Winnipeg student with COVID-19 'did everything they were supposed to do,' top doctor says - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg student with COVID-19 'did everything they were supposed to do,' top doctor says

A Churchill High School student who attended the first day of class on Tuesday had gone for a test before school started andwas asymptomatic, Dr. Brent Roussin says.

Churchill High School student wore mask, had no close contacts, health officials say; school will stay open

A look inside one Churchill High School classroom on the first day back shows spaced-out desks. The first known positive COVID-19 case in Manitoba's school system was identified a day later in a Grade 7 student at the school. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

The first positive COVID-19 case identified in Manitoba's school system is a student who attended the first day of class on Tuesday while asymptomatic and "did everything that they were supposed to do," says Manitoba's top doctor.

"Everything in this situation was done correctly," Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin said."There wasn't anything that this individual did wrong, and so I would encourage people to accept that."

The Grade 7 student at Churchill High School was one of the 16 cases identified by the province on Wednesday.

Roussinsaid at a news conference Thursday the student attended the school briefly on Tuesday, the first day of classes, but did not acquire the virus there.

The student had gone for a test before Tuesday andwas asymptomatic, Roussin said. Asymptomatic people aren't required to self-isolate after testing.

"Everything in this situation was done correctly," Roussin said."There wasn't anything that this individual did wrong, and so I would encourage people to accept that."

WATCH | First positive COVID-19 case identified in Manitoba's school system:

First positive COVID-19 case identified in Manitoba's school system

4 years ago
Duration 2:10
A Churchill High School student who attended the first day of class on Tuesday had gone for a test before school started and was asymptomatic, Dr. Brent Roussin says.

Roussin repeated in the weeks leading up to September that it was inevitable COVID-19 would surface in the school system.

Five otherchildren and youth were added to the provincial COVID-19 case totals Thursday. Roussin said one was from August and has completed the incubation period. Asked whether any of thosecases attended school Thursday, Roussin said not to his knowledge.

Five school-age children and youth were added to the current active COVID-19 tally Thursday. (Jacques Marcoux/CBC)

The Churchill High Schoolstudentwas not a close contact of a known case, but Roussin would not say whether the case is technically an example of community transmission.

'A sense of calmness'

Churchill High School principal Ryan Hughes said there were13 students in the class on Tuesday. The student left around lunch time, he said.

The school found out early Wednesday afternoon from public health and followed up with staff in small groups, he said. Health officials notified the broader public a few hours later.

Dozens of Churchill High School students file into the building on the first day back on Tuesday. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

The student had worn a mask on aWinnipeg Transit bus to school and did so while in class as well, officials said. The student had no close contacts, so no one has beentold to self-isolate.

The student who tested positive and theirhousehold contactsare now self-isolating, said Roussin.

The school underwent sanitization and remained open Thursday because public health officials and the division deemed the risk of transmission to others as low.

"We were assured over and over again about the minimal exposure that had occurred," said Hughes.

WATCH |Dr. Roussin urges public to avoid stigmatizing people in school system who test positive:

Manitoba's top doctor urges public to avoid stigmatizing people in school system who test positive

4 years ago
Duration 0:41
The first positive COVID-19 case identified in Manitoba's school system is a student who attended the first day of class on Tuesday while asymptomatic and "did everything that they were supposed to do," says Manitoba's top doctor.

Under the cleaning protocolsin place, the class had already been disinfected three times before the school was notified of the positive case, Hughes said. It was then disinfected once more and an aerosol fogging machine owned by the Winnipeg School Division was brought in to further disinfect the space, he said.

"This morning there's a sense of calmness in the building," Hughes said. "We've been talking to students as they've been coming in, and for the most part, they're very understanding of the situation.

"They're still learning the processes and this helped to really reinforce why it's so important to respect the measures we put in place."

Panicturns to calm

The mother of another student at Churchill High School said she was initially startled by the news,but felt comfortable with her child heading back to class Thursday.

CBC News isn't naming the mother to protect the identity of her child, who is in care.

Her daughter is in Grade 7 andwas in aclass next door to the student who tested positive.

An email on the second day of class notifying parents that a student tested positive caused her some alarm at first, she said, but that resolved as she read on.

This week students are back at in Churchill High School classes, such as this one. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

The letter outlinedthe measures that were in place and said the risk of transmission was low.

"The wording calmed me down. Panic at first quickly, and then I felt better by what they reported," she said.

Hughes said a few families planned to keep their students at home Thursday, but attendance wasgenerally unaffected.

Churchill High School's statushas not been elevated under Manitoba's colour-coded COVID-19 response system due to the low risk and lack of close contacts, provincial officials said.

WATCH | Full news conference on COVID-19 | Sept. 10, 2020:

Manitoba government daily briefing on coronavirus: Sept. 10

4 years ago
Duration 41:26
Provincial officials give update on COVID-19 outbreak: Thursday September 10, 2020.

With files from Jill Coubrough, Meaghan Ketcheson and Rachel Bergen