Winnipeg boy under 10 dies from COVID-19, province's youngest death linked to illness - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg boy under 10 dies from COVID-19, province's youngest death linked to illness

The boy's death was among 10 announced Saturday, bringing the total in Manitoba to 290. The province also announced 487 new COVID-19 cases, its third-highest single-day increase to date.

Record 327 people in hospital have coronavirus, including 44 in intensive care

A COVID-19 outbreak has been declared in a unit at the Health Sciences Centre in Winnipeg, the province said in its Saturday update. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

A Winnipeg boy under the age of 10 has died from COVID-19, becoming the youngest person in Manitoba to lose their life to the illness.

The number of people hospitalized with the coronaviruscontinued its steady climb on Saturday, reaching a record high of 327 up from 322 on Friday, the province said in a news release.Of those, 44people are in intensive care.

The grim updates come as Manitoba announces 487 new cases of the illness, its third-highest single-day increase to date.

Of the nine other deaths announced Saturday, five are connectedto known outbreaks in Manitoba.

They include a man in his 70s and a woman in her 90s linked to the Gilbert Plains Personal Care Home;a man in his 80s with ties to Fairview Home in Brandon;a woman in her 80s connected to Heritage Lodge Long Term Care Home in Winnipeg; and a man in his 90s linked to Park Manor Care in Winnipeg.

The remaining deaths announced Saturday are two women (in their 60s and 80s) from the Winnipeg health region;a man in his 60s from the Interlake-Eastern Health region; and a woman in her 80s from the Southern Health region, the province's news release says.

The boy who died had underlying medical conditions, a provincial spokesperson confirmed on Monday. The spokesperson did not say if the case was linked to a known outbreak.

The latest deaths bring Manitoba's number ofcoronavirus-linkedfatalities to 290.

More than three-quarters of Manitoba's total COVID-19 deaths happened this month. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

The province has declared COVID-19 outbreaks in the GD4 unit at the Health Sciences Centrein Winnipegand at the Manitoba Developmental Centre in Portage la Prairie a long-term care facility forresidents with intellectual disabilities. Both sites have been moved to the critical red level on the province's pandemic response system, the release says.

Meanwhile, outbreaks previously declared at Arborgate School in La Broquerie and Reston Schoolare now over.

The chief provincial public health officer warned againon Friday that Manitoba'shealth-care capacity is being stretched to its limits, with record numbers of COVID-19 patients in hospital and dozens in intensive care.

"We're not going to be able to have enough capacity to maintain these numbers for much longer," Dr. Brent Roussin said at a news conference.

Manitoba's five-day test positivity rate a rolling average of the COVID-19 tests that come back positive is down slightly again to 14.2 per cent. In Winnipeg, that rate is now 13.9 per cent, the province says.

Of everyone tested for COVID-19 in Manitoba in the last five days, 14.2 per cent got a positive result. The province's test positivity rate has been in the double-digits since Nov. 10. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

There have now been 16,118 cases of COVID-19 identified in Manitoba, 6,804 of which are considered recovered.

Another 9,024 cases are still considered active, though Roussin has previously said that number is inflated because of a data entry backlog.

Nearly two-thirds of the new cases announced on Saturday (307) are in the Winnipeg health region, while another one-fifth (104) are in the Southern Health region.

The remaining cases are spread out across the Northern Health region (38), the Interlake-Eastern health region (23) and the Prairie Mountain Health region (15).

On Friday, 2,640 more COVID-19 tests were done in Manitoba, the news release says, bringing the total completed in the province since early February to 348,768.

WATCH | Dr. Brent Roussin speaks about recent COVID-19-related deaths:

We cant continue with these numbers

4 years ago
Duration 0:42
Dr. Brent Roussin, Manitobas chief public health officer, says COVID-19 deaths in the province have skyrocketed since last month.