'Need is urgent': Northwest Territories asks for federal help dealing with COVID-19 outbreak - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 09:42 PM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

'Need is urgent': Northwest Territories asks for federal help dealing with COVID-19 outbreak

The Northwest Territories is "rapidly" running through its resources as a COVID-19 outbreak spills into six communities, the health minister said Wednesday. Now, the territory has asked the federal government and the Red Cross for additional staff and supplies.

The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the N.W.T. more than doubled on Tuesday to 70

A serious looking woman looks to the side.
As the Northwest Territories asks for help from the federal government and Red Cross to deal with the most recent COVID-19 outbreak, Health Minister Julie Green (pictured) asked people who live in areas where a containment order is in place to avoid going to two large funerals planned in Inuvik and Yellowknife this week. (CBC)

The Northwest Territories is running through its resources to deal with the latest COVID-19 outbreak "pretty rapidly," saidHealth Minister Julie Green. Now, the territory has askedthe federal government and the Canadian Red Cross for additional staff and supplies.

The ministertold CBCNews on Wednesdaythatthe territory needs help with testing andlabanalysis andmorepeople to administervaccinations and fillother roles, and that it's looking for more equipmentthough shedid not specify what equipment is needed.

"We have reached out to the federal government and to the Red Cross for additional resources," Green said.

"We were already challenged with the amount of staff we had available because of the time of year [with]lots of people on holiday. Now we have this tremendous need for more nurses."

The territory was already facing a nursing shortage before the latest outbreak.

Green said her government doesn'thave any specific details of where and when more help will arrive, orhow many people will be sent.

"All of those wheels are now in motion," Green said. "Obviously the need is urgentand we expect to hear back as soon as possible."

CBC has reached out to Health Canada and to the Canadian Red Cross but did not hearback by the time of publication.

Six communities with cases

The territory'slatest outbreak began earlier this month with a case at a Dene hand games tournament held in the remote community of Fort Good Hope, which is in the Sahtu region in central N.W.T. The outbreak has now spreadtosixcommunities and there'sno signof it slowing down, in part because of uneven vaccination rates in the territory.

Two communities Fort Good Hope and Colville Lake were put under a 10-day containment order on Sunday.

The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the N.W.T. more than doubled on Tuesday to 70, with 44 of thosein Fort Good Hope.Chief Tommy Kakfwi reported Monday that the communityof just over 500 people has declared a state of emergency.

There are also five cases in Colville Lake, three in Dln, 12 in Yellowknife, five in Norman Wells and one in Inuvik, all connected to the outbreak. It isn't yet known whether the cases are the delta variant, but Dr. Kami Kandola, the territory's chief public health officer, said Monday thatwas likely.

Testing is ongoing in all of the communities where there have been cases reported, and more positive cases are expected, Green said.

"There's, I'm gonna say, a high number of probable cases here that are waiting for lab confirmation,"Green said.

There's also a "high ratio" of the number of tests being taken leading to positive results, Green said higher than in the N.J. Macpherson School outbreak in Yellowknife declared in May. At the time of that outbreak,the percentageof tests resulting in positives was the highestin the territory to date.

Green said people have been transported by medevacair ambulancefrom Colville Lake, and that there's been one hospitalization so far, though she offered no details on that case.

She said the medevacs relate not only to the severity of the cases, but the lack of availablehealth care in the community. For example, Colville Lake's health facility isa"health cabin" without a full-time nurse, she said.

"So, medevacs in situations like that are precautionary," Green said. "We're concerned that the support we can provide in that situation won't be adequate to the need."

A portrait of a man in a beaded moose leather jacket.
Municipal and Community Affairs Minister Shane Thompson said big gatherings, like bingos and hand games, have the potential to be COVID-19 spreader events. (Mario De Ciccio/Radio-Canada)

Gatherings give COVID-19 chance to spread

Municipal and Community Affairs Minister ShaneThompson said the situation is "pretty stressful for the communities."

Thompson said his department has activated the emergency management organizations in the Sahtu and the North Slave regions to meet residents' needs, such as housing.

The number of exposure locations has grown and the government is especially concerned about a public exposure notice at several bingos at the Tree of Peace Friendship Centre in Yellowknife.

Thompson said, like the hand games,bingos can be"an opportunity for the COVID virus to spread," because they bring multiplepeople togetherin close proximity.

Green also warned of the possibility of further spreadat the two large funerals planned this week, one in Inuvik and the other in Yellowknife.

"It's very important that if you are in a community that has a containment order, if you live in the Sahtu, that you not attend these funerals no matter your desire to do so to honour the family," Green said.

She emphasized that those who do go should belimited to those who "most need to be there" and thatpeople wear masks and sanitize their hands.

"That has the potential to be quite a dangerous situation," Green said.

Green said the territory's route out of this crisis relies on people following the orders of the chief public health officer, such as self isolating and self monitoring if required.

"We're saying to people, 'Please don't go out on the land, in response to this,'" she said. "Please stay home and monitor your symptoms so that you're in a place where you can receive medical attention."

Corrections

  • This story was updated from a previous version that said the number of COVID-19 cases more than doubled in the Sahtu region on Tuesday. In fact, the cases more than doubled territory wide.
    Aug 18, 2021 3:10 PM CT

Written by Amy Tucker, with files from Loren McGinnis and Joanne Stassen