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N.W.T. expands eligibility for booster shots, issues record 21 public exposure notices

The territory's health and social services authority announced it will expand the eligibility for COVID-19 booster shots beginning Monday. Meanwhile, the COVID-19 case count in the territory went down slightly from Thursday.

COVID-19 exposure notice issued for East Three Elementary School Kindergarten class in Inuvik

A city skyline and a setting sun.
N.W.T. health officials are expanding the eligibility of people able to receive a COVID-19 booster shot, beginning Monday. (Graham Shishkov/CBC)

Editor's note: This story has been updated to reflect a correction from public health officials. It initially said students attending junior kindergarten atEast Three Elementary School in Inuvik on Tuesday had to isolate, however, the date is actually Wednesday.

The N.W.T.'s health and social services authority announced it will expand the eligibility for COVID-19 booster shots beginning Monday.

Residents who are 60 and over who live in Yellowknife, Dettah, Ndil, Hay River, Inuvik and Fort Smith will be eligible to get a booster shot.

In all other N.W.T. communities, booster shots will be available to residents 50 and over.

Third doses had been available to Yellowknife, Dettah, Ndil or Behchok residents who were 75 and older, as well as front-line health workers in Yellowknife and Behchok, and those who are immunocomprised.

The authority saidbooster doses can be taken six months after a second dose. It also specified that booster doses aredifferent than third doses.

"A booster contains less vaccine product than a thirdfull dose," it said in a news release. The authority also said people who areimmunocompromised may be eligible for a thirddose instead of a booster, andsuggestedpeople let their healthcare provider know duringtheir immunization appointment.

The authority said it was taking this measure on theadvice of theOffice of the Chief Public Health Officer (OCPHO), whoissued a record 21 public exposure notices Friday, the same day the number of overall cases in the territory dropped from 376 on Thursday to 354.

The OCPHO also declared an outbreak at City Cabs in Yellowknife.

It said anyone who has taken a City Cab any time betweenSept. 29 and Oct. 15should monitor for symptoms and get tested should any develop.

One of the public exposure notices is for passengers who were seated in rows three to nine on the Westjet flight WS 3258 from Edmonton to Yellowknife on Oct. 8.

Partially vaccinated and unvaccinated passengers on both flights are required to isolate for 10 days and arrange to get tested for COVID-19. Vaccinated passengers are asked to self-monitor for symptoms. Should they develop, passengers must isolate and arrange for testing.

The full list of public exposure notices is available here.

The situation in Inuvik

Earlier in the day, the OCPHO announced there was COVID-19 community transmission in Inuvik. Later theOCPHO reported eight cases in the community, an increase of two from yesterday.

Late Friday, the OCPHO issued a public exposure notice requiring parents of children who attend junior kindergarten at East Three Elementary School in Inuvik to immediately isolate and arrange testing for their children.

Initially, public health said all children in junior kindergarten who attended school on Tuesday had to isolate for 10 days. They later issued a correction, saying children who attended junior kindergarten on Wednesday had to isolate.

Parents were also directed to arrange for COVID-19 testing.

Where the cases are

The majority of cases in the territory remain in the Yellowknife, Dettah and Ndil, where the OCPHO is reporting 195 cases, and in Behchok where there are 117 cases being reported.

It's a drop of 10 and 16 cases, respectively, since Thursday.

There are 16 cases in Hay River and K'atl'odeeche First Nation, an increase of three since Thursday, while Fort Simpson is reporting six cases which is unchanged from Thursday.

There are five cases in Fort Smith, one less than Thursday. There remains three cases in What, two in Fort Good Hope, and one each in utsel Ke and Norman Wells.

Stanton gets increasedoxygen capacity

In one of many updates on Friday, thehealth and social services authoritysaid thatthe installation of an oxygen concentrator, which will increase the capacity of the existing oxygen system at Stanton Territorial Hospital, is underway.

The external piece of equipment is part of an ongoing effort to increase oxygen supply at the hospital in case there is a surge of COVID-19 hospitalizations.

The concentrator was brought to Yellowknife in collaboration with the Public Health Agency of Canada and federal suppliers, the authority said. Staff have also been trained on oxygen contingency systems.

The authority said the device will increase "general facility noise" while it's being used and there may be extra traffic in the area amid its installation.

New location to get proof of vaccination

A new location where N.W.T. residents can get proof of their vaccination status will open at Yellowknife's Centre Square Mall on Tuesday.

The Proof of Vaccination Record Office will be open from 8:45 a.m. to 4 p.m. on weekdays, theauthority said.

The office is for people who have issues with a newly-announced online system for getting vaccination records, which the authority is asking residents to use first, or for those who don't have access to a computer.

The existing office, at the Primary Care Centre building, closed on Friday.

The new office will be on the lower level of the mall, next to the elevators, on the southeast end of the building, and staff will make the move on Monday.