The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Anxiety grows in First Nations communitie­s amid pandemic’s second wave

- WILLOW FIDDLER

First Nations across Canada are having their own second wave of COVID-19 – a jump in case numbers that Indigenous leaders and federal officials are monitoring closely because of the virus’s potential to spread like wildfire in communitie­s often far from medical care.

Indigenous communitie­s have a higher risk of spread and poor outcomes due to health inequities, a greater prevalence of underlying medical conditions and lack of hospitals in remote areas, Canada’s Chief Public Health Officer says. First Nations leaders and health officials also worry the second wave could be more extensive than the first.

Data from Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) underscore the concern.

In mid-March, when pandemic lockdowns began, First Nations had a few cases, and 32 by the end of the month.

The first wave spiked in the last week of April, with 99 infections. After a lull, new cases began to rise in late August, and grew by more than six times. By the end of summer, there were 129 active cases among First Nations.

As of Monday, ISC was aware of 722 COVID-19 infections affecting First Nations since the pandemic began, noting 95 active cases, 60 hospitaliz­ations, 614 recoveries and 13 deaths.

First Nations in Alberta and B.C. have been hit the hardest, with a total of 298 cases reported in Alberta and 161 in B.C. There have also been 99 in Saskatchew­an, 31 in Manitoba, 80 in Ontario and 53 in Quebec.

In a recent interview, Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller said concern about the second wave in First Nations is “immense.” He said Indigenous communitie­s did exceedingl­y well under the first wave, but “we can’t take that for granted.”

Shannon McDonald, acting chief medical officer of B.C’s First Nations Health Authority, the only Indigenous province-wide health authority in Canada, said First

Nations in British Columbia had few cases during the first wave, but the numbers have gone up precipitou­sly, mostly within the past month.

Growth hasn’t just happened in First Nations, she said in an interview, adding there has also been significan­t growth provincewi­de, particular­ly on the Lower Mainland. She said the good news is that the clusters in First Nations are small.

“What people are worried about is the kind of outbreak where we can’t trace; where we don’t know the source of the infection,” she said.

Similar concerns have been raised in Manitoba, which on Tuesday had 781 active cases and 1,441 recoveries from COVID-19. There were 28 people in hospital, seven in intensive care and 24 deaths.

Public health officials last month restricted travel in an attempt to prevent the spread of the virus to northern Manitoba and remote communitie­s, and recently mandated masks be worn in indoor public spaces in the Winnipeg area and limited gatherings to 10 people.

NDP MP Niki Ashton, who represents the riding that includes York Factory First Nation, said members of the community are extremely worried because people there have to go to Winnipeg for health care appointmen­ts, such as meetings with specialist­s, surgery and follow-ups. She noted a recent case in the community was linked to medical travel.

As long as COVID-19 cases are increasing in Winnipeg, First Nations and northern communitie­s will be vulnerable, Ms. Ashton said.

“We need to recognize our communitie­s are very much interconne­cted; people are going back and forth for medical on a daily basis,” she said.

Over the weekend, Chief Raymond Keeper of Little Grand Rapids First Nation in Manitoba, an Anishinaab­e community northeast of Winnipeg near the Manitoba and Ontario border, said he and the band council asked the province to work with them to increase safety measures. As of Sunday, the First Nation had 19 confirmed cases since Sept. 30.

 ?? GLOBE AND MAIL. ?? A precaution­ary sign meets travellers to the Fort William First Nation. As the second wave of Covid-19 deepens, First Nation communitie­s across Ontario are experienci­ng a surge in positive cases, prompting heightened lockdowns and travel restrictio­ns in the already vulnerable communitie­s.
GLOBE AND MAIL. A precaution­ary sign meets travellers to the Fort William First Nation. As the second wave of Covid-19 deepens, First Nation communitie­s across Ontario are experienci­ng a surge in positive cases, prompting heightened lockdowns and travel restrictio­ns in the already vulnerable communitie­s.

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