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Morning Update: February, 2020: The world s lost month in fight against COVID-19

Morning Update: February, 2020: The world s lost month in fight against COVID-19
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Bureaucrats, not docs, reign supreme at lab: ex-researcher

Bureaucrats, not docs, reign supreme at lab: ex-researcher By: Dylan Robertson Last Modified: 6:15 AM CDT Tuesday, May. 11, 2021 | Updates The National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES/John Woods OTTAWA Researchers at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg are left to the whims of Ottawa bureaucrats instead of scientific experts. Winnipeg Free Press OTTAWA Researchers at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg are left to the whims of Ottawa bureaucrats instead of scientific experts. That’s according to a senior epidemiologist who left the Public Health Agency of Canada just months before the COVID-19 pandemic. There are lots of things that went on in Winnipeg that Ottawa was absolutely unaware of, said Rev. Michael Garner, who is now an Anglican priest after 13 years at PHAC.

Public Health Agency refusing to disclose uncensored documents on Winnipeg virus lab

or provide uncensored internal documents, saying it can t release personal information under federal privacy laws. It did provide 271 pages of documents to the committee in advance of Monday s meeting, but much of it was censored. We ve redacted documents where the information pertains to personal information, investigations or security matters. The reason we ve done so is that, as public servants, we re bound by law to keep confidential information confidential,  PHAC president Iain Stewart told the committee. It s not that we re wishing to be uncooperative or unresponsive. We are disclosing as much as we can within the limits of the law. Iain Stewart, president of the Public Health Agency of Canada, says federal privacy law prevents him from sharing personal information about the two scientists let go from the National Microbiology Lab in Winnipeg.(National Research Council/Twitter)

Moderate rise in Saskatoon COVID-19 cases forecast by sewage study

Article content COVID-19 cases in Saskatoon are expected to rise based on the latest analysis of the city’s wastewater. The latest study of wastewater from the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchewan found a 25 per cent increase in the COVID-19 viral RNA load in the sewage compared to the previous analysis. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Sewage study forecasts moderate rise in Saskatoon COVID-19 cases Back to video “This increase in viral RNA load is predictive of a moderate increase in the number of new cases in Saskatoon in the upcoming week(s),” says an update posted on the institute’s website.

Saskatoon COVID-19 surge predicted by sewage analysis fails to happen

Saskatoon COVID-19 surge predicted by sewage analysis fails to happen Scientists at the University of Saskatchewan are stumped to explain why a spike in cases predicted by analysis of wastewater did not arrive. Author of the article: Phil Tank  •  Saskatoon StarPhoenix Publishing date: May 03, 2021  •  4 hours ago  •  3 minute read  •  Saskatoon s wastewater treatment plant is seen on Tuesday, October 2, 2018, in this aerial photo. An analysis of wastewater in April suggested a surge in COVID-19 cases was coming in Saskatoon, but scientists are now stumped to explain why it never happened. Photo by Liam Richards /Saskatoon StarPhoenix Article content Dr. John Giesy and his colleagues are still trying to figure out why a surge in Saskatoon’s COVID-19 cases never happened despite a wastewater analysis that predicted one.

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