Canada’s new graphics for COVID-19 show how flat the curve isn’t

It’s not an achievement anyone would want to see. COVID-19 in Canada is on the rise and new graphics show how the curve has become flat in some provinces and in the country at large.

On Canada’s epidemiological update site, there is a lot of knowledge about COVID-19 that you can see, adding new charts.

They run from January 31 to the day of supply for the whole country and for the province and territory, and it is quite transparent how flat the curve is now.

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COVID-19 in Canada as of October 13

When it looks at the graphs of the total number of cases, Canada saw the curve begin to flatten around May and June.

While the line of instances shown continued to increase even at that time, it increased in September, so the curve is no longer flat.

For the provinces and territories, Quebec and Ontario recorded the largest on the curve.

The general instance line is also higher for British Columbia and Alberta, but to the same extent.

Other provinces and territories have noticed that cases remain low.

You can also see the progression of deaths, active instances, and others tested as total, rate, or moving average.

There were 4,042 new COVID-19 demonstrations in Canada on October 13, bringing the total to 186,881.

In September, Dr. Theresa Tam noted that we may only see 5,000 cases reported in October if we do not decrease our number of contacts.

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