CBC Windsor July 9 COVID-19 update: 46 new cases reported today - Action News
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CBC Windsor July 9 COVID-19 update: 46 new cases reported today

Here's what you need to know about COVID-19 in Windsor-Essex on Thursday, July 9.

Windsor-Essex County Health Unit will provide a COVID-19 update on weekday mornings

Dr. Wajid Ahmed, medical officer of health at the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit provided a COVID-19 update Thursday morning. 46 new cases of the disease were reported in our region. (Windsor-Essex County Health Unit/Facebook)

The Windsor-Essex County Health Unit reported 46 new COVID-19 cases for our area on Thursday, a day after 47 new cases were reported.

Of the new cases, 31 are workers in the agri-farm sector, seven are close contacts of people in the community who have tested positive already, and eight cases are currently under investigation.

"Seven of these cases are family membersand close contacts with confirmed case so it's not unusual in a largefamily of someone gets infected that other family members are already exposed," said medical officer of health Dr. Wajid Ahmed.

The cases currently under investigation are cause for some concern, say Ahmed, as health officials closely monitor the spread of the virus as businesses and services slowly reopen across the region.

To date, roughly 750 farm workers have tested positive for the disease, most of them being temporary foreign workers.

Wednesday sawthe fourth-highest day of reported confirmed cases of the disease. The health unit reported47 new COVID-19 cases in our region, with 45 of those cases in workers in the agri-farm sector, one ina health-care worker and one case is still under investigation.

On Thursday, 46 new COVID-19 cases were reported in Windsor-Essex. (Windsor-Essex County Health Unit)

Ahmed said Wednesday the new cases originated from farms that were already under an outbreak.

"All were close contacts of the symptomatic cases, so by default they were at a high risk of contacting the disease," Ahmed said during a daily press briefing.

Workers at the four farms under outbreak have been identified as "close contacts" of those who have already contracted the virus, said Ahmed, so they have already been self-isolating before the positive test results were announced.

"Once you have a positive case it's easy to pretty much spread it to everyone else living at the same bunkhouseor accommodation."

WATCH | The health unit's COVID-19 update for July 9:

Twoseniors' homes in the area are currently under a COVID-19 outbreak.Riverside Place long-term care home in Windsor has had one staff member test positive,Devonshire Retirement Residence retirement home in Windsor has had three staff members test positive.

An outbreak atExtendicare Tecumseh long-term care home is now over. One resident had tested positive for COVID-19 there.

Five workplaces are currently under a COVID-19 outbreak. One is in the manufacturing sector and four others are in the agricultural sector. The businesses are located in Leamington and Kingsville but the health unit does not name businesses under an outbreak unless there is a risk to public health, say officials.

Should we be testing for COVID-19 after death? An Ontario man thinks so

An Ontario mansays he wants to see more post-mortemCOVID-19 testing, after a Windsor Regional Hospitaldenied a swab test request following the death of his grandmother.

In June, Ada Lidwell was admitted to the hospital after she fell and fractured her hip. The 103-year-old was swabbed for COVID-19 upon arrival, buttestednegative.

More than a week after surgery, Lidwelldeveloped severe pneumonia, dying on June 23.

Her grandson, Steve Saunders, askedhospital staff to swab his dead grandmother, only to be told that post-mortem COVID-19 tests are against hospital policy.

Steve Saunders say Windsor Regional Hospital denied his grandmother a post-mortem COVID-19 test due to hospital policy. (Sameer Chhabra/CBC)

"We had a discussion about how this made no sense if the hospital was at all serious about contact tracing," said Saunders. "Obviously you always want to establish if there is a patient zero in any infection chain."

Though Saunders continued to petition to the hospital for a test,his request wasdenied.

A spokesperson for Windsor Regional Hospital said via email that "our policies reflect active patients."

"A deceased patient is under the jurisdiction of the coroner's office," said Steve Erwin, manager of corporate communications, government and community relations for Windsor Regional Hospital.

COVID-19 in Sarnia-Lambton

Lambton Public Health reported no new cases ofCOVID-19 in the region since last week. There have been 286total cases in the region and overall, there have been 25 deaths.

Another 259people have recovered.

COVID-19 in Chatham-Kent

Chatham-Kent's health unit is reporting no new cases of COVID-19.The area has had 162totalcases, but only five cases are currently active. Those individuals are self-isolating.

In Chatham-Kent, one person has died due to COVID-19 and 156people have recovered.

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