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Saskatchewan

Sask. sought help from several U.S. states before asking Ottawa for ICU specialists

The Saskatchewan government reached out to several U.S. states for COVID-19 assistance before it made a formal request to the Canadian federal government on Monday.

Sask. asked Ottawa for critical care specialists on Monday

Premier Scott Moe (left) and president of Saskatchewan's Public Safety Agency Marlo Pritchard (right), confirmed the province's request for help from Ottawa on Monday. Pritchard said the government had also made similar requests to American states in recent days. (Adam Hunter/CBC)

The Saskatchewan government reached out to several U.S. states for COVID-19 assistance before it made a formal request to the Canadian federal government on Monday.

SaskatchewanPublic Safety Agency president Marlo Pritchardsaidthe request to Ottawa is for critical care nurses,respiratory therapistsandperfusionists, who control cardiac bypass machines during surgery.

During a media briefing on Monday, Pritchard said the Provincial Emergency Operations Centre, which is co-ordinating Saskatchewan's COVID-19response, also asked for help from American states and some provinces.

"The decision was made this morning to ask the federal government because we were unable to get it from our emergency measures partners throughout North America," Pritchard said.

He said Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitobaand Ontario belong to the Northern Emergency Management Assistance Compact, alongside Illinois, Montana, Indiana, Michigan, New York, Minnesota, Ohio, North Dakota, Pennsylvaniaand Wisconsin.

"To date, Montana, Michigan, North Dakotaand Pennsylvania have indicated they cannot provide resources. We also know that Alberta and Manitoba are facing a similar situation regarding COVID as Saskatchewan," Pritchard said.

On Monday, Saskatchewan announced it was sending six patients with COVID in ICU to Ontario over the next three days.

Premier Scott Moe said Monday that planning for transferring patients hadbeen going on for "a number of days" and that patients will be transferred to ensure they receive "the very best possible care that they can."

Pritchardsaid Saskatchewan has also reached out through the International Emergency Management Assistance Memorandum of Understanding, which includes eastern states and provinces, and the Pacific Northwest Emergency Management Agreement, which includes westernstates, British Columbia and Yukon.

"We have sent requests to much of North America to identify any ICU skilled workers or perfusionists that may be deployable to Saskatchewan."

Pritchard said the province has to be "realistic" about its request because there are only a limited number of people who are "trained for [those] critical care supports in ICUs."

He said what the federal government can send as far as resources may help staff an additional two to five ICU beds.

As of Monday, Saskatchewan had 85 COVID-19 patients in ICU. The province's normal total ICU bed complement is 79.

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair's office confirmed to CBC News that the federal government received Saskatchewan's request and is currently reviewing it to co-ordinate supports "as soon as possible."

The federal government said a formal request for assistance is made"when an emergency event overwhelms or threatens to overwhelm the resources of a province or territory and federal government help is needed to effectively support the impacted region."

According to the federal government's request for assistance guide, "the Canadian Armed Forcesshould be considered a 'last resort' option, and should not replace solid planning."

On Monday, Public Safety and Emergency Preparednessapproved a request by the Northwest Territories forinfection prevention and control, contact tracingand COVID-19 testing efforts.

The Canadian Red Cross is providing one operations lead and nine epidemic prevention control specialists to N.W.T.

with files from Yasmine Ghania