Ottawa Public Health is calling on any resident who might have travelled to the United Kingdom or South Africa over the holidays to present for a coronavirus test to help trace the possible spread of new variants of COVID-19.
Dr. Vera Etches said in a news conference Tuesday that the new variants emerging in other parts of the world, especially the faster-spreading variant first identified in the U.K., will affect Ottawa’s ability to flatten the city’s surging COVID-19 curve.
“It’s more transmissible. It would make bringing the virus levels down in our community even more difficult,” Etches said of the U.K. variant. OPH identified multiple cases of this new strain in Ottawa late last year.
Another variant, identified in South Africa, carries multiple genetic mutations, which some experts worry could make current vaccines less effective.
In an effort to gauge the full spread of these variants in Ottawa, OPH is asking any travellers who travelled to or through the U.K. or South Africa to present at an assessment centre for testing, even if asymptomatic. Close contacts of these travellers are also asked to get tested.
While Ottawa’s COVID-19 numbers were trending well before the holidays, a spike in the early days of the new year has put the city “firmly in the red” on the province’s coronavirus framework.
The nation’s capital joined the rest of Ontario in a 28-day lockdown on Dec. 26, though Etches noted the city’s current COVID-19 spike would be a result of pre-holiday behaviours.