TORONTO â About half of Ontarioâs newest cases of COVID-19 can be traced to travel to the United States, public health authorities said Monday. The news comes on the same day the federal government announced stricter border measures â that still allow American citizens to cross into Canada.
âBasically, the numbers are going up very rapidly,â Dr. Barbara Yaffe, associate chief medical officer of health, told reporters at Queenâs Park.
âWe have found the numbers of new cases have almost doubled in a few days ... We have 32 new ones in the last 24 hours. And a significant number of those were exposed [to the virus] in the United States.â
Ten of the 32 new cases are still being investigated, Yaffe said, so their cause is not yet confirmed.
âIâm concerned about people coming from lots of places.â
Public health officials are conducting detailed interviews with every individual diagnosed with COVID-19 to trace their activities and all the people they came into contact with during the two weeks prior to their diagnosis, she said.
Yaffe added that she is worried about travellers arriving from the U.S. still being allowed to enter Canada.
âI am concerned, obviously, about people coming from the States right now. But Iâm concerned about people coming from Italy. Iâm concerned about people coming from lots of places.â
Earlier Monday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Canada is closing the border to most non-residents, but he said U.S. citizens would be exempted, for now.
Watch the prime ministerâs announcement. Story continues after video.
âWe recognize that the level of integration of our two economies and the coordination that weâve had over the last while puts the U.S. in a separate category from the rest of the world,â Trudeau said.
The Canadian Chamber of Commerce applauded the move, saying the exemptions are necessary to safeguard supply chains.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford also cautioned about any moves to shut down the Canada-U.S. border, saying commercial activity needs to continue.
U.S. official says country is âfailingâ
Concerns have been raised about the U.S. governmentâs ability to test and treat people for COVID-19, including by governors and one of the countryâs top health officials.
âThe system is not really geared to what we need right now,â Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told a Congressional committee last week.
âIt is a failing. Letâs admit it.â
Californiaâs governor also called out the U.S. government for providing testing kits that were incomplete.
One epidemiologist told The Atlantic that testing was so limited that journalists should refer to new cases as ânewly discovered casesâ rather than ânew casesâ to avoid giving the impression that the official tally is an accurate representation of the number of confirmed cases in the U.S.