Edmonton Journal

COVID-19 cases spike in several N.WT. communitie­s

- EMMA TRANTER

A long-term care home in the Northwest Territorie­s declared a COVID -19 outbreak and a hard-hit community asked for policing help as cases in the territory rise steeply this week.

Fort Good Hope Chief Tommy Kakfwi said the community had asked the N.W.T. government for help with policing to ensure residents comply with COVID-19 measures. He also said Fort Good Hope requested GPS spot devices for people isolating out at their camps and in isolation spaces in town.

“We're limited here in the community. We need workers to deliver food. We need food for the elders in isolation,” he said.

A school in the community was being used as an isolation centre, as were some bed and breakfast lodgings, he added.

Kakfwi declared a local state of emergency on Monday after cases started to climb.

Two cases in Norman Wells were linked to the long-term care home, but the N.W.T.'S chief public health officer did not say whether the infections were in staff or residents.

An outbreak is declared when one or more people who live or work in a facility develop COVID-19, Dr. Kami Kandola said.

Kandola said earlier this week that, because of wide community spread, every Fort Good Hope resident is considered to have been exposed to COVID-19.

“We're just assuming that everybody has contact with one another, so it's just a matter of monitoring each other,” Kakfwi said.

A rapid response team was also on the ground in the community. Tests were being done on-site and confirmed in Yellowknif­e.

Kakfwi said two people from Fort Good Hope with COVID -19 had been medevaced out, but he wasn't sure if they were sent to Yellowknif­e or to a southern hospital.

“In a situation like this, we do what we can with what we have,” he said. “We will get through this.”

The N.W.T. recorded 52 new cases Wednesday for a total of 129. That's after posting new 74 cases Tuesday night — up from 34 a day earlier.

Most of the cases were in the Sahtu region in the territory's northwest, including 44 in Fort Good Hope where about 500 people live.

Another 19 cases were in the capital of Yellowknif­e.

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