Medicine Hat News

Some health workers may have to self-isolate after colleagues test positive for COVID-19

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WINNIPEG

Some Manitoba health-care workers have tested positive for COVID-19, and that could lead to others having to selfisolat­e.

The Manitoba government says one staff member at a hospital in Selkirk tested positive after travelling within Canada, and had been working while symptomati­c between March 19 and 23.

Public health officials are tracking patients and other staff members who had close contact with the worker, and those people will have to selfisolat­e for 14 days.

The Manitoba Nurses Union says a nurse at a hospital emergency department in Winnipeg has also tested positive and is self-isolating.

The union says it is concerned nurses are not always getting proper protective equipment while dealing with patients, putting workers at risk.

St. Boniface Hospital has sent a letter to workers that says a staff member in the echocardio­graphy department has tested positive, and was working while symptomati­c on March 25.

“Staff in the echocardio­graphy department who worked alongside the individual when they were symptomati­c ... will be required to self-isolate for 14 days from the date of last exposure,” the memo reads.

The province’s chief medical officer said earlier this week the province is investigat­ing cases involving healthcare workers who might have caught COVID-19 while on the job.

“Certainly in other jurisdicti­ons there are, and we have been investigat­ing some cases where that type of transmissi­on is considered,” Dr. Brent Roussin said Tuesday.

“Certainly when we see such cases, the investigat­ion will centre around that - whether it could have been contracted in the workplace as well as was adequate (protective equipment) used at the time.”

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