First Nations people in Manitoba account for 25% of COVID-19 hospitalizations
CBC
First Nations people in Manitoba account for 25 per cent of COVID-19 hospitalizations in the province, and 40 per cent of cases in ICU as of Jan. 18, according to the Manitoba First Nations COVID-19 Pandemic Response Co-ordination Team.
"It's not surprising. We've been hovering around 40 to 50 per cent at different waves throughout the pandemic," said Melanie MacKinnon, who leads the team.
She said First Nations people make up about 12 per cent of the Manitoba population.
As of Jan. 18, the pandemic response team's daily bulletin reported 152 First Nations people in Manitoba in the hospital due to COVID-19, with 57 of those cases reported being on-reserve, and 95 from off-reserve.
The bulletin also reported there were 20 First Nations people in Manitoba currently in ICU, with 12 of those being off-reserve cases.
MacKinnon said it has been difficult to track how many cases reported on First Nations are due to variants of concern because of the time it takes to get test results.
"We're waiting to hear back from our clinical leads in the province, to let us know about the sequencing between Omicron and Delta," said MacKinnon.
"But we are hearing that there are still a number of Delta cases in hospital."
MacKinnon said First Nations people remain at higher risk for severe illness and outcomes from COVID-19.
"I know that there's lots of talk about Omicron being milder or less severe, but we're not able to verify that as yet," she said.
"The data is not telling us that yet."
On Wednesday, Black River First Nation leadership sent a letter to its members declaring a COVID-19 outbreak.
The band said on Jan. 18 there were seven new cases, 23 active cases and 60 people in isolation on the reserve 120 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.
Black River Chief Sheldon Kent said the community has lost a few members to COVID-19.