COVID-19: Moncton man unable to get straight answer on isolation requirements
Global News
'Even to date I still don't have a definitive answer.'
A Moncton man who has been in self-isolation since Dec. 21 is still unable to get a straight answer as to when he can resume his normal life.
Following a business trip to New York City, Matthew Kinney noticed he had COVID-19 symptoms and isolated in Maine while awaiting the results of a PCR test he took on Dec. 21.
After checking federal guidelines and seeing that fully vaccinated travellers can travel to their place of quarantine without waiting for test results as long as they have a suitable quarantine plan, he headed to his home in Moncton to self-isolate on Christmas Eve.
When he received his positive result on Dec. 27, he called Telecare to have a better idea of when he could end his isolation.
“From what I understood, the federal guidelines are a 10-day isolation based on the date you took your test, so that would have put me out (of isolation) on the 31st or the 1st. The provincial guidelines say otherwise. Depending on who you ask, either 14 from the date of the test or the date you received your test results,” he said in an interview on Wednesday.
He first spoke to a receptionist who told him his 14-day isolation would start from the day he received his results, on Dec. 27.
“I said, ‘Well, that seems like a 20-day quarantine, that seems a little extreme.'”
He says a nurse from Telecare contacted him a few hours later saying the 14-day period started on the day he took his PCR test, on Dec. 21.