'We've lost our way': More Winnipeg restrictions coming as Manitoba posts record-breaking 173 COVID-19 cases - Action News
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Manitoba

'We've lost our way': More Winnipeg restrictions coming as Manitoba posts record-breaking 173 COVID-19 cases

Dr. Brent Roussinmade the announcement at a news conference on Thursday, the third day in a row the province has set a new record for a single-day increase in cases.

Another death recorded as test positivity rate hits 4.9% in Manitoba, 5.8% in Winnipeg on Thursday

Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin says more restrictions could be in place for people in the Winnipeg area as early as next week. (David Lipnowski/The Canadian Press)

Further pandemic restrictions are coming soon for the Winnipeg area, Manitoba's chief public health officer warned, as he announced yet another record-breaking daily tally of 173 newCOVID-19 cases on Thursday.

The update from Dr. Brent Roussinmarkedthe third day in a row the province has set a new record for a single-day increase in cases.

Roussin's warning of impending restrictions, which he said will likely take effect earlynext week, comesmore than two weeks after the Winnipeg region was moved to the orange, or restricted, level on the province's pandemic response system. Thatdesignation brought a 10-person cap on gatherings and made masks mandatory in indoor public spaces.

A total of 133 of the newcases announced Thursday are in the Winnipeg health region, where Roussin said it's clear more restrictions are neededas people continue to attendgatherings that end up contributing to the spread of the illness.

In one case, a person with COVID-19 symptoms went to a gathering on Sept. 11, setting off a transmission chain that infected 40 people and forced 243 to self-isolate in a span of 12 days, Roussinsaid.

"We've lost our way with the fundamentals at this point," he said, adding symptomatic people have still been going out to work and socialize.

Many of Manitoba's recent new COVID-19 cases are among people in their 20s, Roussin said, and more than half of the cases in that demographic have no known origin.

WATCH | Dr. Brent Roussin explains how one person ata gathering led to dozens being infected:

How one gathering led to 40 COVID-19 cases

4 years ago
Duration 2:05
Dr. Brent Roussin, Manitobas chief public health officer, explains how one person going to a gathering while sick led to dozens of people being infected and hundreds having to self-isolate.

Roussin gave few details about what new restrictions people in the Winnipeg area can expect, but the response measures listed on the province's website suggest they could includerestricted non-urgent procedures, more remote learning in high schools and lowercapacity limits across the board.

Meanwhile, all licensed personal care homes in the Winnipeg region are being moved up to the red, or critical, level in the pandemic response system,Roussin said.

That means anyone admitted to a care home will need to self-isolate for 14 days once they get there, the province said in a news release.No new residents will be admitted to any care homes that have suspected or confirmed outbreaks unless they already haveCOVID-19.

Many of Manitoba's recent new COVID-19 cases are among people in their 20s, and many have no known origin, Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin said on Thursday. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

Manitoba also announced its 38th death linked to the novel coronavirus on Thursday. The death of aWinkler man in his 40s with underlying health conditions was the province's11thfatality linked to the illness to beannounced in the last six days.

Manitoba's mostrecent deaths also includethree residents ofParkview Place personal care home in Winnipeg. Withnine deaths and 89infections, the site isbattling the largest and deadliestCOVID-19 outbreak in a Manitobalong-term care facilityto date.

New workers at that site will not be allowed to work at other care homes, Roussin said. Nothing is off the table to keep the spread at Parkview Place under control, he added.

Twenty-three of Manitoba's new COVID-19 cases on Thursday are in the Southern Health region, while eight are in the Prairie Mountain Health region. Another six are in the the province's Interlake-Eastern health region, and the remaining three are in the Northern Health region.

Manitoba posts record-breaking 173 COVID-19 cases

4 years ago
Duration 2:08
Further pandemic restrictions are coming soon for the Winnipeg area, Manitoba's chief public health officer warned, as he announced yet another record-breaking daily tally of 173 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday.

Record-breaking week

Thursday's update comes after multiple record-setting days for new COVID-19 cases in Manitoba.

On Wednesday, the province announced 146 more people had contracted COVID-19, at that point the fourth record-breaking day in less than a week. It broke the record set Tuesday, when the province announced 124 new cases of the illness caused by the novel coronavirus.

Manitoba's five-day test positivity rate, a rolling average of the COVID-19 tests that come back positive, is now 4.9 per cent, Roussin said. In Winnipeg,that rate is now 5.8 per cent.

The illness has also made its way into other high-risk settings in Manitoba, including nine First Nations andthree jails.

WATCH | Dr. Brent Roussin explains why more restrictions are needed:

Dr. Brent Roussin says concerning spread continues despite restrictions

4 years ago
Duration 0:43
Dr. Brent Roussin, Manitobas chief public health officer, says more restrictions will likely be announced for the Winnipeg region by early next week.

The province declared an outbreakat Headingley Correctional Centre this weekafter seven inmates and two workers tested positive for COVID-19, raising concerns of how to physically distance in an overcrowded facility. There are currently 593 people incarcerated at Headingley, a provincial spokesperson said on Thursday, though the sitehas an official capacity of 549.

Right now, 154 inmates are isolated from the rest of the population in separate units, the spokesperson said.

An outbreak declared at the YWCA in Thompson, Man., which has been housing about 25 people experiencing homelessness throughout the pandemic, has now been linked to five cases of COVID-19, Roussin said Thursday.

There are now 25 people in hospital with COVID-19 in Manitoba, including five in intensive care. There have been 3,098 cases of COVID-19 identified in the province.

To date, 1,533 people in Manitobahave recovered from the illness. Another 1,527 cases are still considered active though that number is skewed because of a backlog of cases that public health workers need to follow up on, Roussinhas said.

The outbreak at Maplewood Manor personal care home in Steinbach, Man.,is now considered over, and that site has been moved down to the yellow, or caution,level on the pandemic response system,Roussin said.

On Wednesday, 2,117 more COVID-19 tests were done in Manitoba, bringing the total completed in the province since early February to 217,878.

WATCH | Full news conference on COVID-19 | Oct. 15, 2020:

Manitoba government daily briefing on coronavirus: Oct. 15

4 years ago
Duration 46:45
Provincial officials give update on COVID-19 outbreak: Thursday, October 15, 2020.

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