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Manitoba

Brandon-area home-care worker tested positive for COVID-19

An employee of a Brandon-based private home-care service tested positive for COVID-19 earlier this month, the owner confirmed Wednesday.

Employee of private home-care business felt sick while at work on May 6, tested positive May 10, CEO says

Public health investigators have investigated and done contact tracing on the case of a worker with a private western Manitoba home-care business who has tested positive for COVID-19, says the CEO of Daughter on Call. (Nova Scotia Health Authority)

An employee of a Brandon-based private home-care service tested positive for COVID-19 earlier this month, the owner of the business confirmed Wednesday.

An employee of Daughter on Call, which offers home-care services in western Manitoba, tested positive for the illness on May 10, said CEOGail Freeman-Campbell.

"A very valued employee of Daughter on Call" first felt illwith an upset stomach while at work on May 6, Freeman-Campbell said Wednesday afternoon. She was sent home that day before developing other symptoms and testingpositive shortly afterward.

"Sheis recovering and will be able to get back into the workforce and back out to society as soon as public health clears her completely."

Daughter on Call offershome-care service in communities includingBrandon, Neepawa and Portage la Prairie. According to its website, it has more than 100 staff members in those areas.

The employee who tested positive had recently been working with two clients, both of whom lived in private homes, as opposed to long-term or personal care centres, Freeman-Campbell said.

While some of Daughter on Call's staff do go into personal care homes in the area for work, Freeman-Campbell said the employee who fell ill did not.

The employee worked with one of her clients on the day she felt ill, and the other client prior to her symptoms arising, Freeman-Campbell said.One of the clients is based in Brandon and the other is outside the city.

To the best of her knowledge, neither of the clients have been ill, Freeman-Campbell said.

On Wednesday morning, theBrandon Sunreported Freeman-Campbell had denied any staff members were ill. On Wednesday afternoon, Freeman-Campbell said she stated her staff is healthy in an effort to protect the right of her employees to privacy and confidentiality.

"I will not share her name or any more details other than she works for me," she said.

3 other staffpotentially exposed

Public health investigators have investigated and done contact tracing on the case, including contacting both clients and three other staff members, she said.

The staff members who were potentially exposed have followed all public health guidance they received, she said. She believes one of them had a test forCOVID-19 that came back negative, and the other two have not developed symptoms.

Thirty-fourManitoba health-care workers have tested positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic began, according to new demographic data released by the province on Tuesday.

That includes 12 nurses, eight health-care aides, nine physicians and residents and five in unspecified roles.

As of Wednesday afternoon, Manitoba has 23 active cases of COVID-19 and a total caseload of 290.