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After the Montreal Canadiens won Game 2 against the Winnipeg Jets on Friday, Premier François Legault tweeted that he hopes for a parade if the Habs win the Stanley Cup and "if Dr. Arruda is willing."

"And that's 6! [...] 10 more to go for the Cup... and the parade... if Dr. Arruda is willing...," Legault wrote.

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At a press conference on Wednesday, Dr. Mylène Drouin, Montreal's public health director, gave an overview of the current health situation in the city. While things are improving, she said, there are still "more than" 216 total active outbreaks in Montreal, with nine connected to parks, though the region's public health authority later said these outbreaks are small. 

"What we are seeing is a small increase in the number of outbreaks in the community and this is what we are expecting in the next couple of weeks because we are reopening those sectors," explained Drouin.

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Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and chief medical advisor to the past seven U.S. presidents Dr. Anthony Fauci will be giving a virtual lecture hosted by McGill University in Montreal to "communicate the science behind the COVID-19 pandemic."

Fauci will be McGill's 67th Beatty lecturer — which McGill calls "one of the longest-running lecture series in North America" — on October 1.

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Just as Montrealers were getting used to summer-like weather, the province was hit with the s-word — that's right: it's been snowing across Quebec all day. 

It's not like it's never snowed here in April before. But after a number of 20-degree days (or warmer), we're simply not having it. As we looked up at the sky and cursed the heavens, asking, "Why the f*** is this happening?" we decided it would be more productive to ask actual experts the same question. 

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As of April 18, there have been 10,802 COVID-19 deaths in Quebec. The province marked one year since the beginning of the health crisis only a little over a month ago.

MTL Blog spoke with the Quebec Health Ministry and Dr. Christopher Labos, a cardiologist with a degree in epidemiology, about how we got to this grim milestone and how we can do better in the future.

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In an April 5 AccuWeather blog post, Dr. Gordon Telepun advised anyone hoping to get a good view of the 2024 total solar eclipse to avoid hosting parties.

"If you are lucky and the weather is predicted to be good at your house on eclipse day, that’s convenient for you, but if you have to travel away from your house for eclipse day, so be it," he wrote. "DO NOT plan a party at your house for eclipse day. You cannot be obligated to be a host or hostess at your house!"

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On Wednesday, Quebec's National Director of Public Health, Dr. Horacio Arruda, announced individuals working in high-risk, high-exposure environments will soon be able to book a vaccination on the province's vaccination portal, Clic Santé.

Namely, Dr. Arruda mentioned "personnel of primary and secondary schools, personnel in the milieu of daycare for children, personnel in public security, firefighters, police, detention centres, workers in community services for health and social services, temporary foreign workers, personnel of abattoirs, and personnel in regional mining industries" will be able to sign up. 

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Researchers at the Université de Montréal, led by Dr. Cécile Aenishaenslin of the faculty of veterinary medicine, have diagnosed the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in a cat in Quebec, according to a press release from the university.

"It's a cat from the greater Montreal area that was likely contaminated by its owners," Dr. Aenishaenslin said in an interview with the school's newsroom. "It was isolated as is done with people who have tested positive for coronavirus."

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Montreal's public health director, Dr. Mylène Drouin, said she's "optimistic" that the city will be able to hold certain outdoor cultural events this summer, such as small festivals.

In fact, she confirmed in a press conference on March 17 that the public health department is working with local groups to devise strategies for organizing summer events in Montreal.

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A cocktail of monoclonal antibodies produced in plants has shown promising potential to fight COVID-19 variant strains, new research by a French-Canadian pharmaceutical company has shown.

Angany, which is based in Quebec City but owns a research and development laboratory in France, says it has found both a curative and preventative treatment for COVID-19 — however, it still has to undergo human clinical trials.

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Montreal public health has estimated that 8-10% of new COVID-19 cases in Montreal stem from the B.1.1.7 COVID-19 virus variant, which was identified in the U.K.

In a press conference on February 24, Public Health Director Dr. Mylène Drouin confirmed that the city is managing 22 COVID-19 outbreaks linked to the B.1.1.7 virus variant. 

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There are now 44 suspected cases of COVID-19 virus variants in Montreal, according to Regional Public Health Director Dr. Mylène Drouin who confirmed this figure in a press conference on February 10.

UPDATE: In a press conference the following day, on February 11, Quebec Public Health Director Dr. Horacio Arruda said there were 48 confirmed or suspected COVID-19 variant strain cases in the Montreal region. 

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