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WHO puts Toronto back on Sars list

Tom Cohen
Monday 26 May 2003 19:00 EDT
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Precautions taken at Toronto hospitals since last month's Sars outbreak have failed to prevent dozens of possible new cases, health officials conceded Monday as the World Health Organization put Canada's largest city back on its list of places affected by the virus.

The WHO designation is routine for places with new cases of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or Sars, and a spokesman for the UN health agency said Toronto was nowhere near another WHO warning against travel to the city.

Canadian health authorities scrambled to limit any further spread while investigating how eight probable new cases and 26 suspected cases slipped through upgraded monitoring and reaction systems designed to halt the spread of Sars.

The new cases included two deaths. A third death, that of a patient who had been sick for months, raised the overall toll in the Toronto area to 27 dead among more than 150 cases – the biggest outbreak outside Asia.

Toronto had been removed May 14 from the WHO list of Sars-affected areas after more than 20 days passed without a new case being reported. The new cluster is believed to come from an elderly patient whose case dates from April 19.

The 96-year-old man developed pneumonia after surgery in an orthopedic ward at North York General Hospital. He turned out to have undiagnosed Sars and infected health care workers, other patients and visitors on the ward, officials said. A patient transferred from the orthopedic ward to St. John's Rehabilitation Hospital was considered the likely source of four more cases under investigation, they said.

The outbreak prompted the US. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to issue a travel alert for Canada last week, a step short of advising against unnecessary travel there.

WHO officials stressed there were no plans to reinstate a travel advisory for Toronto. That requires specific criteria such as proven export of the illness. The agency imposed a travel advisory on Toronto on 23 April but lifted it a week later when Canada promised to upgrade monitoring of international travelers.

In response to the new cases, health authorities re-imposed strict controls on Toronto-area hospitals – closing those where the new cases were found to new patients, limiting access to emergency rooms in all others, with staff required to wear protective masks and gowns and to take the temperature of anyone entering.

The new Toronto cases showed the need to upgrade so-called "new normal" guidelines for dealing with potential Sars cases at hospitals, which were imposed after the initial outbreak, officials said.

"What it tells us at the moment is that there is a failure in our system of management," said Dr. Allison McGeer, head of infection control at Mount Sinai Hospital who has recovered from Sars she contracted in the early days of Toronto's initial outbreak in March.

Dr. Paul Gully, a federal health official, called the new cluster unexpected and a cause of concern but said visitors to Toronto have little to worry about because the illness remains isolated in hospitals that are closed to new patients.

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