Delta took Manitoba ICUs to the brink this fall. Omicron is poised to make another push
CBC
After a miserable 2020 holiday season marred by deadly COVID outbreaks in personal care homes, the last thing anyone in Manitoba wanted was another dark December.
This is, however, what we're getting, albeit with fewer fatalities and more uncertainty.
A number of depressing pandemic indicators over the past few weeks has forced Premier Heather Stefanson and her cabinet to approve the first set of broad-spectrum pandemic restrictions in six months.
The main metric is a spike in COVID-19 cases, likely because of the continuing spread of the delta variant but also possibly due to the arrival of omicron.
On Dec. 13, Manitoba was reporting an average of 164 new COVID cases a day. As of Monday, that running average had risen to 234 cases per day, a rise of 43 per cent in one week.
On its own, one week of rapid growth would not be a cause for concern. But the prospect of continuing rapid spread as the more-transmissable omicron variant supplants the delta strain suggests Manitoba should not expect only one week of rapidly climbing case counts.
Even then, climbing case counts would not be an overwhelming concern, if Manitoba hospitals had the same capacity to handle severe COVID cases as they did during the second and third waves of the pandemic.
Unfortunately, that is not the case, either. At the most desperate point of the second wave, nurses and doctors in Manitoba intensive care wards somehow treated 129 intensive care patients. At the most desperate point of the third wave, they managed to treat 131.
Over the past few weeks, Manitoba ICUs have struggled to treat between 87 and 104 patients. The health-care system simply doesn't have the critical-care capacity it cobbled together months ago.
The reasons for this are numerous and well-documented. More than 21 months into the pandemic, some nurses have retired or quit. Their replacements are eager but don't possess the same skills and experience, at least not yet. They also have to spend more time treating individual patients, since more tend to be young and able to endure more time in ICUs without succumbing to COVID.
The bottom line is Manitoba is entering the omicron phase of the pandemic with hospitals already tapped out.
When you think back to the start of the pandemic, this was the ultimate worst-case scenario: a health-care system so ravaged by the pandemic, it was unable to deliver basic services to people who need them.
But this is where we are, and where we have been for many weeks now.
Yet only on Friday did the chief provincial public health officer announce new restrictions he hopes will slow the rise in COVID cases that will translate into more people in ICUs a few weeks down the road.