Record number in intensive care as Manitoba announces 320 new COVID-19 cases on Friday
Coronavirus-linked hospitalizations also reached new high, as 9 more deaths reported
There are now more COVID-19 patients in Manitoba's hospitals and intensive care units than ever before, the province's top doctor says, after a week in which the number of people in hospital with the illness went up almost every day.
That trend continued on Friday, when Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin announced 361 people hospitalized with COVID-19, up from 357 on Thursday.
The record 55 intensive care patients with COVID-19 — 43 of whom are on ventilators — make up just under half of Manitoba's critical care patients, Shared Health Chief Nursing Officer Lanette Siragusa said at the conference.
"I cannot emphasize enough the impact that these COVID numbers are having on our staff throughout the system," Siragusa said. "They are tired, they are fatigued, they are stressed by the changes and the intensity that is upon them."
The province's critical care program is now working at 161 per cent of its pre-pandemic capacity, she said.
Projections released Friday suggest sweeping restrictions in Manitoba have barely kept the province from its worst-case scenario for daily COVID-19 cases, which assumes few restrictions and poor compliance in the province.
"It's a scary thought to think about what would happen if we didn't have the restrictions and if Manitobans weren't doing their part," Siragusa said.
Manitoba also announced on Friday that another 320 people have contracted COVID-19 and nine more have died.
The province's latest coronavirus-linked deaths include a woman in her 50s from the Interlake-Eastern health region and four people linked to care home outbreaks across Manitoba, Roussin said.
There are now 134 intensive care spaces in Manitoba after a new 14-bed COVID-19 unit was added at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre Thursday night, Siragusa said.
Manitoba's five-day test positivity rate — a rolling average of the COVID-19 tests that come back positive — is up slightly to 13.4 per cent, Roussin said. In Winnipeg, that rate dipped to 14. 6 per cent.
WATCH | Full news conference on COVID-19 | Dec. 4, 2020:
Two previously announced COVID-19 cases were removed from the province's totals because of a data correction, Roussin said, bringing Manitoba's total case tally to 18,069.
Of those, 8,535 are considered recovered from COVID-19, while 9,172 are still deemed active, though Roussin has previously said that number is inflated because of a data entry backlog.
An outbreak of COVID-19 has been declared at the Brandon Correctional Centre, which has been moved to the critical red level on the pandemic response system, Roussin said.
The deaths announced Friday, which bring the province's total to 362, include two women in their 90s linked to Brandon's Fairview Personal Care Home, Roussin said. The most recent deaths also include two other people linked to outbreaks in Winnipeg: a woman in her 80s linked to Lions Manor Senior Housing and a man in his 90s linked to Holy Family Home.
The deaths of two Winnipeg men (in their 60s and 90s) and two people in the Southern Health region (a man in his 70s and a woman in her 80s) were also announced Friday.
Most of the cases announced Friday (200) are in the Winnipeg health region, with another 54 in the Southern Health region, Roussin said. The remaining cases are spread out through the Northern Health region (30), the Prairie Mountain Health region (20) and the Interlake-Eastern health region (16).
Possible exposures to COVID-19 are listed by region on the province's website.
There were 2,706 more COVID-19 tests done in Manitoba on Thursday, bringing the total completed in the province since early February to 365,707.