I DO agree with this. We should have closed much faster, when necessary (early action=much more bang for buck) *and* opened faster while monitoring for upticks (which being able to close faster would facilitate: if decisions aren't seen as permanent, we can be more flexible).https://twitter.com/inthehands/status/1377638429551329282 …
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Prince edward island. Sorry, Canadian speak. The Atlantic region of Canada imposed an internal border at the start of the pandemic and the four atlantic provinces mostly went zero covid. New brunswick, nova scotia, newfoundland, and prince edward island
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That's interesting. Would love to see articles.
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But as we have obvious economic links with the rest of north america we faced reintroductions and periodic outbreaks, so it was a bit of a policy experiment. I should note New Brunswick tested the least, so that could be cause rather than fixed rules. They only test symptomatic
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Nova Scotia, where I live, does 3000-4000 tests a day and finds 3-8 cases a day, almost all travellers, but a tiny amount of local traced cases. We also do about 400 rapid tests a day. 14 day quarantine for anyone entering. Everything is open, and mostly has been since June
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Fascinating.
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