Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa planning to send health workers to Manitoba

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2021 12:11 PM
  • Ottawa planning to send health workers to Manitoba

The federal government is deploying health workers, medical equipment and the military to Manitoba as COVID-19 overwhelms the province's hospitals.

Manitoba has the highest new COVID-19 infection rate in North America currently, with more than 1,200 new cases confirmed over the recent long weekend.

More than a dozen critical patients have already been flown to Ontario for intensive care, some as far away as Ottawa, London and Windsor.

Winnipeg Liberal MP Jim Carr, cabinet's special representative to the Prairies, says Ottawa is responding to requests for assistance from Manitoba.

Carr says the military is deploying to 23 First Nations to aid in vaccinations, epidemiologists and interviewers will help with contact tracing, and Ottawa is also preparing to send federal health care workers and potentially some from the Canadian Red Cross.

Carr says Manitoba has also asked for more personal protective gear as the province's health care system "is reaching its limit."

MORE National ARTICLES

Parks Canada adapts to COVID-19 as camping starts

Parks Canada adapts to COVID-19 as camping starts
Parks have brought in some of their own measures as well to try to keep campers safe while enjoying the outdoors. "There will be, in different parks, different kinds of services," Wilkinson said.

Parks Canada adapts to COVID-19 as camping starts

$50M fund to support B.C. anchor attractions

$50M fund to support B.C. anchor attractions
Premier John Horgan and Tourism Minister Melanie Mark said they believe the $50-million BC Major Anchor Attractions Program is enough to prevent any of those not-for-profits and businesses on the edge from going under.

$50M fund to support B.C. anchor attractions

B.C. Mounties say homicide victims were brothers

B.C. Mounties say homicide victims were brothers
The RCMP say they are releasing the names of 29-year-old Erick Fryer and 31-year-old Carlos Fryer in an effort to help their investigation. They say the bodies of the two men from Kamloops, B.C., were found by a couple walking in a remote area around Naramata Creek north of Penticton.

B.C. Mounties say homicide victims were brothers

B.C. may accelerate delivery of second doses

B.C. may accelerate delivery of second doses
In a statement, the province says with a large and steady vaccine supply after most people have had their first jab, officials will be able to consider how they might be able to accelerate the delivery of second shots.

B.C. may accelerate delivery of second doses

Vancouver cops hope DNA might solve boys' murder

Vancouver cops hope DNA might solve boys' murder
Sgt. Steve Addison said advancements in science, in combination with people's interest in learning about their ancestry, have opened a door to discovering who may have killed two boys, ages seven and eight.

Vancouver cops hope DNA might solve boys' murder

B.C. mink farm under COVID-19 quarantine

B.C. mink farm under COVID-19 quarantine
The Ministry of Agriculture says two other mink on the farm, which has about 25,000 animals, are suspected to be positive for the virus. It says in a statement that the quarantine prohibits the movement of animals and materials from the property.

B.C. mink farm under COVID-19 quarantine