People at Six Nations asked to journal, keep receipts to aid COVID contact tracing

Ohsweken Public Health said the information would be confidential and can 'possibly save lives'

Image | Six Nations

Caption: Six Nations of the Grand River wants people in the community to keep track of all their interactions to help with contact tracing. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

Six Nations of the Grand River wants the community to "do their part" in contact tracing by having them track their own movements and interactions in case they get COVID-19 or come in contact with an infected individual.
"All the information they gather is confidential and can quite possibly save lives," reads a release.
In the same release, Ohsweken Public Health (OPH) emphasized that "contact tracing is proven to be one of the most effective ways of identifying and containing the spread of the COVID-19 virus in any community."
"The process involves retracing the steps of a person who is or may be infected to determine the people they have come into contact with," reads the release, noting the process is most effective over the 14-day period when someone was infected.
The Six Nations Elected Council also wants residents to complete a survey with five open-ended questions where they can share "ideas, suggestions and insights" on COVID-19 measures in the community.
The responses will be confidential and viewed only by the council, its emergency control group and OPH.
Six Nations only has four active cases. A total of 14 people have tested positive for COVID-19 and one person has died. There are 84 people in self-isolation.