Residents react to the return of masks at Guelph General Hospital
Mask are now required in clinical areas at Guelph General Hospital after a COVID-19 outbreak was declared earlier this week.
As of Thursday evening, eight patients and seven staff members had tested positive for the illness.
Jan Teeter visited the hospital on Friday and said she had already heard about the masking rules.
“The woman I'm going to see is pretty sick,” she said. “If it's going to keep her safe, then I'll put it on and happily wear it.”
While Teeter will be following the rules, she hopes they aren’t reintroduced elsewhere.
“I was a teacher. I'm retired now, but if I don't have to see a mask again, I'll be happy,” she said.
Jennifer Randall got a test done at the hospital and said the masks “sort of give you minor flashbacks of the worst” of the pandemic.
While she doesn’t want to relive those days, wearing a mask at a hospital is an easy thing for her to do if it helps those who need it the most.
“Obviously they're ill, or we're getting tested. So for sure, if that's a vulnerable place, then they deserve to be protected,” Randall said.
Public health weighs in
According Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Public Health, the spread of COVID-19 is less of a threat in the summer months.
Despite what many would hope, though, it hasn’t completely disappeared.
“Even though COVID is less urgent, less acute, less impactful at the community level, it's important for us remember that it hasn't gone away,” explained Dr. Matthew Tenenbaum, the associate medical officer of health for Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Public Health.
He said we’ve come along way since the height of the pandemic thanks to safety measures strategically put in place to stop the spread of the virus.
“People did come out and get their vaccines and get boosters, and our community really responded to that ask when we had it during the pandemic,” Tenenbaum said. “That has helped put us in a better place today than we were back then.”
It’s important to stay on top of outbreaks or stricter rules could return.
“We're over the whole mandate, curfew and restrictions. We're really hopeful it doesn't come back,” said Sheena Lalani, who visited the hospital Friday.
The last time Guelph General Hospital had a mask mandate was in September 2023.
The hospital's current COVID-19 cases are the 5 west unit and 7 east unit. Visiting is prohibited in those two units during the outbreak.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Terror suspect entered Canada with student visa in June 2023, immigration minister confirms
A Pakistani citizen who was arrested last week in Quebec and charged with plotting a terrorist attack in New York City came to Canada on a student visa in June 2023, Immigration Minister Marc Miller has confirmed.
PwC plans to track employees' location while at work. Is this practice legal in Canada?
As PricewaterhouseCoopers plans to enforce its back-to-office policy by tracking employees in the U.K., one employment lawyer explains whether the practice is legal in Canada.
NDP MPs embrace distance from 'radioactive' Trudeau brand, as Singh convenes caucus in Montreal
Just days after demolishing his deal with Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is holding a three-day strategy session with his MPs in Montreal. There, his MPs are embracing their new-found distance from what one called Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's 'radioactive' brand.
'A decisive time': Mark Carney calls new role 'an honour,' dodges questions about running for office
In his first press conference on the job, newly appointed Liberal economic growth task force chair Mark Carney said it's 'an honour' to serve in his new role, but wouldn't say whether he plans to run for political office, or whether he'll recommend changing the controversial carbon tax.
Joly says Canada bars any Canadian-made arms from reaching Gaza
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says Ottawa prohibits any Canadian-made weapons from reaching the Gaza Strip.
U.S. presidential historian predicts results of November elections. Here's who he says will win
An American presidential historian is predicting a Kamala Harris presidency as the outcome of the upcoming U.S. elections in November.
7-Eleven ordered to pay B.C. woman $907K for pothole injury
A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has ordered 7-Eleven Canada to pay a woman more than $900,000 in damages after she tripped on a pothole and broke her ankle in the parking lot of a convenience store.
Young camper diagnosed with life-threatening Powassan virus during northern Ont. trip
A nine-year-old boy contracted an often-deadly disease during a in northern Ontario camping trip in July.
Buyers say they lost life savings to a Saskatchewan company selling luxury vacation condos
In 2022, Tanya Frisk-Welburn and her husband bought what they hoped would be a dream home in Mexico.