Manitoba premier should visit ICU to see why mask mandate needed, says mother of baby hospitalized with RSV
CBC
The mother of a baby in a Winnipeg intensive care unit says people need to wear masks to slow the spread of respiratory viruses that have led to a surge in the number of kids ending up in hospital.
Devon McWilliams's daughter Willow is just under four months old and has RSV, or respiratory syncytial virus. She's been taken to the neonatal intensive care unit at Winnipeg's Children's Hospital, where she had to be intubated.
In a post shared on social media, McWilliams invited Premier Heather Stefanson to the hospital unit to better understand why she thinks a mask mandate is necessary.
"I have one visitor spot left and it has your name on it," McWilliams wrote in the post, addressing the premier. "Stop thinking of votes for the next election, start thinking of Manitoba's future and the legacy you will leave."
The Winnipeg Children's Hospital emergency department has seen a significant rise in the number of children with respiratory illnesses, including RSV and influenza, in the past two weeks, a Manitoba Shared Health spokesperson said Thursday.
Earlier this week, the department's medical director said it is in a crisis due to the number of patients presenting in emergency and how sick they are.
McWilliams declined an interview but answered some questions in writing, and gave CBC permission to share her social media post.
She wrote the post on Friday, one day after Stefanson said at a news conference that there are no current plans for a mask mandate, though the premier encouraged people who are sick to wear one if they are "out and about" in public.
Born early, at just 27 weeks, McWilliams's daughter spent the first part of her life in the neonatal ICU.
She was discharged from hospital after 99 days, but after Willow had been home for just four days, McWilliams's older children started getting sick, she said.
She first tried isolating with Willow in a different part of their home, and then moved to her parents' home to try to keep Willow from getting sick.
When the baby started to show signs of difficulty breathing, McWilliams, who lives outside Winnipeg, took her to a local hospital.
They were eventually airlifted to Winnipeg Children's Hospital, where McWilliams said they were admitted to the NICU because there was no room in the pediatric intensive care unit.
In her online post, McWilliams said both Willow's lungs collapsed.