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Two new cases of COVID-19 were reported on Saturday in Newfoundland and Labrador, both linked to international travel.
According to a statement from the Provincial Department of Health, the first new confirmed case is a woman living in the province in her sixties in the Eastern Health region, who has returned to the province from Europe.
The second new case is also a resident of the Eastern Health region, a woman aged between 20 and 39 who returned to the province from the United States.
The two cases are not related.
Both individuals have been in solitary confinement since their arrival, with contact tracing underway.
The two new cases bring the province’s total COVID-19 case load to 296. A new recovery from the virus has also been announced, bringing the number of active cases to six.
As of Saturday, 54,439 people have been tested for COVID-19 – out of 178 in the past 24 hours.
Issue of new notices
The Department of Health issued several notices as part of Saturday’s press release regarding travel and rotation workers.
Public health is asking passengers who traveled on Air Canada Flight 7480 from Montreal to St. John’s on November 5 to call 811 for COVID-19 testing. The notice was issued as a precaution and relates to the second positive case announced.
The government is also advising rotation workers on two COVID-19 outbreaks reported in Alberta by the Public Health Agency of Canada at the Canadian Natural Resources Albian Oilands site and the Imperial Oil Kearl Lake Wapasu Oilsands site.
The Kearl Lake site was also at the center of a COVID-19 outbreak in April, which according to the Department of Health resulted in at least two cases in Newfoundland and Labrador in May. More than 100 cases of COVID-19 have been reported as linked to the site by Alberta Health Services.
People working at the site who have returned to the province must call 811 for testing and undergo a full two-week isolation period regardless of the test result.
On Friday, the Department of Health advised some rotation workers in the province to self-isolate after being informed of a COVID-19 outbreak at the Manitoba Hydro Keeyask Generating Station project, about 725 kilometers north of Winnipeg.
Most rolling workers can end their isolation after seven days if they have received a negative COVID-19 test.
These rules do not apply to workers at sites where an outbreak is ongoing.
Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador
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