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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Alberta Health Services adopts enhanced masking directive for acute care sites

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Alberta Health Services (AHS) has adopted an enhanced masking directive at acute care sites to help prevent transmission of COVID-19 within these facilities.
The Use of Masks to Prevent Transmission of COVID-19 Directive, which came into effect on Wednesday, October 11, will allow zone leadership to require enhanced masking by all AHS staff, physicians, midwives, students, volunteers, contracted service providers, as well as workers at Alberta Precision Laboratories in acute care facilities.
Additionally, where the enhanced measures are implemented, masking would be required for patients, designated support persons and visitors in Emergency Departments in acute care facilities. No patient shall be denied services.
Masking will also continue to be required for workers, family/support persons and visitors when:
• Recommended during an outbreak by the Medical Officer of Health according to the Communicable Disease Control Outbreak Guides;
• For staff, as identified by the Attending Work with COVID-19 Symptoms or a Positive COVID-19 Test;
• Or when in contact with a severely immunocompromised individual.
This directive supports zone and site leadership to determine if enhanced masking is necessary, and can include patient care areas, elevators/staircases/hallways, common areas, gift shops, and cafeterias where patient contact could occur in acute care facilities.
Decisions to implement enhanced masking will be based on several factors which consider rate of hospitalizations, number of outbreaks, occupancy, test positivity, and situational context. Site signage will indicate when enhanced masking is being implemented.
Wearing a mask is optional for AHS workers when they are in an area where there is no contact with patients (staff break rooms/meeting rooms, corporate settings, health records departments).
Masking is also optional at continuing care and Addiction and Mental Health settings that are not within an acute care site. However, AHS continues to respect the choice to voluntarily wear a mask in all areas and encourages those who want to wear a mask to continue to wear one.
AHS continues to rely on data, and will engage clinical experts, unions, frontline healthcare workers and other key stakeholders to help determine requirements for enhanced masking.
Masking is just one strategy out of a package of preventive measures. As always, all staff are encouraged to mask, stay home when ill and, to continue to practice diligent hand hygiene as part of ongoing efforts to keep patients, families and each other safe and healthy.


Delia hires new CAO

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The hunt is over and Delia has appointed a new CAO.
It has been a struggle for the village to fill the role, but now Lena Beninger has been appointed CAO.
“I am looking forward to it,” Beninger tells the Mail.
She has municipal experience working for the City of North Battleford and the Town of Hafford, Saskatchewan.
“I am looking forward to learning what is happening there and trying to encourage growth in the village,“ she said.
She currently resides in Hanna, since February.
“Getting to know the people is the first thing I want to do, what they are looking for and the concerns they have, and help them out that way,” she said.
She has learned there is good community spirit in the village.
“I know I am going to have a lot of things to learn, but I know it is just a matter of getting in there and doing it,” she said.
It has been a long time coming for the village, most recently since Rudolf Liebenberg resigned in May of 2022. He was hired to replace Tracy Breese who resigned in June 2021.
Bill Wulff has been acting as interim CAO during this search.

What's on the stove?

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To wrap up Fire Safety Week, members of the Drumheller, East Coulee, and Rosedale halls held an open house at the main Drumheller Fire Hall on Saturday, October 14. The public got to have an up close and personal look at some of the equipment used by the fire department, including the rescue boat and the LUCAS automated chest compression system, enjoy some hot dogs and cake, and even take a ride in a firetruck. Drumheller Fire Chief Derian Rosario and members of the department also put on demonstrations and spoke about safety in the kitchen and with other cooking appliances such as barbecue grills. Using a cup attached to a long pole, firefighters demonstrated the dangers of pouring water on a hot oil fire to extinguish it.


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