Manitoba

Workplaces were source of 25% of Manitoba's COVID-19 community-linked cases last fall

Manitoba saw hundreds of COVID-19 cases in workplaces and stores after the province ordered most businesses shut and barred private gatherings last November, according to government data obtained through a freedom-of-information request.

Retail stores, health-care facilities among top community sources for 6-week period, provincial data shows

For the first time during the pandemic, the provincial government has included data on the proportion of cluster cases occurring in various settings in Manitoba. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Manitoba saw hundreds of COVID-19 cases linked to workplaces and stores last fall after the province ordered most businesses shut and barred private gatherings.

"I think this is a pretty good warning signal for us that we're not necessarily following all the procedures that we need to be," said University of Manitoba virologist Jason Kindrachuk.

New provincial government data obtained by CBC News through a freedom-of-information request provides the first detailed snapshot of where Manitobans were infected with the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 from Nov. 1 to Dec. 15, 2020.

The illness infected nearly 16,000 people across the province during that six-week period. Half of those cases were tied to close contacts such as household members and a quarter are listed as unknown or missing information. Another quarter were linked to a variety of community sources.

In total, contact tracers tied 3,764 cases to community, and investigators deemed almost 40 per cent of those — 1,475 — as unknown transmission.

WATCH | See where COVID-19 spread in the fall when most businesses were closed:

See where COVID-19 spread in the fall when most businesses were closed

4 years ago
Duration 2:16
Manitoba saw hundreds of COVID-19 cases linked to workplaces and stores last fall after the province ordered most businesses shut and barred private gatherings.

For the rest of the community cases, workplaces topped the list, accounting for 873 infections, or a quarter of all community-based infections. 

Retail was responsible for the most COVID-19 cases after that, with 423. Outbreaks at health-care facilities accounted for 380 infections. (That doesn't include personal care homes, which fall under the province's "congregate settings" category. There were 202 cases in that category during the six-week period.)

Another 216 cases were linked to transmission inside educational institutions and daycares.

The province said some cases might have multiple sources of exposures.

Kindrachuk said he wasn't surprised COVID-19 was spreading in workplaces and retail stores, because they are among the few places still open during Manitoba's red-level restrictions, which came into effect in Winnipeg on Nov. 2, then expanded to the rest of the province on Nov. 12.

He added, though, it may be a sign people were letting their guard down while at work.

"There's always this question about comfortability in workplaces," he said.

"Are people maybe not adhering as close to infection control measures because they have that built-up comfortability, that subconscious belief that they're OK because the others around them are OK, and these are people that they trust and they know?"

Jason Kindrachuk is Canada Research Chair in infectious diseases at the University of Manitoba. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

The province has recommended people work at home, but has not mandated that under the current public health order, which forces non-essential businesses to close but allows stores to open for the sale of essential goods.

During the six-week period starting Nov. 1, Manitoba saw hundreds of daily new COVID-19 cases announced. The province's COVID-19 death count skyrocketed, with 439 deaths reported in that time, reaching a total of 508 by Dec. 15.

Precarious work problematic: epidemiologist

Toronto social epidemiologist Dr. Farah Mawani said other factors may have been at play in the high number of workplace-related cases.

"If people are in precarious positions — where they don't have a commitment to a longer contract, their income is low, they have limited benefits … they're in a position where they don't have the power to challenge lack of safety in the workplace," she said. 

"They don't have the power to choose to stay at home if they're sick or if a member of their household is sick."

Customers line up outside a Winnipeg Costco on Nov. 16, 2020. Stores have been allowed to remain open if they sell essential goods but are now required to block off non-essential items. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

She said it's important to look at some of the systemic factors that might prevent someone from working from home.

"One thing that we do know globally, and certainly in Canada, [is] a very high proportion of people working in precarious employment conditions are our racialized people. And many of them are also immigrants who are underemployed."

Retail council wants stores reopened

Meanwhile, the Retail Council of Canada said there could be several reasons for spread in stores, including the fact November and December are usually the busiest time of year for retailers. As well, there were few other places people could gather, the council says.

But its Prairie director of government relations, John Graham, said it's important to look at the number of infections tied to retailers in the context of total cases for the province during the six-week timeframe.

That number shows retail stores were connected to just under three per cent of total COVID-19 cases.

"Retail stores — frankly, most businesses — create a safe environment and [in] jurisdictions where they remained open, they haven't sacrificed the economy the way that Manitoba has done," he said.

"We think that retail stores are well-positioned to continue to create a safe environment for their employees and for their customers, and we would be disappointed if we don't start to see retailers open soon."

But Kindrachuk said the message for Manitobans from public health should continue to be only shopping when necessary and designating one shopper per household.

A more detailed picture of where Manitobans are getting infected with COVID-19 will be useful in the future, he said. 

"When we start thinking about further restrictions, if we have to go down that road, at the least we know now a little bit better where some of the transmission is occurring and maybe how to strategize for the restrictions."

WATCH | Exposure data could be source of confusion, says Dr. Jazz Atwal:

Exposure data could be source of confusion, says Dr. Jazz Atwal

4 years ago
Duration 1:13
Dr. Jazz Atwal, Manitoba's acting deputy chief public health officer, said data on COVID-19 exposures obtained by CBC News should be approached carefully.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

​Austin Grabish is a reporter for CBC News in Winnipeg. Since joining CBC in 2016, he's covered several major stories. Some of his career highlights have been documenting the plight of asylum seekers leaving America in the dead of winter for Canada and the 2019 manhunt for two teenage murder suspects. In 2021, he won an RTDNA Canada award for his investigative reporting on the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, which triggered change. Have a story idea? Email: austin.grabish@cbc.ca