May 5, 2024

Coronavirus: What’s happening in Canada and around the world on Monday | CBC News

The latest:

COVID-19 cases continue to mount across Canada as the Omicron variant of the coronavirus becomes further entrenched.

Nova Scotia was the first province to report updated figures on Monday, with 581 new cases. The abbreviated release did not include updated hospitalization data, with more detail expected later in the week.

In Ontario on Monday, Health Minister Christine Elliott reported 9,418 new cases of COVID-19. 

Experts have said there may be more cases than reported because many public health units have reached their testing capacity.

Meanwhile, public health experts expect case counts to continue to climb, given the high transmissibility of the Omicron variant, and that has renewed their concerns about the capacity of Canada’s hospitals and health-care workers to handle another wave of the pandemic.

-From The Canadian Press and CBC News, last updated at 10:45 a.m. ET


What’s happening across Canada

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What’s happening around the world

People get a swab for the COVID-19 test for travelling requirement at a mobile coronavirus testing facility outside a commercial office building in Beijing on Sunday. (Andy Wong/The Associated Press)

As of late Monday morning, more than 280 million cases of COVID-19 had been reported worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University’s coronavirus tracker. The reported global death toll stood at more than 5.4 million.

In the Asia-Pacific region, China’s local symptomatic COVID-19 cases crept up again, with most new infections reported in Xian city as it entered a fifth day of a lockdown, while Australian authorities refrained from imposing new curbs despite the country’s first Omicron death.

Meanwhile, South Korea said it has granted an emergency authorization to Pfizer’s COVID-19 treatment pill, Paxlovid. The Ministry of Food and Drug Safety said Monday it expects the introduction of Paxlovid to help diversify options for COVID-19 treatments and prevent patients’ conditions from becoming serious amid surging infections and critical cases in South Korea.

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency says the government has signed contracts to procure Paxlovid pills enough to cover 362,000 patients. It says the Paxlovid pills will be delivered to South Korea as early as mid-January.

In the Americas, U.S. airlines cancelled more than 1,300 flights on Sunday as COVID-19 thinned out the number of available crews, while several cruise ships had to cancel stops after outbreaks on board, upending the plans of thousands of Christmas travellers.

Meanwhile, the Dominican Republic has identified its first case of the Omicron variant.

In Africa, health officials in South Africa on Sunday reported 5,604 new cases and 41 additional deaths.

In the Middle East, Israel’s Health Ministry said on Monday it was shortening the time between offering the second and third doses of COVID-19 vaccine to three months from five months. The new timeframe would be applied to vaccines made by Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca.

Oman will not allow employees in the public or private sectors to enter their workplace without a vaccination certificate that proves they are fully vaccinated, the health minister said in a news conference on Monday.

In Europe, France broke the 100,000 cases threshold for the first time since the pandemic began as the Omicron variant continued its rapid spread, while Italy reported a third successive record tally of cases on Saturday.

From Reuters, The Associated Press and CBC News, last updated at 10:45 a.m. ET

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