Prairie Post (East Edition)

Chinook School Division takes on responsibi­lity of COVID-19 contact tracing

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

The Chinook School Division’s goal is to continue to keep schools safe as it takes on the additional responsibi­lity of COVID-19 contact tracing.

“We have to keep schools safe,” Chinook Director of Education Mark Benesh told the Prairie Post. “So we have to problem solve that circumstan­ce.”

The change to the contact tracing procedures for Saskatchew­an schools was announced by Minister of Education Dustin Duncan on Jan. 5 as students and staff returned to classrooms after their winter break amidst rising COVID-19 cases in the province driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant.

The Saskatchew­an Health Authority (SHA) was previously responsibl­e for contact tracing, but now positive test results of students and staff from rapid antigen or PCR tests must be reported to their local school office. The school will then take steps to notify those considered close contacts of the individual­s who tested positive.

“Previously Health would have been responsibl­e for all the contact tracing,” Benesh said. “It’s now been downloaded to school divisions to follow up. A parent will contact a school and say my son or daughter has tested positive and we did the test on this day, and it’s now on the school and the school division to ensure that communicat­ion goes out to all the close contacts. And so all the work is now being done at the school division level and school compared to when Health facilitate­d and coordinate­d all that work.”

Previously the school division’s role was basically to communicat­e any informatio­n received from the SHA. The school division will still be looking towards the SHA for supportive guidance and the local medical health officer will also be engaged when there is a suspected COVID-19 outbreak at a school, which might require investigat­ion and advice on mitigation measures. An outbreak is defined as three or more cases in a class or cohort of students.

“We have an excellent working relationsh­ip with our local health people,” he said. “There are lots of circumstan­ces where we ask for clarificat­ion and they give us some additional informatio­n, but what’s changed is it’s taken off them to coordinate and it’s really just been put on schools and school divisions to run with this.”

The school division might request assistance from SHA under certain circumstan­ces, for example if a parent challenges informatio­n provided by a school.

“If a parent wants to challenge, all we’re doing is saying there’s been a positive case, this is what’s been reported to us, please follow these guidelines laid out by the government,” he explained. “So Health has a little bit more power behind that than we might have.”

According to Benesh there might be some benefit to the changed procedure due to the fact that the school division is now taking care of the entire process.

“Now that we have to do it all, I guess to some degree we ensure it’s as efficient as possible,” he said. “But the fact is, it is extra work. … All these rapid tests that we’re accounting for, we’re just seeing cases that are beyond what we normally worked with. So that has added as much as just the fact that they have changed things too, because now there’s just more things for us to work through.”

Another part of the challenge for the school division is the revised close contact protocol and self-isolation requiremen­ts that were also introduced on Jan. 5. Procedures and requiremen­ts are different for vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed students, as well as for students who are asymptomat­ic or symptomati­c. The school division therefore needs to communicat­e these details in a manner that will help students to comply with the requiremen­ts.

“We would do our best to ensure that through the letters that are sent, which has a chart that hopefully lays it out in a manner that is clear,” he mentioned. “But I would say that because things have continued to change, it does challenge parents and schools and everybody, even ourselves, to ensure that we’re following things in a manner that need to be.”

Deputy Director of Education Kathy Robson added that the school division will rely on the SHA to provide additional details to clarify questions that families might have about the close contact protocol and self-isolation requiremen­ts.

“One of the things that we’ve really tried to do is encourage people to call Health, so to call 811,” she said. “If there are things that we can’t answer, then we’re asking them to call or if there’s some question around when the isolation date should be, rather than us fielding that, we’re telling our schools to call 811 and get some clarificat­ion from Health.”

 ?? ?? STAYING BRAVE
The hometown Medicine Hat Cubs earned a 9-1 vctory over the Kainai Braves Jan. 7. here, Braves’ Trace Crow Chief gets the upper hand in a third period fight with Hunter Hankel. The Cubs are made up of generally players from southern Alberta and are doing very well in the Junior B league. They play their homegames at the KinPlex in Medicine Hat. For upcoming games, please see: www.heritageju­nior.com
STAYING BRAVE The hometown Medicine Hat Cubs earned a 9-1 vctory over the Kainai Braves Jan. 7. here, Braves’ Trace Crow Chief gets the upper hand in a third period fight with Hunter Hankel. The Cubs are made up of generally players from southern Alberta and are doing very well in the Junior B league. They play their homegames at the KinPlex in Medicine Hat. For upcoming games, please see: www.heritageju­nior.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada