more stories like this hereFor the past four months, Toronto has been in the grips of a new disease that terrified the world, brought some of Canada's biggest hospitals to a virtual standstill and siphoned billions from the once burgeoning hospitality and movie-making businesses. But the tale of Toronto's battle against SARS isn't only about its macro-level impact.
It's really a tapestry of stories, most of which never came to the public eye because travel advisories or hospital closings, quarantine orders or surging case numbers bumped them from the nation's news agenda.
Many are tragic, some ironic. Some are silly, others perplexing. Some are tales of heroism and sacrifice, others of unspeakable loss. One cannot fully appreciate the impact of SARS without examining the fine detail.
Here is a small sampling of those stories:
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At about 9 p.m. on Thursday, May 22, a clutch of ashen-faced public health officials filed into a small room in the headquarters of Toronto Public Health for a hastily called news conference. Their grim message: SARS was back.
Four cases - the minuscule tip of the eventual iceberg - had been found at a rehabilitation hospital in the north end. The source of infection was unclear, they said, though there was a possibility the cluster had been triggered by an imported case.
That was wishful thinking, hinged on an astonishing coincidence.
One of the first four cases was a woman, 66, who had travelled in April to Hong Kong and China - areas where SARS infections were also raging out of control. Fearful that she might have been exposed to SARS, the woman quarantined herself at home for 12 days following her return.
Public health didn't ask her to. She simply wanted to make sure she posed no risk to others.
After her self-imposed quarantine was over, the woman went to visit her son, a patient at St. John's Hospital. And there she became infected with the virus she'd managed to evade in two of the world's hottest SARS hot zones.
"It's truly one of the great ironies," says Dr. James Young, Ontario's commissioner of public security. "Because for days everybody thought: 'Oh, well, she must have brought it back.' Then it turned out she didn't."
On June 7, the woman became the 34th person in Ontario to die from SARS.
I find it nice and helpful to be reminded sometimes that things like this are affecting real people.