小蓝视频

Skip to content

Manitoba sets another new COVID-19 record with 183 cases, eight in north

The good news: two people in northern Manitoba have recovered from COVID-19. The bad news: eight more people in the region have tested positive. The really bad news: 183 cases have been announced province-wide - a new record for most cases in a day.
covid

The good news: two people in northern Manitoba have recovered from COVID-19.

The bad news: eight more people in the region have tested positive.

The really bad news: 183 cases have been announced province-wide - a new record for most cases in a day.

Manitoba continues to see higher case numbers of COVID-19. The five day test positivity rate has increased to 7.5 per cent province-wide. Three more people have died from COVID-19, all in Winnipeg - a woman in her 60s connected to the existing outbreak at Parkview Place and two people, a man and woman both in their 80s, connected to an outbreak at St. Boniface Hospital.

Sixty-six people in the north currently have COVID-19. The region's COVID-19 hotspot continues to be The Pas/OCN/Kelsey, where 29 people now have active cases of COVID-19. Thompson/Mystery Lake also continues to have active cases, though numbers there are declining - the community now has 11 active cases, less than half of the number reported there last week.

Cross Lake/Pimicikamak now has 10 active cases of COVID-19. Two health districts, Island Lake and Lynn Lake/Marcel Colomb/Leaf Rapids/O-Pipon-Na-Piwin/Granville, have three active cases, while Shamattawa/York Factory/Tataskweyak/Split Lake has two. Several other districts - Bay Line, Bunibonibee/Oxford House/Manto Sipi/Gods River/Gods Lake, Flin Flon/Snow Lake/Cranberry Portage/Sherridon and Norway House - each have one active case. Four cases are listed as "unknown district" cases.

Another possible exposure has been announced in northern Manitoba, this time in Cross Lake. A person who tested positive for COVID-19 was at a funeral in Cross Lake Oct. 18 when they may have been infectious. It is the third funeral in recent weeks in northern Manitoba where someone attended after having tested positive - a similar situation was announced for Norway House at a Oct. 20 funeral, while another funeral at Lake St. Martin First Nation Oct. 12 has also been described as a possible exposure. Attendees of all three events are asked to self-monitor for symptoms, isolate and present for testing if symptoms develop.

Restrictions remain in place for northern communities and schools.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks