Passengers near Manitoba COVID-19 case on June flights now told to self-isolate
No new cases of COVID-19 announced in Manitoba on Thursday; province has 16 active cases
Some passengers on Air Canada flights last month are now being advised to self-isolate because they are considered close contacts of a COVID-19 case identified earlier this week in Manitoba, the province said Thursday.
No new cases of COVID-19 in the province were announced on Thursday, with a total of 16 active cases in the province.
The daily news release did, however, update a warning from earlier this week about a passenger who travelled by plane three times in June and tested positive for COVID-19.
On Tuesday, the province advised passengers on the flights to simply self-monitor for symptoms. However, on Thursday, that advice was updated to instruct passengers in affected rows to self-isolate for 14 days following the flight.
The province's advisory includes:
- June 18: Air Canada flight AC 295, from Winnipeg to Vancouver, rows 19-25.
- June 21: Air Canada flight AC 122 from Vancouver to Toronto, rows not yet determined.
- June 23: Air Canada flight AC 259, from Toronto to Winnipeg, rows 24 to 30.
People who were on those flights and in those rows are considered close contacts of the case, the province said. They are advised to self-isolate for 14 days from the time of the flight and monitor for symptoms.
If you were on the flight but not in the affected rows, you should self-monitor for symptoms, the province said.
In the past week, 10 new cases of COVID-19 have been announced in Manitoba. Eight of them were in the Winnipeg health region, according to provincial data, and the remaining two were in the Southern Health region.
At least four of the cases were linked to the trucking industry.
As of Thursday, 302 people have recovered from COVID-19 in Manitoba, the province said Thursday.
A total of 325 confirmed or probable cases have been identified in the province since the pandemic began, and seven Manitobans have died.
No one is currently in hospital or in intensive care for COVID-19, the province said.
On Wednesday, 512 tests were completed, with a further 503 tests on Tuesday. That brings Manitoba's total to 64,329 tests since early February.