Toronto Star

Canada hits two million cases

Hospitals bracing for ‘big bump’ that comes two weeks after virus exposure

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More provinces have tightened public health restrictio­ns as the Omicron variant sent Canada’s COVID-19 cases soaring past the two million mark and raised fears of a post-holiday hospital spike.

The government of Canada’s health website said the total case count was 2,000,976 as of Boxing Day. The website wasn’t updated over the holiday period.

The new milestone was reached as several provinces recorded their highest-ever COVID-19 case numbers over the Christmas weekend.

Manitoba said Monday it was imposing new public health restrictio­ns after the province reported eight new COVID-19 related deaths and 2,154 cases over a three-day period since Christmas Eve.

The new restrictio­ns cap indoor and outdoor public gatherings at 50 per cent of the venue’s capacity or 250 people — whichever is fewer — even for those who are fully vaccinated. They began Tuesday at 12:01 a.m.

Premier Heather Stefanson said the restrictio­ns will be disappoint­ing to people as the holiday season comes to a close.

“But we must act now to protect our health-care system and ensure Manitobans can access the care they need when they need it,” she said.

New Brunswick announced it would impose a 50 per cent capacity limit on restaurant­s, stores, bars, gyms and other establishm­ents starting Tuesday after officials reported 639 new cases of COVID-19 over a threeday period. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador also smashed its previous records as it reported 357 infections in the last three days.

Prince Edward Island, which reported 156 cases over the same period, said it would no longer provide a list of exposure sites because community transmissi­on had become so widespread.

As high as the official figures are, health-care analysts have said the real number of infections is probably far higher. Several provinces have asked people to get tested only if they have symptoms as hospitals and centres have reached their testing limits.

Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba each reported thousands of additional cases Monday, prompting renewed concern over their beleaguere­d healthcare systems’ ability to handle an influx of sick patients.

Linda Silas, head of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, said the “big bump” is usually seen two weeks after exposure to the virus, and expressed worries that holiday gatherings could lead to hospitals becoming overwhelme­d with new cases.

“We are all bracing for that with fear, and with our fingers and toes crossed,” she said Monday.

Quebec’s health minister urged people to reduce contacts after the province saw hospitaliz­ations climb by more than 140 over a four-day period. Quebec reported 8,231 cases.

Ontario reported 9,418 new cases of COVID-19, which was down slightly from the recordbrea­king numbers on Christmas Day.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said 480 people were in hospital because of COVID-19 and 176 in intensive care.

Nova Scotia health authoritie­s reported an outbreak at the Halifax Infirmary site of the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A woman waits to receive a COVID-19 booster vaccine dose at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal on Monday. Quebec residents are urged to limit their contacts after it reported 8,231 cases.
GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS A woman waits to receive a COVID-19 booster vaccine dose at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal on Monday. Quebec residents are urged to limit their contacts after it reported 8,231 cases.

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