Ottawa to send epidemiologists, lab techs and others to help COVID-19-ravaged Manitoba - Action News
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Manitoba

Ottawa to send epidemiologists, lab techs and others to help COVID-19-ravaged Manitoba

The Canadian government is responding to Manitoba's urgent plea for help to battle COVID-19 and over-capacity intensive care units by deploying epidemiologists, laboratory techniciansand increased testing capacity.

Premier Brian Pallister asked the federal government for nurses, respiratory therapists, contact tracers

A close-up of a patient's hand as they lay in a medical bed. A health-care worker wearing a gown and gloves attends to them.
A spokesperson for Premier Brian Pallister says Manitoba is grateful for any help to battle COVID-19 and help care for patients in hospital. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The Canadian government is responding to Manitoba's urgent plea for help battlingCOVID-19 and over-capacity intensive care units by preparing to deployepidemiologists andlaboratory techniciansand to increasetesting capacity in the province.

The ministersof public safety and emergency preparedness, health and national defenceconfirmed in a news release Monday that the federal government willprovidea range of supports to Manitoba, which reporteda record high number of patients in intensive care that same day.

The news releasesaid the federal government wouldsend human resources, deploy medical staff through the Canadian Red Cross and provide support from the Canadian Armed Forces.

The Canadian Armed Forces is currentlysupporting vaccine rollouts in up to 23 First Nationscommunities in Manitoba until the end of June. It's not clear if the province has requested itshelp beyond that.

Jessica Lamirande, a spokesperson for the armed forces said in an email the military is poised to help in the fight against COVID-19, but didn't say how that would look.

CBC News hasreached out to the Red Cross for more information and will update this story when the agencyresponds.

Ottawa is also preparing to send epidemiologists, public health workers and laboratory technicians and from the Public Health Agency of Canada and Health Canada, the news release said.

"Manitoba is appreciative of additional assistance, just as we were happy to assist other jurisdictions in times of need," said provincial spokesperson Blake Robert.

Although the news release says Ottawa is still waiting on a formal request for federal assistance, Robert said that request was madeFriday.

Fourteen people who landed in Manitoba ICUsafter getting COVID-19 hadbeen transferred to hospitals across Ontario as of Mondayto free up space in the strainedunits, said a spokesperson for Shared Health, the provincialhealth organization.

On top of the patients moved to Ontario, the total number of COVID-19 ICU patients from the province Monday was 88 a record high for Manitoba.

Manitoba needs up to 50 critical care nurses and 20 respiratory therapists, as well asup to 50 contact tracers from Statistics Canada, Premier Brian Pallister said after talking with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday.

"This is going to be we hopea temporary thing and a short-term thing, but the sooner we get a little bit of backup help here the better," Pallister said at the time.

Pallisterhas alsoasked the U.S. forsurplus doses of COVID-19 vaccines in the U.S. to be shipped to Canada.

Shared Health's Chief Nursing Officer Lanette Siragusaalso mentioned in a news conference Friday that any health-care workers sent to Manitoba would be stationed at three Winnipeg acute care facilities.

A spokesperson from the federal government said the precise details of the resources deployed will be worked out with the province in the coming days.