Lethbridge Herald

Canadian virus cases top 100K

CANADA’S COVID-19 CASELOAD SURPASSES 100,000

- Michelle McQuigge and Morgan Lowrie THE CANADIAN PRESS

Canada’s struggle against the COVID-19 pandemic passed a bleak milestone on Thursday, with data from one of the hardesthit provinces pushing the national caseload over the 100,000 threshold.

The national tally, reached after Ontario reported 173 news cases, secured Canada’s place among the 20 countries hardest-hit by the novel coronaviru­s since its global spread began just six months ago.

Medical experts say the Canadian figures highlight both successes and failures in Canada’s response to the pandemic, noting provincial and territoria­l health systems remained able to cope with the crisis despite government­s’ early reluctance to impose widespread closures and lack of preparatio­n for a robust testing regime.

“It could have been much more than that had we not implemente­d the measures we did when we did,” said Dr. Susy Hota, medical director of infection prevention and control at Toronto’s University Health Network. “We did not overwhelm the system in that initial wave that hit the country.”

Hota said the medical community was awake to the possibilit­y of a serious medical crisis ahead of the population at large, who for weeks were told that a new form of coronaviru­s originatin­g in the Chinese city of Wuhan posed a minimal to low risk to Canadians.

Early literature on the disease eventually dubbed COVID-19 sounded tentative alarm bells for doctors before the federal government launched an informatio­n blitz aimed at curbing its spread on Jan. 24, she said.

Government assurances that the disease had not reached Canadian shores had to be abandoned the next day when a Toronto man returning from a visit to Wuhan was identified as the country’s first COVID-19 patient. Three days later, another case was diagnosed in British Columbia.

Quebec has recorded the highest number of cases and fatalities since its first case was announced on Feb. 27. The province’s spring break, which falls on the first week of March, has been widely cited as a root cause of the severe outbreak in that province.

Premier Francois Legault has said the mass exodus of residents travelling abroad came “at the worst possible time,” noting their uninhibite­d movements likely allowed the virus to proliferat­e.

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