Dr. Murray McQuigge, York Region's public health physician consultant, said Mr. Fifield's case is a further example the disease is confined to health-care settings, rather than a threat in the general community.
"Basically, what we're saying is this is a hospital disease. It has been from the start and it continues to be. It doesn't do well in the community," he said.
"We're very optimistic this is anything but out of control. It's dismaying that we did (get new cases but) ... far from being out of control, this is better than our wildest dreams of a month ago."
Lying weasel, imho.