Public health officials have declared an outbreak at an Ingersoll long-term care home after seven health-care workers there tested positive for COVID-19, but how the virus got into the home remains a mystery.
Southwestern Public Health, which covers Oxford and Elgin counties and St. Thomas, said a health-care worker at Secord Trails Care Community tested positive Monday. Since then, officials have recorded six more cases among staff, who hold different positions and have different levels of interactions with residents.
All seven infected workers are self-isolating at home, officials said. So far, none of the home’s roughly 80 residents has tested positive, though some results are still pending.
The first case was confirmed after a staffer with “very mild” symptoms was tested, Joyce Lock, the region’s chief medical officer, said at a news conference Friday. But there’s no indication of how the virus got into the home.
“We don’t even know who the first (infected) staff member was, because when the other six staff members were deemed to be positive, on deeper questioning (we) realized some had developed very mild symptoms prior to the first case,” Lock said.
“So we don’t know who the index case was or where the exposure may have occurred.”
Lock said extra staff have been brought in to ensure the home, which employs about 110 people, remains fully staffed.
Though most of the infected staff reside within Southwestern Public Health’s jurisdiction, health officials aren’t releasing where they live, Lock said.
All Secord Trails staff and residents have been swabbed since Monday, Lock said. Officials are working to inform people of their results and trace all contacts, and all precautions are being taken to prevent the virus spreading within the home.
Sienna Living, the home’s owner, said Friday that 51 residents have tested negative, and test results on 27 others are pending.
Long-term care and retirement homes across Canada have been hit hard by the virus crisis, with residents accounting for most COVID-19 cases and deaths.
As of Friday, there were 171 active outbreaks at Ontario long-term care homes, and 1,486 residents and patients had died, according to figures collected by the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.
On Friday, Ontario reported 441 new COVID-19 cases, bringing the provincial total to 24,628 since the pandemic began. About 76 per cent of those cases have been resolved.
jjuha@postmedia.com
Twitter.com/JuhaatLFPress