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Ontario residents are being urged to stay away from hospital emergency rooms unless they are really sick because an increase in visits from people who are well but worried is putting pressure on existing resources, says a Toronto ER doctor.

Dr. Erin O'Connor, deputy medical director of the University Health Network (UHN) emergency departments, said the number of emergency room visits in the hospital network has increased by 25 to 30 per cent. Most of those visits are from people who want to be tested for COVID-19.

"This is a volume of patients that do not otherwise need to be in the emergency department. They are not sick. Some of them have runny noses, slight coughs, mild fevers, that are concerned about the virus, many without any risk factors," O'Connor said.

"They have not travelled and they have not been in contact with a positive case."

According to Toronto Public Health, people will be tested for COVID-19 only if they are showing symptoms, they have travelled outside of the country within the last 14 days, and they have had contact with a person who has a confirmed case of the virus.





COVID-19 symptoms include shortness of breath, cough, fever and sore throat. If a person has a combination of two risk factors, the hospital would recommend a swab, she said.

O'Connor said people with risk factors for COVID-19 and who are elderly or have significant diseases, such as active cancers, cardiac disease, or are transplant patients, should go to the emergency department.

But people who are young and healthy, "without any medical co-morbidities," should stay at home or go to one of the assessment centres, she said.

"If you don't have those risk factors, or the symptoms that we mentioned, or the combination of the two, even if you come to the emergency department and we assess you, that doesn't mean you will be swabbed," O'Connor said

"You run the risk of infecting other people, other very sick and unwell people in our emergency departments."

'It's been quite difficult,' doctor says

Until the hospital began what it calls "droplet precautions," it was taking staff members up to an hour and a half to clean rooms where people were being tested, she said. The cleaning was required to keep patients safe and to make sure air was circulating properly.

Previously, the hospital network was on "airborne precautions," she said. The change means the hospital network can see people faster.

But the increase in ER visits from people who should not be there has been challenging, she added.

"It's been quite difficult," O'Connor said.

The University Health Network includes Toronto General, Toronto Western Hospital, the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and Toronto Rehabilitation Institute.