12 deaths, 11 more COVID-19 hospitalizations reported in Manitoba on Wednesday - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:57 AM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

12 deaths, 11 more COVID-19 hospitalizations reported in Manitoba on Wednesday

Manitoba public health officials announced 12 COVID-related deaths and 11 more hospitalizations on Wednesday.

Manitoba to get 1,100 doses of new Pfizer antiviral treatment

There are now 631 people with COVID-19 in Manitoba hospitals, a new high since the province started reporting that statistic daily in December 2020. (Daniel Becerril/Reuters)

Manitoba public health officials announced 12 COVID-related deaths and 11 more hospitalizations on Wednesday.

There are now 631 people in hospital with the virus, setting another high since the province started reporting that statistic daily in December 2020.

That's over 200 more than a week earlier and nearly 400 more than two weeks ago.

Among those in hospital, 50 are in intensive care units, an increase of two sinceTuesday.

Ten of the deaths are from the Winnipeg health region, one from the Southern Health region and one from thePrairie Mountain Health region.

The province's death toll related to COVID-19is now 1,478.

The people from the Winnipeg region who died are a man in his 40s, two women in their 60s, a man in his 70s, three men in their 80s and three women in their 80s.

The deaths in the Southern Health and Prairie Mountain Health regions are both men in their 70s.

More details were also released about three deathsreported Tuesday onthe province's online dashboard,all from the Winnipeg health region. They are a man in his 80s, a woman in her 90sand a man in his 90swho is linkedto the outbreak at Actionmarguerite St. Boniface.

The province reported 919 new COVID-19 cases on Wednesday, although health officials have repeatedly said those numbers are a significant undercount of the total number of active cases.

The rapid spread of the Omicron variant has overwhelmed testing capacity and led to numerous cases going unreported. Many people are now using rapid tests, the results of which are not entered into the provincial database.

Manitoba is strictly restrictingaccess toPCR tests at provincial sites. To protect capacity, those tests arelimited to certain people, including some symptomatic people and some people who have had a positive rapid test.

As has been the case for many weeks, the majority of the new cases are in the Winnipeg health region, with 576.

There are 102in the Interlake-Eastern health region, 92 in Prairie Mountain Health, 79 in theNorthern Health Region and 70 in the Southern Health region.

A breakdown of the latest cases by vaccination statuscan be viewed on a chart on the government website.

The total number of patients in ICUs both those with COVID-19 and those being treated for non-COVID-related issues is 100. That's down two from Tuesday and seven since Monday.

The critical care program's normal, pre-COVID baseline capacity was 72 patients.At a news conference last week, Health Minister Audrey Gordonsaid the province's maximumICU capacity had been increased to116.

Two active cases of COVID-19 were reported in the pediatric intensive care unit at the Children's Hospital at Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg.

A Shared Health spokesperson said there is continued focus on ensuring capacity is available to care for patients as demand increases, including in the pediatric ward.

The spokesperson added that as of Wednesday morning, seven pediatric patients in the unit were were receiving both COVID and non-COVID care a number that, similar to adult critical care, can change multiple times daily as well as three adult patients.

"Planning is underway to train and orient staff to support an increase in PICU beds, should patient needs increase," the spokesperson said.

There have been 22 pediatric COVID-19cases that required critical care since start of the pandemic.

New outbreaks have been declared at:

  • St. Boniface Hospital, M2, in Winnipeg.
  • River East Personal Care Home inWinnipeg.
  • Concordia Hospital, N3 East, in Winnipeg.
  • Health Sciences Centre, PX2 East, in Winnipeg.
  • Gillam Hospital in Gillam.

A previously announced outbreak at Portage Evangelical Church inPortage la Prairie is now over.

New tool

Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin said in a news conferenceWednesday that Manitoba will be getting 1,100 doses of the new Pfizer antiviral treatment, Paxlovid, which was approved by Health Canada on Monday.

The province is waiting for that delivery and additional doses have been requested, he said.

Eligibility for the medication will be based on getting a positive COVID-19 test and the likelihood ofbecomingseverely ill from the virus.

"This is yet another welcome tool to our toolbox to mitigate the risk of COVID-19," Roussin said."The purpose of this is to decrease that strain on the health-care system."

Anyone who tests positive on a self-administered rapid test can be referred for an assessment and a followup rapid test, performed by a health-care provider, to confirm.

Treatment withPaxlovidmust be administered within five days of the onset of symptoms, "so this makes it even more important, especially if you're at high risk, of closely monitoring symptoms and early testing," Roussin said.

There will soon be a "clear process" available online for people to refer themselves for the newtreatment, no matter whether their positive test was a PCR or a rapid test, Roussinsaid.

He couldn't say how many self-administered rapid tests are turning up positive, but the ones being reported are only a fraction of what's out there, he said.

"Omicron's spread is extensive. By now, most people probably know someone or maybe even several people who've contracted the virus," saidDr. Joss Reimer, medical lead of Manitoba's COVID-19 vaccine implementation task force.

She urged people to get vaccinated especially children of eligible age who have returned to in-school classes and pushed for people in their 50s and 60s to get booster shots.

A total of 66,654 first doses have been given to children agefive to 11, which is 53.3 per cent of that age group, the province's dashboard says.

People who are not fully vaccinated are three times as likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19, 11 times as likely to be admitted to an intensive care unit and 10 times as likely to die with COVID-19, Roussin said.

As of Wednesday, 85.1 per cent of eligible Manitobanshave had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, while 78.3 per cent have had at least two and 36.5 per cent have had three, theprovincial vaccine dashboard says.

Eligibility for first and second dosesincludes anyone age five or older. Anyone 18 or older is eligible for a third dose, if there's been a long enough interval since they received their second dose.

The total number of doses administered in the province is now at 2,672,627 with 2,399 more scheduled to be given on Wednesday.

Enforcement

The province also provided an update Wednesday on enforcement of public health orders, saying28 warnings and 27 tickets were issued during the week of Jan. 10-16.

The total amount of fines handed out was $21,442.

Twenty-one tickets, each for $298, were handed out forfailure to wear a mask in an indoor public place, while another four tickets of$1,296 each were given to individuals for various offences.

Viva Restaurant onSargent Avenue inWinnipeg was hit with two tickets of $5,000 each.

There were 18tickets issued in the Southern Health region (67 per cent) whilesixwerein Winnipeg (22 per cent), two in theNorthern Health Region(seven per cent) andone in the Prairie Mountain Health region (four per cent).

None were given out in theInterlake-Easternhealth region.

WATCH | Full news conference on COVID-19 | January 19, 2022:

Manitoba government daily briefing on coronavirus: Jan. 19

3 years ago
Duration 28:48
Provincial officials give update on COVID-19 outbreak: Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2022.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story attributed a comment about maximum ICU capacity to Premier Heather Stefanson. In fact, Health Minister Audrey Gordon said the province's maximum ICU capacity was 116.
    Jan 20, 2022 2:27 PM CT