'So many challenges': How COVID-19 outbreak is impacting one tiny Cree town - Action News
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'So many challenges': How COVID-19 outbreak is impacting one tiny Cree town

Since Jan. 7, there have been 27 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Ouj-Bougoumou, a tight-knit Cree community, located more than 730 kilometres north of Montreal.

Current outbreak in Ouj-Bougoumou leaves a third of 980 residents isolating

More than a third of Ouj-Bougoumou'spopulation of 980 people is self-isolating after 27 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed Since Jan. 7 in the tight-knit Cree community. (CBC North/ Jaime Little)

With more than a third of Ouj-Bougoumou'sentire population of 980 people currently in mandatory self-isolation, Chief Curtis Bosum has had a very busy start to 2021.

Since Jan. 7, there have been 27 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in this tight-knit Cree community, located more than 730 kilometres north of Montreal.

Many of the peopleself-isolating are close enough contacts of the 27 positive cases to be put in precautionary self-isolation by Cree public health.

"That's why the contact tracing is so huge. We're such a small community ... we're very close to one another, not only in the family, but [also as] friends," said Bosum.

Bosum said the vast majority of residents are doing a great job of controlling the outbreak, respecting the self-isolation and following the protocols. He stressed how important it is to continue to do so.

I think this really scared the community.- Curtis Bosum, Chief Ouj-Bougoumou

"I'm very grateful that they are responding in a positive way. They understand the importance.I think this really scared the community," said Bosum.

The outbreak in Ouj-Bougoumou is linked to gatherings and parties over the new year that has also led to 33 cases so far in the nearby Cree community of Mistissini.

It has also led to a vast and ongoing contract tracing exercise by Cree public health, which at last count, included 727 contacts and more than 597 COVID-19 tests.

Chief Curtis Bosum said there wasn't a new COVID-19 case in the community Wednesday and that six of the 27 cases are now considered recovered. (Cree community of Ouj-Bougoumou)

All of the Cree communities, including Ouj-Bougoumou, are currently in the most restrictive phase of the Cree Nation's deconfinement plan, in which indoor and outdoor gatherings are forbidden, and community access and businesses arerestricted to essential services only. Ouj-Bougoumou, along with some other communities, have also put in place a curfew.

"When we increase restrictions and measures, this helps the contact tracing team to do its work to track further transmission," said Bertie Wapachee, Chairperson of the Cree Board of Health and Social Services of James Bay, in one of his regular addresses to the Cree communities.

For Bosum, the outbreak has also been a confirmation of the warnings Cree leadership have been giving since March, that if the virus got into the communities, it would spread like wildfire.

"It's kind of sad that the outbreak was so devastating ... so big right now," said Bosum.

No grocery store a challenge

It's also complicated by the fact that Ouj-Bougoumou is one of the only Cree communities without a grocery store. That means at the beginning of the outbreak, many residents were regularly traveling to nearby non-Cree towns to buy food.

Early on in the pandemic, community leadership fast-tracked renovations to an old fire hall to give the residents access to basics like bread, butter, flour and frozen goods such as vegetables without needing to leave Ouj-Bougoumou, according to Bosum.

They are also working with a grocery store of a major chain about an hour away for food deliveries.

Building a local grocery store was already in the works before the pandemic, but is now even more of a priority according to Bosum.

"Ouj has faced so many challenges during this pandemic," he said.

Signs of hope

Now two weeks into the outbreak, Bosum said he's starting to see some signs of hope.

On Wednesday, there were no new names added to the list of positive cases in Ouj-Bougoumou, andsix of the 27 positive cases who are now considered recovered, according to Bosum.

"So 14 days of people being isolated ... if we continue with the trend right now, this will slow down," he said,adding there are no signs of community transmission in Ouj-Bougoumou.

"So, some hope," said Bosum, adding the community knows and appreciates that other Cree communities are keeping Ouj-Bougoumou in their prayers.