Hospital near Toronto reports possible SARS cluster
Health authorities in Canada have closed a hospital to new patients because of a possible fresh cluster of SARS cases and reinforced orders for all staff treating patients in the Toronto area to wear gloves, masks and gowns.
At least 14 patients at Lakeridge Health Centre in Whitby, Ontario, 40 miles east of Toronto, were under investigation for symptoms of severe acute respiratory syndrome.
Some were dialysis patients, and all had pneumonia-like symptoms consistent with SARS, but officials said it was too soon to confirm the cause of the illness.
âWe certainly hope they arenât SARS and we hope itâs something thatâs treatable,â said Dr James Young, the Ontario commissioner of public safety. âWe have to assume they may be SARS.â
Health care workers, family members and others who had contact with the 14 patients were going into 10-day home quarantine as a precaution, while the hospital was closed to new patients.
âWeâre not going to wait until we get some lab tests back. Weâre going to act now like this is SARS,â said Dr Donna Reynolds of the health centre.
A second SARS outbreak in Canadaâs largest city has been mostly brought under control. Officials reported 66 probable cases yesterday, down two from the previous day, of the illness that has killed 33 patients since first appearing from Asia more than three months ago.
Health officials warn that more patients in critical condition could die.
Toronto authorities thought they had the illness under control after the initial cluster in March and April had mostly disappeared by mid-May. An undiagnosed case at North York General Hospital then led to a further spread among other patients, family members and health care workers.
There was no immediate known link between the possible Whitby cluster and previous SARS cases. Two brothers were being treated for SARS at an affiliated hospital in Oshawa, Ontario, near Whitby, but officials said they were unable to connect them to the Whitby hospital.
Concern over possible hidden SARS cases and reports that some hospitals were failing to require staff to wear protective garb brought the latest directive for all Toronto area hospitals, Dr Young said.
It reinforces previous regulations by authorities, including immediate reporting of suspected SARS cases and for all staff dealing with patients to wear the extra layers of protective clothing.
âWe want to ensure ourselves we donât have any hidden cases anywhere,â Dr Young said. âWeâre trying our best to cover things we canât even think about, and in this case, thatâs what happened. The unthinkable happened.â
On Friday, health officials closed the maternity ward at Torontoâs Mount Sinai Hospital after a medical student who helped deliver babies there came down with SARS symptoms.
Officials said yesterday that none of the patients, newborn infants or others from the maternity ward had displayed symptoms of the illness so far.
Also yesterday, several Ontario nurses wearing masks with âmuzzled, silenced and ignoredâ written on them demonstrated at the Ontario legislature for an independent inquiry of how health officials handled the SARS outbreak.
Nursing groups have complained their members were ignored when they raised concerns about the second SARS outbreak last month. They also want better pay and working conditions to confront the illness.





