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ManitobaAnalysis

Manitoba officials didn't heed warnings about a 3rd COVID-19 wave. Now hospitals are overwhelmed

Across Canada, most provinces are relaxing pandemic restrictions or planning on reopening their economies later this spring or in the early summer butManitoba is astark exception. Epidemiologists, infectious disease experts and intensive care unit physicians say the provincial government has only itself to blame.

Provincial government 'dithered with half-measures' as crisis loomed, expert says

Nurses inside a hospital hallway.
As of Sunday, Manitoba has transferred 35 COVID-19 patients from intensive care wards such as this one at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre to hospitals in Ontario and Saskatchewan. Three of those patients have been returned. (Mikaela Mackenzie/Winnipeg Free Press/The Canadian Press)

Across Canada, most provinces are relaxing pandemic restrictions or planning on reopening their economies later this spring or in the early summer butManitoba is astark exception.

For the past two weeks, the province that once appeared as if it wouldbe spared a third waveof the pandemic has posted the highest per capita COVID-19 infection rate of any Canadian province or U.S. state.This has forced Premier Brian Pallister'sProgressive Conservative government to increase restrictions while most jurisdictions are removing them.

Manitoba's daily average of 26 COVID-19 cases per 100,000 citizens is more than triple the Canadian average and nearly double that of Washington state, thejurisdiction with the second-worst infection rate.

Even as Manitoba's daily case counts have started to recede, Pallister and his public health officials had little choicebut to extend public health restrictions.

"We are in a tough situation, and our need is to protect each other and to safeguard our health care system for all of us," Pallister said on May 27.

Epidemiologists, infectious disease experts and intensive care unit (ICU) physicians in Manitoba say the Pallister government has only itself to blame.

"They dithered with half-measures, ignoring the science andevidence all around them, and eroded public trust while squandering a month-long cushion at the start of the third wave," Souradet Shaw, a social epidemiologist at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, said in a series of tweets onMay 20after Manitoba Shared Health began to transfer ICU patients out of province.

"Instead of developing a clearly articulated and evidence-based strategy to tackle predictable surges, they impugned critics, misled the public through distortions, obscuring data, and accountability,and blamed everyone but themselves."

Hospitals in crisis

The ongoingcrisis in Manitoba hospitals, which have been struggling for weeks to treat record volumes of COVID-19 patients, is the main reason behind the continuing restrictions.

On Sunday, a record 106 Manitoban COVID-19 patients were receiving intensive care. This includes 32 ICU patients transferred to hospitalsin Ontario and Saskatchewan because there is no capacity in Winnipeg and Brandon hospitals to handle the patients.

A total of 35 ICU patients have been transferred out of province as of Sunday. Three have been returnedwhile another prospective transfer31-year-old Krystal Mousseau of Ebb and Flow First Nationdied on May 25after an attemptto move her from Brandonto Ottawa.

In the span of about 35 days, Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister went from dismissing physicians' concerns about the impact of the third wave on hospitals to pleading with Manitobans to protect the health-care system. (Manitoba media pool)

Winnipeg ICU physician Eric Jacobsohn said the hospital crisis has also led to the deaths ofnon-COVID patients,mainly becausethousands of surgeries have been cancelled to free up hospital staff to work on COVID-19 wards.

Sixcardiac patients have died waiting for heart surgeriesthat could not be performed because nurses and other health-care staff were not available, Jacobsohnsaid on May 25.

Other non-COVID patients are suffering while the health-care system struggles to provide basic care, he said.

Concerns raised weeks ago

Jacobsohn and Shaw are amongdozens of doctors, infectious disease experts andepidemiologists who warned the provincial health-care system was in dangerin early April, when COVID-19 case counts began rising exponentially in Manitoba.

Provincial officials dismissed those concerns, even as hospitalizations during Ontario's third waveroseto the point where Toronto intensive care wards were struggling to treat record numbers of COVID-19 patients.

WATCH | ICU admissions rising in Manitoba:

Manitoba sees rising ICU admissions while fighting COVID-19 denial

3 years ago
Duration 2:01
COVID-19 continues to ravage Manitobas health-care system as intensive care unit admissions continue to climb, all while the province tries to increase vaccine uptake and fight ongoing COVID-19 denial.

Dr. Jazz Atwal, Manitoba's deputy provincial public health officer, promised Manitoba would enact restrictions in time to prevent his province from suffering a similar fate.

"Ontario,when you look at how the case numbers went up, likely waited much too long," Atwal said duringanApril 16 news briefing. "We're not going to go down that road,I could assure you that."

Pallister went further later that month, lashing out at ICU physicians' calls for a lockdown."It's coming all too often from people who wouldn't be affected adversely by a shutdown," he said.

"There are a lot of other people out in the province who don't have a guaranteed paycheque, who are struggling to make ends meet, who have to work for a living, and they don't want to go back to depending on a government program."

2nd-wave strategy returns

It took a month for the official rhetoric to change in Manitoba. By the Victoria Day long weekend, hospitals were transferring ICU patients out of province and the premier was asking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for critical-care nurses, respiratory therapists and contact tracers.

After the second wave of the pandemic, when Manitoba's slow imposition of pandemic restrictions led to the highest per capita COVID-19 death rate in Canada, there was an expectation the province would be more proactive if casecounts ever rose again.

Back in March, the chief provincial public health officer, Dr. Brent Roussin, suggested Manitoba had learned its lesson aboutimposing a series of incremental restrictions instead of enacting a lockdown.

"We quickly saw that the incremental approach and really trying to limit the impact of those restrictions just didn't work when we started seeing more and more transmission," Roussinsaid, pledging more decisive action next time. "I think that's something we'd have to consider earlier on."

Instead, Manitoba officials opted to once again employ a strategy similar the one they utilized with little success during thesecond wave. And Pallister, who had hinted earlier at some form of reopening strategy akin to those of other provinces, acknowledged Manitoba's third wave is now destined to linger well into the summer.

"We're not in a position to reopen," Pallister said.