Military, civilian health workers heading to hot zones in Ontario, Nova Scotia
OTTAWA — Dozens of health professionals from the military, federal government, Canadian Red Cross and even Newfoundland and Labrador’s front-line hospitals are being redeployed to COVID-19 hot zones during the relentless third wave of the pandemic in Canada.
Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said the average number of new cases over the last week has declined slightly, but more people are dying, and the number of people in hospitals keeps growing.
Nova Scotia, once part of the oft-praised Atlantic bubble, is going into full lockdown Wednesday facing its worst outbreak yet, with a record 96 new cases reported Tuesday.
The Canadian Armed Forces is deploying 60 service members to help with testing in Nova Scotia, said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. It also sending three military teams of nurses and medical technicians, and another nine military nurses with ICU experience to Ontario, where intensive care units and hospital wards are bursting.


