23 new cases of COVID-19 in Manitoba, including ones in school, personal care home
20 of Wednesday's new cases are in Winnipeg, officials say; outbreak at John Pritchard School now at 7 cases
Twenty-three new COVID-19 cases were announced in Manitoba on Wednesday, including numerous cases at a Winnipeg school.
An estimated 250 students from John Pritchard School studentswere sent home for remote learning starting Wednesday after six new confirmed coronavirus cases were identified, bringing the school's tally to seven in total,Dr. Brent Roussin, the province's chief public health officer, saidat an impromptu press conference with Education Minister Kelvin Goertzen.
Meanwhile, a worker at Winnipeg's Parkview Place Long Term Care Home has tested positive for COVID-19 and the facility is now restricting visits as part of its outbreak protocols.
"All residents are monitored closely for symptoms twice daily and all staff are screened at the beginning and end of their shifts," saidDr. Rhonda Collins, the chief medical officer for Revera, which oversees Parkview Place.
Visits are being restricted to essential visitors only, she said.
It's the second time the care home in Winnipeg's Central Park area has had a case of COVID-19. A worker there first tested positive for the illness in early April.
It's one of six personal care homes in Winnipeg currently elevated to the critical or red level.On Tuesday, the province confirmed two other health care facilities St. Amant and Actionmarguerite had initiated outbreak protocols after workers tested positive for the virus.
Twenty of Wednesday's new COVID-19 cases are in Winnipeg,two are in the Interlake-Eastern Health region and one is in the Northern Health region,Dr. Roussin reported. The cases in the Interlake-Eastern Health region areclose contacts of a known case and preliminary investigations suggest the person in the North may be living in Winnipeg.
There are currently 283 active cases in Manitoba 200 of which are in Winnipegand 1,190 individuals have recovered from COVID-19. Thefive-day COVID-19 test positivity rate is 1.5 per cent.
Winnipeg school outbreak prompts restrictions
To date, there have been sixschools with COVID-19 exposures since students went back to class early last week. The first was reported just one day after schools reopened, when a potential exposure was announced at Churchill High School in Winnipeg.
John PritchardSchool is the first tomoveto the restricted level the orange level on the province's pandemic response system due to the number cases and contacts involved.
Starting on Wednesday, students in grades 6,7, 8, and those in a split grade 4/5, plus those who attend the Henderson Early Learning Centre a before-and-after school program were sent home for remote learning.Other grades and cohorts will continue to go toschool for in-class learning.
"There's some students, there's some staff involved, but we don't want to specifically identify any of that," Roussin said.
All of the people who tested positivewere asymptomatic while at the school, but developed symptoms and went for testing afterwards, he said.
WATCH | Full news conference on COVID-19 | Sept. 16, 2020:
Possible Winnipeg exposures
Roussinalso announced five possible COVID-19 exposures in Winnipeg on Sept. 5 and 6 at the following locations:
- Tavern United at1405 St. Matthew Ave.,at 4:30 p.m.for about 45 minutes on Sept. 5.
- U-Puttz, 423 McPhillips St.,between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. on Sept. 5.
- McPhillips Street Station, 484 McPhillipsSt., between 10 p.m. and 11p.m.
- Hampton Inn by Hilton Winnipeg, Airport/Polo Park, 730 Berry St., overnight on Sept. 5.
- CF Polo Park, 1485 Portage Ave., from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m on Sept. 6
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With files from Meaghan Ketcheson and Caitlyn Gowriluk