sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Medical exception letters required for Albertans who don't wear masks in public areas

EDMONTON 鈥 Alberta has moved to close loopholes people might use as a way to avoid wearing masks in public indoor places. Dr.
TC_233693_web_20210513180556-609daea4e141f72310e737dcjpeg.jpg
Alberta chief medical officer of health Dr. Deena Hinshaw updates media on the COVID-19 situation in Edmonton on Friday March 20, 2020. Alberta has moved to close loopholes people might use as a way to avoid wearing masks in public indoor places. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

EDMONTON 鈥 Alberta has moved to close loopholes people might use as a way to avoid wearing masks in public indoor places.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, chief medical officer of health, said Thursday that effective immediately, anyone not wearing a mask where required will need to have a medical exception letter.

Wearing masks remains a 鈥渃ritical public health measure鈥 to help stem the spread of the COVID-19 virus and there are a 鈥渓imited number of health issues鈥 for which a mask exception is possible, she said.

Those include sensory processing disorders, developmental delay or cognitive impairment, mental illness disorders, facial trauma or recent oral or jaw surgery, contact dermatitis or allergic reactions to masks.

鈥淚n order to verify that someone has a medical condition that makes them unable to wear a mask, Albertans with these conditions will require a medical exception letter from a health professional,鈥 Hinshaw said at a COVID-19 update.

鈥淭his letter is important to have especially if requested by enforcement officials for not complying with the legal requirement to wear a mask in indoor public spaces.鈥

Hinshaw said the letters must come from a nurse practitioner, physician or psychologist.

She said the change comes as a result of talks with Alberta Health Services staff as well as some publicly reported instances where people have refused to wear a mask.

鈥淭here have been some incidents reported in the media where individuals who are not following public health rules are perhaps seeking loopholes or areas in the rules where it鈥檚 not clear. That鈥檚 sometimes challenging our local law enforcement teams,鈥 Hinshaw said.

鈥(Masks) are not optional. They are mandatory.鈥

Alberta reported another 1,558 infections Thursday and nine more deaths. There were 722 people in hospital and 177 in intensive care.

Hinshaw said Alberta has now administered more than two million COVID-19 vaccine doses and there are another 328,000 appointments for a shot in the next seven days. If vaccine supply remains constant, the province is likely to start offering second doses in June, she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 13, 2021.