The latest:
- COVID-19 deaths in Canada may be 2 times higher than reported, study finds.
- Woman in her 50s the 11th Manitoba COVID patient to die in out-of-province ICU.
- Ontario ‘failed’ LTC residents and families during COVID-19 pandemic, new long-term care minister acknowledges.
- Dr. Deena Hinshaw offers positive outlook as Alberta hits lowest active cases since August.
- ANALYSIS | Saskatchewan still hasn’t reached threshold it set to drop masking, but plan stands.
- Have a question about COVID-19? You can reach us at [email protected]
Ontario is moving into the next step of its reopening plan on Wednesday and the province’s top doctor says he’d prefer to wait a full 21 days before rolling back restrictions further.
“The two- to three-week cycle is very important to maintain so that we do the opening of Ontario in a stepwise manner, always going forward and not having to take a step back,” Dr. Kieran Moore said on Tuesday.
Moore made the comments at his first pandemic briefing since he officially took on the job as Ontario’s chief medical officer of health.
Ontario has surpassed COVID-19 vaccination targets for entering the second step of its reopening plan, which will allow more outdoor activities and more indoor services like haircuts to resume on Wednesday.
More than 77 per cent of people had at least one vaccine dose as of Tuesday morning and 37 per cent were fully vaccinated.
The province set 21 days between each step of its economic reopening to observe public health trends and allow vaccines to take full effect. It moved up the second step of the plan by a few days based on vaccination rates and other positive COVID-19 trends.
Ontario has also passed the goal set for entering the third step of the reopening plan, which would further expand capacity for indoor gatherings.
But Moore, like his predecessor Dr. David Williams, maintained on Tuesday that vaccination isn’t the only metric. He advised proceeding with caution with the more infectious delta variant spreading.
Waterloo Region not moving to Step 2
People with one vaccine dose are less protected against that variant and it’s contributed to local infection spikes in Grey Bruce and Waterloo Region. Waterloo won’t reopen with the rest of the province on Wednesday as it manages the rise in infections.
Moore said he’s watching the variant’s impact locally and internationally and that reopening must be done cautiously to avoid losing progress made in the fight against the virus so far.
“It is a difficult adversary. It’s aggressive. It wants to spread rapidly,” he said of the variant.
“We need to be prudent and we need that 21 days to be able to understand the impact of opening on our communities.”
-From The Canadian Press, last updated at 6:45 a.m. ET
What’s happening across Canada
As of early Wednesday morning, Canada had reported 1,414,746 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 7,400 considered active. A CBC News tally of deaths stood at 26,274. More than 36.7 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered so far across the country, according to CBC’s vaccine tracker.
There were a total of five cases of COVID-19 reported in Atlantic Canada on Tuesday, including:
There were no new cases of COVID-19 reported in Newfoundland and Labrador on Tuesday.
In Quebec, health officials reported four additional deaths and 71 new cases of COVID-19.
In the Prairie provinces, Manitoba on Tuesday reported no new deaths and 61 new cases of COVID-19. Saskatchewan, meanwhile, reported two additional deaths and 52 additional cases of COVID-19.
In Alberta, health officials reported four deaths and 61 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday.
“Across the board, our numbers are moving in the right direction,” Dr. Deena Hinshaw said Tuesday, ahead of a broader reopening later this week.
“Cases, hospitalizations, ICU admissions and our positivity rate are the lowest they’ve been since last summer, early fall.”
Across the North, there were no new cases reported in Nunavut or the Northwest Territories on Tuesday, while 10 new cases and one additional death were reported in Yukon.
“We are in a new phase of this pandemic, one we had hoped not to see,” Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Brendan Hanley said in a statement on Tuesday. “But we are here and we will continue to work together to contain this wave.”
British Columbia will move to Step 3 of its pandemic reopening plan on Thursday, lifting the provincial mask mandate and government state of emergency declaration. The news came as B.C. reported 29 new cases and no new deaths on Tuesday.
-From CBC News and The Canadian Press, last updated at 7:10 a.m. ET
What’s happening around the world
As of early Wednesday morning, more than 181.8 million cases of COVID-19 had been reported around the world, according to data published by Johns Hopkins University in the United States. The reported global death toll stood at more than 3.9 million.
In the Asia-Pacific region, Australian officials extended lockdown and physical distancing measures to more of the country on Wednesday, with four major cities already under a hard lockdown in a race to contain an outbreak of the highly contagious delta coronavirus variant.
In the Americas, the U.S. Supreme Court left in place the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s ban on residential evictions imposed last year to combat the spread of COVID-19 and prevent homelessness during the pandemic.
In Africa, the Tunisian government on Tuesday extended the hours of night curfew in an effort to stop the rapid spread of COVID-19, as the North African country reached a daily record of cases since the start of the pandemic last year.
Zimbabwe’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Tuesday imposed a dusk to dawn curfew, banned inter-city travel and cut business hours with immediate effect in response to increasing coronavirus infections.
In Europe, Greece will allow people fully vaccinated against the coronavirus inside restaurants without masks, the government said, as part of measures to boost inoculation rates.
Russia will fail to vaccinate 60 per cent of its population by the autumn as planned due to sluggish demand for the shots, the Kremlin said, after the country recorded its highest number of daily deaths from the virus.
In the Middle East, Oman said it was expanding its vaccination drive to anyone over the age of 18, as it accelerates what has been the slowest rollout in the Gulf.
-From Reuters, last updated at 6:40 a.m. ET
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