Ontario has declared an emergency after the latest modelling put Canada’s most populous province on track to have more than 20,000 new Covid-19 cases a day by the middle of February – a nearly tenfold increase from the current count.
Ontario, which is battling a coronavirus surge that has swamped its hospitals and triggered a province-wide lockdown, could also see roughly 1,500 more deaths in its long-term care homes through mid-February under a worst-case scenario, according to modeling from experts advising the government.
New restrictions that take effect on 14 January mandate that residents must stay at home except for essential activity, while outdoor gatherings will be limited to five people and non-essential construction work will be restricted.
“I know the stay-at-home order is a drastic measure, one we don’t take lightly. Everyone must stay home to stay lives,” said the Ontario premier, Doug Ford, at a media briefing. “Enforcement and inspections will increase.”
Quebec to enter full lockdown as Covid cases spiral
Read more
Canada began targeted vaccinations in December, with current efforts focused on healthcare workers and residents of long-term care homes.
The federal government ordered an additional 20m doses of the coronavirus vaccine from Pfizer Inc and BioNTech, Justin Trudeau told reporters on Tuesday. That would take the total number of doses to be delivered this year in Canada to 80m.
Ontario, the country’s economic engine, has been under lockdown since 26 December, with non-essential businesses shut and schools closed for in-person learning.
Yet the daily number of Covid-19 cases has risen above 3,500 on average over the past seven days, government data showed. On Tuesday, Ontario reported 2,903 new cases.
Under the worst-case scenario, with 7% case growth, there would be 40,000 new cases daily by mid-February, while the best-case scenario, with 1% growth, would result in 5,000 new cases every day, Ontario’s data showed. Case growth has recently been over 7% on the worst days, the data showed.
In five of the hardest-hit areas of Ontario – including the Toronto area, nearby Hamilton, and Windsor-Essex, across the border from Detroit – schools will remain closed until at least 10 February. Childcare for children who are too young for school will remain open, along with emergency childcare for some school-age children.
“We will have to confront choices that no doctor ever wants to make and no family ever wants to hear,” Dr Steini Brown, head of Ontario’s case modeling, said at a briefing on Tuesday. “People will die from the virus itself and from the overloaded health system that is unable to respond to their needs.”
Brown warned that the new Covid-19 variant from Britain was already in Ontario and could decrease the doubling time of cases – or how long it takes for case counts to double, currently 30 to 40 days – to 10 days.
Last week Quebec, Canada’s worst-affected province, became the first in the country to introduce a curfew to limit the spread.
Свежие комментарии