wednesday's hiccups at both the Saint John cruise terminal and Grand Bay-Westfield mobile pickup site were caused by a delivery delay, with the expected kits not arriving until "well after" the clinic was scheduled to open.

Here's how to use a COVID-19 rapid test kit — and what the letters mean

2 months ago
Duration 2:43
The kits handed out in New Brunswick follow an industry standard for infectious disease testing, according to manufacturer BTNX Inc. 2:43

"Given this unexpected situation, the decision was made to close the site for the day and reopen on Thursday, Dec. 30 at 1 p.m. using the stock that arrived from this late delivery," he said.

Daigle noted Horizon is working with the government to address these issues and apologized for the inconvenience to residents.

"We are working with our on-site teams to help ensure that anyone waiting in line to receive a kit can be notified when supplies are running low in order to reduce the number of people waiting unnecessarily," he said. 

In the meantime, some residents said the lack of available kits has them on edge.

Saint John resident Dick Murphy, who was also in that long lineup in Grand Bay-Westfield, acknowledged that the swift and unexpected arrival of the highly transmissible Omicron variant has complicated things for the province but said residents have all been told to test frequently with the rapid kits.

"We're trying to be conscientious and follow the rules," Murphy said.

"If the expectation is that if you are feeling a little off, and the front line of the whole thing is to give yourself a rapid test, then I guess it does concern me."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marie Sutherland is a web writer with CBC News based in Saint John. You can reach her at marie.sutherland@cbc.ca.

  

40 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
 
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated 
Hmmmm  
 
 
 
 
David Amos 
Content deactivated  
Methinks its rather obvious that only the lemmings are permitted to lament N'esy Pas? 
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Content deactivated  
Reply to @David Amos: N'est-ce pas
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated 
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: Not if you speak Chiac
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated  
Reply to @David Amos: BTW I already explained this to you correct? So why rub it in?
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Content deactivated  
Reply to @David Amos: You must be using a different chiac than I have ever heard. The idea is to blend both languages together so I can't figure out your "y".
 
 
Al Clark
Content deactivated  
Reply to @David Amos: You lament a LOT! = lemming?
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated  
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: Perhaps you should scroll down to review what I already explained to you and your buddy Al?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated
Why is it lemmings come to mind? 
 
 
David Smith
Content deactivated
Reply to @David Amos: In your case ..alleged mind.
 
 
David Smith
Content deactivated
Reply to @David Amos: What happened to your other names? lol
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated
Reply to @David Smith: I only have one name and its been on 7 ballots and many legal actions etc Correct?
 
 
David Smith
Content deactivated
Reply to @David Amos: "Correct?"

Whatever happened to N'esy Pas? lol
 
 
Al Clark
Content deactivated
Reply to @David Amos: One name with MANY ID variations ;-)
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated
Reply to @David Smith: Methinks my "alleged" mind deems this to be far more important news yet no comments are allowed thus far N'esy Pas?

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-2020-opioid-overdoses-1.6299762
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Content deactivated 
Reply to @David Amos: Why do you say "N'esy Pas?" Do you mean to be insulting?
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated 
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: Ask Higgy and his blogger buddy Chucky why I speak and write Chiac 
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated  
Reply to @Maxime Babineau BTW Please notice who lamented about my not using Chiac within this thread Hence I accommodated him Correct?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Laurie Savage
Content deactivated 
@David Amos you can call yourself one when you're in the ICU
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated
Reply to @Laurie Savage: Dream on They won't admit me into the ICU unless I pay them in advance

Methinks everybody knows that Higgy et al have denied my right to Free Health Care for political reasons N'esy Pas? 
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated
Reply to @Laurie Savage: FYI I did reply
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Lou Bell
Feds are letting us down AGAIN ! Like with the vaxs they're slow with the test kits .
 
 
Mike McCormick
Reply to @Lou Bell: wrong.
 
 
Christopher Harborne
Reply to @Lou Bell: They state in the article that it's a logistics problem with Public Health or Horizon/Vitalite. You're going to have to set your sights on Higgs to lay this blame.
 
 
Michael Cain
Reply to @Lou Bell: "Right now we have 189,000 kits or 1.5 million tests on hand," she said at a Dec. 21 news conference. "We anticipate another 500,000 tests this week and another 750,000 tests arriving the first week of January."
 
 
Michael Cain
Reply to @Lou Bell: read the article
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Content deactivated 
Reply to @Lou Bell: Thanks for the deactivation
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Reply to @Lou Bell: You do know that we have received the kits right? I'm sure that if we ask they will take on the responsibility of overseeing that they now get to the handout stations. So don't try blaming the feds for the incompetence on our end.
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: You do know that we have received the kits right? I'm sure that if we ask they will take on the responsibility of overseeing that they now get to the handout stations. So don't try blaming the feds for the incompetence on our end.
 
 
Maxime Babineau
Reply to @Lou Bell: wrong
 
 
David Amos
Content deactivated 
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: "Thanks for the deactivation"

Yea Right You did it to me twice
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to @Maxime Babineau: 3 times??? 
 
 
 
 

New Brunswick sees high death toll from accidental opioid overdoses in 2020

38 people lost their lives, the highest toll since at least 2005, according to data kept by CBC News

Thirty-eight people died from accidental apparent opioid overdoses in 2020 in New Brunswick, according to new figures from the federal government.

It's the highest toll of accidental opioid overdoses in the province since at least 2005, according to figures kept by CBC News, as the country faces an opioid overdose crisis, described by some as a shadow pandemic.

While New Brunswick's numbers fluctuate and are not as stark as those in some other provinces — British Columbia recorded nearly 1,700 accidental opioid deaths in 2020, federal data shows — they're still cause for concern, according to chief medical officer of health Dr. Jennifer Russell.

"There is no question that during COVID, during the pandemic, that mental health and addictions issues and substance-use disorders have definitely increased in terms of number of people being affected, and the severity of the types of symptoms that they see," she said.

Russell co-chairs the special advisory committee on the epidemic of opioid overdoses, along with Dr. Theresa Tam, the chief public health officer of Canada.

They released modelling this month indicating that opioid deaths are projected to remain high or increase, with as many as 1,600 to 2,000 people in Canada predicted to lose their lives to opioid overdoses in each quarter of 2021.

"A number of factors have likely contributed to a worsening of the opioid overdose crisis during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, including the increasingly toxic and unpredictable drug supply; increased feelings of isolation, stress, anxiety and depression; and the limited availability or accessibility of health and social services for people who use drugs, including life-saving harm reduction and treatment," a statement from Tam and Russell says.

Figures from New Brunswick show 13 people died of accidental opioid overdoses between January and June 2021. Those figures sometimes climb as autopsies are completed.

"Will this continue to get worse? I think that can happen based on what is happening with the pandemic," Russell said earlier this month in response to a question about opioid overdoses in New Brunswick.

"Certainly in British Columbia, that has been the trend."

Loss of 38 lives 'devastating'

Hearing that 38 people lost their lives in 2020 is "devastating" for Dr. Sara Davidson.

She is the medical director of River Stone Recovery Centre in Fredericton, a clinic providing "trauma-informed treatment for substance use disorder, with a focus on opiate and stimulant replacement therapy." She sees these deaths as preventable.

Dr. Sara Davidson says the province needs to treat underlying issues, such as trauma and homelessness, before it can address substance use disorder. (Gary Moore/CBC)

"There's so much stigma that's associated with substance use disorder," Davidson said.

"It continues to be something that's very hidden. A lot of people that are dying of overdoses are dying because they're using alone, and COVID-19 has just really exaggerated the amount of isolation that everybody is experiencing."

Many of her clients are dealing with mental health problems, trauma and poverty on top of substance use disorder.

Combined with the pandemic and challenges accessing mental health services, it has created what Davidson described as "a perfect storm."

"It's a tragedy because it is actually a preventable condition," Davidson said.

"It's a treatable condition. It's just one that if we remove the veil of stigma, we'd be able to bring it back into being a health care issue, which it is, and then help it not be a disorder anymore."

Overdose prevention site saw about 200 visits in 18 days

In Moncton, the province's first overdose prevention site has been open for less than a month, but has already seen about 200 visits from 50 different people.

The site, open at Ensemble Greater Moncton's downtown office, offers people a place to test their drugs and use them.

This is the room at Ensemble Greater Moncton where people are able to use their drugs. (Submitted by Debby Warren)

After they use, people can hang out in what they call the "chill-out chairs" to make sure they don't have a negative reaction to what they've taken.

"That's 200 possibilities of people who may have injected elsewhere and may not have had somebody to give them Naloxone or access to 911 or any of that," said Joanne Marshall-Forgie, an overdose prevention site co-ordinator with Ensemble Greater Moncton. Naloxone is a medication that can help reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.

Marshall-Forgie, who works in the consumption room with clients, sees the time people spend at the clinic after using their drugs as vital.

That's the opportunity for staff to chat with clients, who may ask to see a nurse or for help getting into affordable housing.

"Because of the [overdose prevention site], research has shown that people are more likely to access rehab services, more likely to access opportunities for detox, more likely to access health care," she said.

For now, its budget means the overdose prevention site can only stay open during Ensemble's business hours, but Marshall-Forgie would eventually like to see the site open 24 hours a day.

Of the 50 clients who have used the overdose prevention site in its first 18 days, she estimated all but five or six people are precariously housed. Some stay in a shelter, but many are sleeping rough.

"Overdoses are still happening at night outside, where people do not have protection," she said.

Unclear when additional overdose prevention sites could open

Davidson said she's been in talks with Ensemble Greater Moncton to look at developing a safe injection site in Fredericton, with wraparound support that helps people access services such as mental health support.

Implementing overdose prevention sites was listed as a priority in the province's addiction and mental health action plan for 2021 to 2025, but the report doesn't specify when additional sites might open.

New Brunswick has seen more than 2,500 take home Naloxone kits distributed in the province since 2018, according to the province. (Sarah MacMillan/CBC)

Along with safe consumption sites, Davidson said, the province needs greater care for "concurrent disorders," when people are dealing with both addiction and mental health problems, along with homelessness.

"Until all of those are holistically looked at, then we're not really going to be able to help end the issues related to substance use disorder."

According to the province's most recent report on opioid surveillance, 2020 also saw "the highest proportion of hospitalizations for accidental poisonings and the lowest proportion of intentional poisonings."

"The total number of opioid-related poisoning hospitalizations in 2020 were within an expected range; however, there is a notable peak in the proportion of individuals aged 60-69 years compared to previous years," the report says.

Since 2018, more than 2,500 take home kits of Naloxone have been given out through distribution sites in the province.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Karissa Donkin is a journalist in CBC's Atlantic investigative unit. Do you have a story you want us to investigate? Send your tips to NBInvestigates@CBC.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/fentanyl

Fentanyl DrugFacts

What is fentanyl?


Fentanyl pills
Photo by DEA
Fentanyl pills

Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid that is similar to morphine but is 50 to 100 times more potent.1,2 It is a prescription drug that is also made and used illegally. Like morphine, it is a medicine that is typically used to treat patients with severe pain, especially after surgery.3 It is also sometimes used to treat patients with chronic pain who are physically tolerant to other opioids.4 Tolerance occurs when you need a higher and/or more frequent amount of a drug to get the desired effects.

In its prescription form, fentanyl is known by such names as Actiq®, Duragesic®, and Sublimaze®.4,5

Synthetic opioids, including fentanyl, are now the most common drugs involved in drug overdose deaths in the United States. In 2017, 59.8 percent of opioid-related deaths involved fentanyl compared to 14.3 percent in 2010.

 
 
---------- Original message ----------
From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca>
Date: Thu, 30 Dec 2021 13:24:42 +0000
Subject: RE: RE New Brunswick sees high death toll from accidental
opioid overdoses in 2020
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Hello,

Thank you for taking the time to write.

Due to the volume of incoming messages, this is an automated response
to let you know that your email has been received and will be reviewed
at the earliest opportunity.

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---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 30 Dec 2021 09:23:07 -0400
Subject: RE New Brunswick sees high death toll from accidental opioid
overdoses in 2020
To: help@recoverynb.ca, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>,
"Mike.Bamford@fredericton.ca \"Roger.Brown\""
<Roger.Brown@fredericton.ca>, "hugh.flemming" <hugh.flemming@gnb.ca>,
"Mike.Comeau" <Mike.Comeau@gnb.ca>, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>,
andre <andre@jafaust.com>, David.Coon@gnb.ca, Jenica.Atwin@parl.gc.ca
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2021/12/long-lineups-fraying-nerves-as-sites.html

Thursday, 30 December 2021

Long lineups, fraying nerves as sites run out of rapid test kits


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/rapid-test-kits-lineups-public-health-1.6299995


Long lineups, fraying nerves as sites run out of rapid test kits
Horizon apologizes for frustrating and futile waits, says supply is
'insufficient to meet demand'

Marie Sutherland · CBC News · Posted: Dec 29, 2021 6:58 PM AT


34 Comments
.

David Amos
Why is it lemmings come to mind?

David Smith
Reply to @David Amos: In your case ..alleged mind.

David Smith
Reply to @David Amos: What happened to your other names? lol

David Amos
Reply to @David Smith: I only have one name and its been on 7 ballots
and many legal actions etc Correct?

David Smith
Reply to @David Amos: "Correct?"

Whatever happened to N'esy Pas? lol

Al Clark
Reply to @David Amos: One name with MANY ID variations ;-)

David Amos
Reply to @David Smith: Methinks my "alleged" mind deems this to be far
more important news yet no comments are allowed thus far N'esy Pas?

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-2020-opioid-overdoses-1.6299762









Laurie Savage
Content deactivated
@David Amos you can call yourself one when you're in the ICU

David Amos
Content deactivated
Reply to @Laurie Savage: Dream on They won't admit me into the ICU
unless I pay them in advance

Methinks everybody knows that Higgy et al have denied my right to Free
Health Care for political reasons N'esy Pas?

David Amos
Content deactivated
Reply to @Laurie Savage: FYI I did reply


 


River Stone Recovery Centre has a multidisciplinary team, composed of:


    Medical Director (Physician)

    Nurse Manager (RN)

    Pharmacist

    Case Managers

    LPNs

    Administrative Workers

    Peer Support Workers

    Project & Research Coordinator

    Security Guards


While operating as an emergency drop in centre, the Phoenix Learning
Centre team included:


    Outreach Coordinator

    Peer & Non-Peer Support Workers

    Cleaner

    Security Guards

    Volunteers

Advisory Committee

The challenges faced by people experiencing substance use disorder are
complex and multifaceted, and we recognise the need to work across
silos and forge strong relationships across sectors and all levels of
government and community.

We are thankful to our advisory committee for their ongoing commitment
and guidance:

    Dr. Imelda Perley, UNB Elder-in-Residence

    Dr. Theveshen Padayachee, Psychiatrist, Addictions and Mental Health

    Kelly Gallagher, Clinic Manager, St. Mary's Health Centre

    Dr. Lacey Blythe, Hospitalist, DECH

    Jennifer Little, RN Manager, DECH ER

    Marchell Coloumbe, Fredericton Homeless Shelters, Board Member

    Const. Mike Bamford, Fredericton Police Force

    Amy Mooers, Social Development Supervisor for Housing and Income Support.


Partners

We have sought input from and work in conjunction with relevant
stakeholders including:

    Individuals experiencing substance use disorder

    First Nations Communities

    Horizon Health Network: Emergency Department physicians and staff,
Fredericton Downtown Community Health Centre, medical experts and
other substance use disorder treatment practices

    Addictions and Mental Health physicians and staff

    Social Development (Capital Region)

    City of Fredericton

    Community-based organizations: Fredericton Homeless Shelters, Out
of the Cold Shelter, John Howard Society, AIDS NB


Two consulting agencies assisted with the establishment of River Stone
Recovery Centre and Phoenix Learning Centre:

    All In Research & Innovation (Human-Centred Design)

    Two Roads Management Consulting (Management & Health Services)


To find out more:

(506) 447- 9634

help@recoverynb.ca

or drop in, we are open 7 days per week