For the latest data on September 28, visit our blog here.
Alberta: 1520 active instances (17032 instances in total, 260 deaths, 15252 resolved)
British Columbia: 1399 assets (8395 in total, 227 deaths, 6769 resolved)
Manitoba – 418 assets (1674 in total, 18 deaths, 1238 resolved)
New Brunswick – 6 assets (199 Fix 2 deaths, 191 resolved)
Newfoundland and Labrador: 1 active case (272 in total, 3 deaths, 268 resolved)
Northwest Territories: 0 active instances (five instances in total, five resolved)
Nova Scotia: 1 active case (1,087 total cases, 1,021 resolved deaths)
Ontario: 3774 assets (48496 in total, 2836 deaths, 41886 resolved)
Prince Edward Island: 1 active case (58 cases in total, resolved)
Quebec: 3917 assets (69670 in total, 5810 deaths, 59943 resolved)
Saskatchewan – 146 assets (1830 in total, 24 deaths, 1673 resolved)
Yukon – 0 assets (15 in total, 15 resolved)
Nunavut – 0 active (4 false positives)
CFB Trenton – 0 active instances (thirteen instances in total, thirteen resolved)
Authorities have been running to involve the spread of COVID-19, as Canadians have the virus while traveling to other countries, human-to-human transmission, and network spread.
Of the more than 145,000 cases diagnosed across the country, at least 125,000 have been resolved, meaning those other people are no longer contagious. As daily COVID-19 cases begin to accumulate across the country, Yahoo News Canada will focus on reporting “active instances” to put our existing scenario in context.
Another day with more instances in Ontario, 31 new instances in schools
Ontario reported 409 new cases on Thursday, marking the fifth time in more than seven days that it has surpassed 400 cases.
Prior to the stretch, Ontario had recorded more than 400 cases in 24 hours since June 2.
The last patients met after the province conducted 30,634 COVID-19 screening tests, which led to a positivity rate of 1. 3%, tied for its current production since last June.
Of the 409 new cases, 151 met in Toronto, 82 in Ottawa, 46 in Peel, 34 in York, 26 in Waterloo, 12 in Middlesex-London and 11 in Halton. The other 27 public fitness teams reported fewer than 10, while 15 did not report new patients.
31 new instances were known in Ontario schools in the last 24 hours of the province, of which 24 come with students, 3 involve staff, while the other 4 are not yet known through the Ministry of Health. schools, lately 178 have had a case of COVID-19, with a total of 210 cases.
Of the maximum recent cases, 195 concerned other persons over the age of 20 to 39, the maximum of all age groups. There were also 91 cases among the elderly of 40 to 59 and 64 among those over the age of 19 or younger.
Thirteen new cases were known among long-term care citizens and among fitness workers.
Across Ontario, one more user died and 286 patients recovered from the respiratory virus. There are currently 3774 active cases, the maximum as of June 9. Among recently infected patients, there are 88 in the hospital, 27 in resuscitation and 11 requiring a fan.
Quebec reports one of its peaks since May, 89 new instances in schools
Quebec reported 582 new instances on Thursday, the number in 24 hours since May 27.
Earlier this week, on Monday, the province announced 586 cases of COVID-19, this is the sixth consecutive time that the province has recorded more than 400 cases and the thirteenth consecutive reporting more than two hundred cases.
The last time Quebec had a similar era between May and early June; since then, it has lived several times when it has consistently reported fewer than a hundred cases daily, as it contained the spread of COVID-19 in the province.
Of the highest recent cases, 247 met in Montreal, 103 in Quebec City, 53 in Montérégie, 36 in Ottawa, 29 in Laval and 25 in Estrie. Of the 18 regions, 8 reported fewer than 10 cases, while 4 did not report new patients.
In Quebec schools, 89 new instances were known between academics and 23 between Array. Since another 29 school instances recovered, there are now 576 inflamed academics and 72 in the province. To date, at least 359 bubbles of elegance have been sent home and invited to be informed. from a distance, an accumulation of 34 from Wednesday’s report. Of the 3,089 schools in the province, 457 had a case of COVID-19, an accumulation of 30.
Quebec check figures reflect its production two days earlier. More recently, it carried out 25,553 controls for COVID-19, while developing its capacity.
No one has died in the last 24 hours of the province, however, it has added one more death to its death toll (5,810) between 17 and 22 September, while the province noted that 257 more patients have recovered, meaning that there are now 3,917 patients have recently become inflamed in Quebec, adding another 184 people in the hospital and 31 in intensive care.
Updates from Canada
No new cases have been known in Nova Scotia or Newfoundland and Labrador, which continue to have an active case of COVID-19 each. Since Wednesday’s last P. E. I. Update, there has also been an active case on Prince Edward Island.
Two new cases have been known in New Brunswick. One of the instances reaches a user in his 40s, who is lately in Ontario and will remain there until he recovers. They live permanently in the domain of Fredecition. The other patient is over 60 years old in Moncton’s domain, and it is believed that the explanation of why their transmission is related. In addition, in a press release, fitness officials notified the public that there is a Quebec resident in Campbellton’s domain who tested positive; will remain in N. B. until they recover. However, they are not counted among the six active instances in the province.
In Ontario, 335 new instances of COVID-19 were reported Wednesday, up from 400 new instances daily on Monday and Tuesday. There were 102 new instances in Toronto, 79 in the Peel region and 65 in Ottawa, according to deputy prime minister and minister of health. Christine Elliott, who also said in a tweet that 69% of positive cases were other people under the age of 40.
Meanwhile, in Quebec, 471 new cases, such as a COVID-19-related death in the last 24 hours. Three other COVID-19-related deaths were also reported between 16 and 21 September. The latest cases were reported in Montreal (146), followed by Quebec City (95) and Montérégie (69).
Across the Canadian Atlantic, there was a new case of COVID-19 in New Brunswick and a new case on Prince Edward Island, while no new cases were reported in Nova Scotia or Newfoundland and Labrador. 60 and 69 in the Miramichi area, and the case is travel-related. The case on Prince Edward Island is a woman in her twenties who has traveled for her work.
Manitoba reported 42 new cases of COVID-19, 30 of which were in the Winnipeg area. The province also reported that of the 418 active cases, another 11 people are hospitalized, five of them in intensive care.
Six other cases of COVID-19 were known in Saskatchewan, and most of 146 active cases occurred in the Saskatoon (78) and Regina (26) regions.
In Alberta, there were 143 new cases of COVID-19 and two other virus-like deaths. The maximum number of recent deaths was an 80-year-old woman and a 70-year-old woman, the last of whom was associated with an outbreak in Heimstaed. Lodge in Crete.
Ontario reported 478 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, the maximum in an undes married day since May 2, at the height of the coronavirus pandemic in the province. Most of the new instances occurred in Toronto (153), Peel Region (95), and Ottawa (90). New double-digit cases have also been reported in the York (27), Waterloo (27), Durham region (16), Hamilton (12), Halton (12) and Middlesex-London (12). Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Health Christine Elliott said 68% of new cases occurred in others under the age of 40. He also said Monday that Ontario would increase its testing capacity to 50,000 tests per day. On Monday, the province processed 34,201 tests, with 39,788 in the queue awaiting processing. Three deaths have also been reported.
In Quebec, 489 new cases of COVID-19 were reported in the last 24 hours, as well as a death between 15 and 20 September. There are also 20 other people in the hospital than the day before, bringing the total number of other people hospitalized to 168. Two other regions of the province, Laval and Ottawa, will move to the orange alert level, joining Montreal, Chaudiére-Appalachia and Quebec City at the “moderate” alert level of the province. The province said this week that Orange- Level regions will have to adhere to compliance rules: devotee meetings should have no more than 25 people, occasions in large open venues, such as concert halls, can accommodate up to 250 people, and personal meetings can host up to six teams from up to two families.
In the maritime provinces, there have been no new cases of COVID-19 in Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick or Prince Edward Island. Nova Scotia showed a new case of COVID-19 on Tuesday, it is unclear whether the same case was marked. as likely on Monday.
Manitoba province reported 24 new cases on Tuesday. Winnipeg has 20 cases, while there have been two new cases in East Interlake Health Region and Southern Health-Health South. There are 8 other people in the hospital, two of whom are in intensive care.
Quebec in the “second wave” of COVID-19, as it reports its last since May
Dr Horacio Arruda, Quebec’s director of public health, said Monday that he is “very, very, very concerned” about the accumulation of cases in the province, after 586 new patients were identified.
Due to the accumulation of cases in recent weeks, Arruda believes Quebec is now in the next phase of its COVID-19 pandemic.
“We’re at the time of the wave, at first, ” said Arruda in French on Monday. “The stage is serious. The stage is serious Quebec.
The 586 instances are the maximum in 24 hours since 641 instances were announced on May 27, now the tenth consecutive day on which it reports more than 200. The last time Quebec had a similar era was from late May to the beginning. -June; since then, it has experienced several times when it has consistently reported less than a hundred cases daily, as it contained the spread of COVID-19 in the province.
On Monday, Montreal, Quebec City and the Chaudiére-Appalachian region moved to the orange stage of the province, the highest moment in their COVID-19 alert system. Constraints, such as collection limits, are affected by the location of a region in the Color Code Scale. Arruda said that it is “very likely” that the regions will go from orange to red (the highest alert level) but that there is still time to flatten the curve and return to yellow and green.
“If we need to have a general Christmas, other people have to cooperate,” Arruda said. “It’s important. “
Throughout the pandemic, Quebec, Canada, the most affected province, in addition to having the highest number of deaths (5,804) of all jurisdictions, has the maximum number of active instances consisting of 100,000 inhabitants. Ontario is the only province with the maximum active instances, after pronouncing 425 new patients on Monday, the maximum in 24 hours from June 2.
Among the recent maximum organization of 586 instances in Quebec, Montreal reported the maximum with 219, followed by Quebec (92), Montérégie (76), Ottawa (31), Estrie (21) Chaudiére-Appalaches (50), Laurentides (39) and partner-health regions of Laval (20).
Quebec check figures reflect its production two days earlier. More recently, it has carried out 23484 controls for COVID-19, while developing its capacity.
In the last 24 hours of the province no one has died, however, the province has added 3 dead and has been disposed of one of past dates, which places the death toll at 5,804, also recently recovered 335 patients, that is. that there are now 3,193 active instances in the province.
Over the weekend, the province’s police investigation of bars and restaurants led to the auditing of 2,206 establishments, 90 fines were issued and 1,500 warnings were issued for problems such as non-compliance with physical distance or drinking alcohol after hours.
In Quebec schools, there are 392 active instances between public and personal school academics and 93 between Array according to Friday night’s latest news. One hundred and nine academics recovered, as well as 38 members. To date, at least 235 bubbles of elegance have been sent. and guests to be informed remotely, a cumulative of 46 since the last report. Of the 3,089 schools in the province, 334 had a case of COVID-19, up to 62.
Two transmissions in Alberta schools, six outbreaks
Alberta’s medical director of health, dr. Deena Hinshaw announced Monday that fitness officers have known two other schools where transmission probably occurred within the school.
The first case of transmission in a school setting was announced through Hinshaw on Friday, meaning it is believed to explain why an individual’s infection is related to some other school member. The two most recent schools where the broadcast has most likely occurred are Vimy Ridge School in Edmonton and Springfield Elementary School in Peace River.
“As I pointed out on Friday, it’s not an unforeseen event and it’s not an explanation of why to be alarmed,” Hinshaw said. “As we have noticed the transmission in other contexts, we will see some cases where this happens in the classroom. “
Six new school outbreaks have also been known since the Hinshaw update on Friday, for a total of 19. An outbreak is reported when there are two or more cases shown in other people who were in school within 14 days.
“It’s a very small number to succeed and it’s not an indication of an out-of-control spread,” Hinshaw said.
Two have at least five instances and have been placed in “Surveillance”: St. Louis Elementary School. Wilfrid and Vimy Ridge School.
To date, 81 Alberta schools have won at least one COVID-19 patient among academics and staff, with a total of 126 cases. In any case, all teachers and classmates of the patient will have to isolate themselves at home for 14 days.
Hinshaw said five school alerts were over, allowing students and staff to return to school. In all cases, there are no transmission signals as a result of possible exposure.
Hinshaw claimed that only 3 percent of schools in the province had been exposed to COVID-19 in the first 3 weeks of the fall semester. Among those schools, school transmission is only known in about 3% of them.
“We will continue to monitor closely, as always, but this is a start,” Hinshaw said.
The province’s leading medical officer continued to point out that the province deserves to see instances in schools whenever there is transmission in the community. In mid-April, the province experienced its overall coVID-19 peak, but also the highest number of cases among school-age children, all are blocked.
“What is essential for schools is that they do not become a position where transmission occurs and spreads sufficiently,” Hinshaw said. “Our youth receive better service through in-person education. And this has a much greater overall aptitude than the mere benefit of maintaining coverage versus COVID-19. »
On Monday, Hinshaw announced that the province’s laboratories had known 119 new instances between Friday and Saturday, 102 between Saturday and Sunday and 137 between Sunday and Monday.
Another user also died. The victim was a patient at Foothills Medical Center in Calgary, where an outbreak was reported. To date, 14 patients and 4 employees from 3 other groups have tested positive for the virus in connection with the outbreak.
Another 322 patients have also recovered in Alberta, which now has 1,459 active cases. Of the recently infected, 747 are in the Edmonton domain and 462 in the Calgary domain.
Ontario reports the latest cases since early June
Ontario reported 425 new COVID-19 cases on Monday, in 24 hours from June 2.
It is now the third time in the last 4 days that it has reported more than 400 cases. It is also the eleventh consecutive day on which Ontario has surpassed the two-hundred-case mark; before the recent period, the province had not registered more than two hundred instances since 29 June.
Of the recent top cases, which were known after 31,753 tests were completed, 175 were in Toronto, 84 in Peel, 60 in Ottawa, 20 in York, 14 in Durham, thirteen at Waterloo and 12 in Halton. reported fewer than 10, while 15 reported no new cases.
18 new cases were known in Ontario schools, for a total of 90. Of the recent case group, 8 involve students, 4 are teachers, while the other six are still known through the Ministry of Health. In total, there are now 75 schools that have had a COVID-19 case.
Two other people died and 178 recovered in the last 24 hours of the province. There are now 3,299 active instances throughout the province, the maximum in all Canadian jurisdictions, and the maximum in Ontario as of June 10.
Toronto leads the rankings with 1,054 recently infected patients, followed by 709 in Peel, 505 in Ottawa and 288 in York. None of the other 31 public fitness equipment has more than 110.
Updates from Canada
Nova Scotia reported any new case on Monday, as it remains the only province without newly inflamed patients. Newfoundland and Labrador and Prince Edward Island continue to have one active case each.
New Brunswick reported two new cases on Monday. Both involve Americans over the age of 20 to 29 in the Moncton area. They are connected and connected to known patients in the past. There are now 3 active instances in New Brunswick.
Two other people died in Winnipeg, which raised the number of COVID-19-related deaths in Manitoba to 18. Recent patients come with a man in his 80s in the Southern Health Region and an 80-year-old woguy in the Mountain Prairie Health Region. Twenty-two new cases were also known in the last 24-hour era of the province in the winnipeg (16), South (three), Prairie Mountain (two) and Interlake East (one) fitness regions. On Monday, the Chief of Public Health of Manitoba The officer, Dr. Brent Roussin, expressed fear of the accumulation in cases in Winnipeg. He said other people went somewhere else when they had symptoms. Of the province’s 363 active cases, 284 are in Winnipeg.
Seven new cases have been known in Saskatchewan in Saskatoon (five), Regina (one) and southeast (one). Three of the cases in Saskatoon are relevant to the Brandt Industries outbreak, which saw a total of 17 similar cases. people recovered in the last 24 hours of the province, leaving 145 active instances in Saskatchewan. Of the recently infected, 27 live in networked living environments, while 76 are in their epicenter of Saskatoon.
BEFORE CHRIST. The provincial health official, dr. Bonnie Henry reported that over the weekend, laboratories met 121 new cases between Friday and Saturday, 117 between Saturday and Sunday and 128 between Sunday and Monday, for a total of 366. During the same period, another 175 people recovered and 4 died. This means that there is now a record 1,987 active cases in the province. There are 3233 self-insulated Americans and they are actively monitored through British Columbia. because they were in contact with a known COVID-19 patient.
Henry stated that there had been a number of exhibits in the school environment, but that they were usually “very low-risk. “For example, an inflamed patient stayed in school for a short period of time; Henry claimed that these exposure scenarios sometimes referred to adults, as staff members. Currently, there have been no groups, epidemics or transmission occasions around the school that have been known through fitness officials. All fitness regions in British Columbia deserve to provide a full list of exhibits, however, Vancouver Coastal Health has recently been criticized for not providing its complete information, so it is unimaginable to provide a complete picture of the stage in British Columbia schools.
Ontario’s first elementary school closes due to COVID-19 infections
An elementary school in Ottawa closed after two academics and two tested positive for COVID-19, forcing it to close temporarily, according to CBC.
Monsignor Paul Baxter Catholic School in Ottawa’s Barrhaven neighborhood is the first elementary school in Ontario to close due to the virus.
On September 16, Fellowes High School in Pembroke, Ontario, Ontario’s first school to closed after 3 staff members tested positive for the virus. The third case was similar to the first two.
“Know that we are following the leadership of Ottawa Public Health,” said Mark Kennedy, Director of Monsignor Paul Baxter, in a letter to parents and guardians, which he received through CBC. “We’ve been working a lot with OPH since we heard our first showed a positive result of COVID-19 control. “
The Monsignor Paul Baxter Catholic School is expected to remain closed for about 14 days, according to the appropriate school board, while students are encouraged to stay informed online at home.
According to Ontario’s latest update Friday morning, 60 schools have so far reported a CASE of COVID-19 among students. There are 72 instances in total, adding 25 between academics and 22 between Array. The other 25 have not yet been known through the Ministry of Health. Updated statistics are expected on Monday.
Quebec back posts largest build-up in instances since May
Quebec fitness announced 462 new instances of COVID-19 on Sunday, the peak in 24 hours since 530 instances were announced on May 30.
This comes a day after Canada’s hardest-hit province reported 427 new cases, now on the ninth consecutive day when more than 200 are reported. The last time Quebec experienced a similar era from early May to early June; since then, it has experienced several times when it has consistently reported fewer than a hundred cases daily because it contained the spread of COVID-19.
Among the recent maximum organization of 462 cases, Montreal reported the highest with 160, followed by Quebec City (92), Montérégie (58), Laval (31), Ottawa (22), Estrie (21) and Chaudiére-Appalachians (19). Regions.
According to Radio-Canada, the Quebec government is expected to extend personal meetings on Sunday and impose new restrictions on restaurants and bars in their two largest cities, because they are concerned about case trends.
Montreal, Quebec City and the Chaudiére-Appalachian region, south of Quebec City, would be placed on “moderate alert”. This means that they will move to the “orange” point (the highest moment) in their new color-coded alert system. , which categorizes the danger posed by COVID-19 in a respective region.
Quebec figures reflect its production two days earlier. More recently, it set a record 29,006 seconds for COVID-19 as it continues to boost its capacity.
In the last 24 hours of the province, one more user has died, while the province has also added 4 deaths to its death figure (5,802), affecting the sick who died between 13 and 18 September. Also recently, three hundred and six patients have recovered, meaning there are now 2,944 active instances in the province.
Updates from Canada
Ontario reported 365 new COVID-19 cases on Sunday, breaking its two-day reporting streak of more than 400 cases. However, this is now the tenth consecutive day on which Ontario has surpassed the two-hundred-case mark; before the recent period, the province had not registered more than two hundred instances since 29 June.
Recent top instances were known after officials recorded 40,127 tests for the virus, which led to a positivity rate of 0. 9% (one since June). There were 130 instances in Toronto, 108 in Peel, 38 in York, 24 in Halton, 20 in Waterloo, 19 in Durham and 14 in Ottawa. The remaining 27 public fitness teams reported fewer than 10, while thirteen reported no new cases.
In Ontario’s last 24-hour period, a fitness center died, while 191 patients recovered. There are now 3,054 active cases in the province, the maximum of all jurisdictions in Canada, and the maximum in Ontario as of June 11.
Nova Scotia did not report new cases on Sunday, as it remains the province without newly inflamed patients; another user has recovered in Newfoundland and Labrador, which now has an active case; there’s also an inflamed patient lately in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.
29 new cases were known in Manitoba in the fitness regions of Winnipeg (23), Prairie Mountain (three), Interlake East (two) and South (one). Five other patients have recovered, there are now 354 active cases in winnipeg is home to 275 of the province’s last inflamed patients, while the trend to concern continues.
In a press release, Manitoba’s fitness officials said they had informed parents “of the imaginable exposure to COVID-19 at the Munroe Children’s Education Center Preschool at 505 Chalmers Ave. September 14th morning and afternoon. All close contacts were identified, while the middle closed the spaces used through the inflamed patient. The Department of Public Health has also published a list of 4 other recent warnings about possible public exposure, all of which are in Winnipeg.
In the last 24-hour era in Saskatchewan, 20 new cases were known in the Regina (10), Saskatoon (seven) and Southeast (one) areas, while the location of the last case is pending. the Brandt Industries outbreak, which has had 14 cases so far, according to a press release from officials. Since the user has recovered since Saturday, there are now 140 active cases in Saskatchewan; 27 of them live in networked living environments and 70 are at their epicenter in Saskatoon.
The Saskatchewan Health Authority also informs the public of a list of possible exposures to COVID-19 at corporations in Saskatoon, Prince Albert and Waskesiu between 10 and 18 September.
Ontario extends restrictions to the entire province after more than 400 more cases
Prime Minister Doug Ford announced Saturday that the entire province of Ontario will now have to comply with new restrictions restricting casual meetings.
Previously, meeting limits were set at another 50 internal and one hundred external people, but have now been reduced to 10 and 25, respectively, over the next 28 days.
Restrictions were first established for Toronto, Peel and Ottawa hot spots on Friday, but have now been extended after the province recorded 407 new cases on Saturday, the peak in 24 hours since June 2. Ontario recorded 401 cases on Friday.
“We’ve noticed an alarming increase in the number of COVID cases in Ontario,” Ford said Saturday. “People, the alarm bells are ringing. “
Ontario now has the maximum number of active instances in Canada with 2,881, followed by 2,793 newly inflamed patients in Quebec, which recorded 427 new instances on Saturday, the peak in 24 hours from May 30.
The number of active cases in Ontario continues to increase at an alarming rate, with 1,345 patients inflamed across the province two weeks ago (September 5). Saturday marks the ninth day in a row that Ontario has surpassed the two-hundred-case mark. In the recent period, the province had not registered more than two hundred instances since 29 June.
“Too many things are similar to other people who don’t comply with the rules, other people who think it’s OKAY to throw parties, as if things were back to normal. They’re not . . . We can’t organize those wild parties right now. It’s too risky.
For those who organize a rally that exceeds the new limit, they will likely face a minimum fine of $10,000 under existing emergency orders. If you go to one of those parties, “you can get a $750 fine,” Ford said.
These new restrictions apply to occasions that take place in services such as cinemas, restaurants, banquet halls, places of worship, gyms or conference centers.
However, Ford warns that they oppose other people who have been joining “political demonstrations” across the country lately. Over the past four months, Canadians have joined the protests to call for racial equality and be gentle with police brutality opposed to marginalized communities. contrary to COVID-19 restrictions that were implemented through other degrees of government.
“Everyone has to stick to the same rules, there can be no exceptions. You can’t get the boys out, let’s use common sense,” Ford said. “We have to make sure that we surround this with our arms and that everyone participates, so don’t move from there to those great manifestations, it would be detrimental to the community.
The recent high of 407 cases was known after the province’s laboratories recorded 38,940 COVID-19 tests. The 1% positivity rate remains one that Ontario has recorded in months.
Of the maximum number of recent patients, 218 are 20 to 39 years old, the maximum of them in all age groups. There were also 72 cases among the elderly 40 to 59 and 72 involving others 19 years of age or younger.
They met one hundred and twenty-nine in Toronto, followed by 94 at Peel, 55 in Ottawa, 28 in York, 18 in Halton, 14 at Waterloo and Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph, 12 in Hamilton, 11 in Simcoe-Muskoka and 10 in Middlesex-London. The remaining 24 public fitness teams reported fewer than 10 cases, while 15 did not report new cases.
“I think the council of passing across the province was actually a precautionary measure,” the deputy medical director of health, Dr. Barbara Yaffe. ” Increases are occurring, especially in some dense urban areas, but there have been signs of small increases elsewhere. And we check to avoid as much as imaginable an additional increase».
Ontario’s deputy health director has said he can get as close as possible to others in his 10-year social circle, but if he’s with others outside this circle, he’ll have to take a distance of six feet or wear a mask, as he is now in meetings of 10 inmates and 25 outsiders.
In addition to the recent high of 407 new instances on Saturday, the user has died in the last 24 hours of the province, raising the death toll to 2,826.
Quebec has seen its biggest increase in instances since May
Quebec fitness has seen 427 new instances of COVID-19, the maximum in 24 hours since 530 instances were announced on May 30.
It is now the eighth consecutive day on which it has reported more than two hundred cases. The last time the province of Canada most affected experienced a similar era in early June, and has since also experienced eras in which it has consistently reported less than one. One hundred cases a day.
“The expansion of instances in some regions is worrying,” Health Minister Christian Dubé said saturday in a tweet.
Of the recent maximum organization of 427 cases, Montreal reported the number with 128, followed by Quebec City (60), the Chaudiére-Appalachian region (36), Laval (34) and the Lower San Lorenzo region (15).
According to The Canadian Press, a major COVID-19 control operation is underway in the Lower St. Lawrence region of Quebec, following positive cases that have been known at a red meat plant. Four hundred and fifty workers from a slaughterhouse, Asta Foods, are being reviewed lately.
Quebec figures reflect its production two days earlier. More recently, it has finished a record 28442 seconds for COVID-19, while continuing to boost its capacity.
Two more people have died in the last 24 hours of the province, while the province has also added 3 dead to its death toll (5,797), with victims who died between 11 and 17 September. Two hundred and seventy-two patients have also recovered, meaning there are now 2,793 active instances in the province.
Toronto nightclub exposure alert after four consumers tested positive
Toronto Public Health (TPH) warns of possible exposure to COVID-19 for visitors who have visited a popular nightclub in the city.
Four visitors were in the inner NOIR of the REBEL entertainment complex on September 11, between 10:30 p. m. and 2 a. m. , they tested positive. Anyone who at the scene at the same time could have been exposed to the virus.
Based on data provided in the site’s touch search logs for and customers, TPH tracks all known close contacts, who will be asked to isolate themselves for 14 days and go through tests. It is requested at 10:30 pm and 2 am to monitor themselves for symptoms until September 25.
“These other people make a special effort to stay six feet away from other people, wear a mask in public spaces, and wash their hands frequently,” says a TPH press release. “They also restrict contact with others, especially people who exercise care centers, the elderly and/or other vulnerable populations. “
During the September 18 inspection, TPH discovered that REBEL entertainment complied with all nightclub reopening protocols.
Canada’s Conservative leader tests COVID-19, leading Quebec prime minister to be tested
Conservative leader Erin O’Toole was diagnosed with COVID-19 after he and his circle of relatives were screened for the virus.
“He is very relieved that his wife and children have tested negative. O’Toole remains isolated and feels good,” said a member of the Conservative party.
O’Toole has been isolated since Wednesday, after one of his people tested positive for the virus and they traveled together to Quebec.
Quebec Prime Minister Francois, who met with O’Toole on Monday for testing as a precautionary measure, has been negative ever since, but will remain remote until September 28, in accordance with public fitness guidelines.
O’Toole sparked a public outing after he and his circle of relatives waited for hours at a review site in Ottawa on Wednesday before being rejected due to capacity limits. Despite everything revised Thursday in Gatineau, Quebec, on a site that grants precedence checks to parliamentarians and their families.
On Friday, Bloc Québécois announced that chef Yves-Fran’ois Blanchet and his wife Nancy Déziel tested positive for COVID-19 and will stay away until September 26 at their home in Shawinigan, Quebec.
Updates from Canada
Two cases of COVID-19 have been known in Nunavut at the Hope Bay mine, located 125 kilometres southwest of Cambridge Bay. Health officials said patients were exposed in the jurisdiction of their home before traveling to Nunavut. Since the cases are not Nunavut’s, they will be counted in other jurisdictions, however, at this time, it is not transparent where. Nunavut remains the only jurisdiction in Canada that does not have a proven case in its count, while the Northwest Territories and Yukon have lately no active instances.
Nova Scotia remains the only province without an active case, after the remaining patient marked as resolved on Friday. No new cases have been known in Newfoundland and Labrador or New Brunswick, as these provinces continue to record two and one active cases, respectively. . Since Tuesday’s last PEI Update, a patient is recently infected.
Eighteen new cases were known in Manitoba in the fitness regions of Winnipeg (13), Prairie Mountain (three) and south (two). Twelve other patients have recovered, there are now 331 active cases in the province. Winnipeg is home to 252 recently inflamed patients in the province, while the tendency to be concerned continues.
In the era of the last 24 hours in Saskatchewan, laboratories conducted a record 2,873 tests. Officials were required to identify 11 new instances in the Regina (five), Saskatoon (two), South Central (two), West Center (one), and East Central (one) areas. The two instances in Saskatoon are related to the outbreak at Brandt Industries, according to a press release from officials. With 3 other people recovering since Friday, there are now 121 active cases in Saskatchewan; 25 of them live in networked living environments and 63 in their epicenter of Saskatoon.
He also recently reported that Métis Nation-Saskatchewan President Glen McCallum tested positive for COVID-19. A Facebook message from Métis Nation-Saskatchewan warns anyone who has been in close contact with McCallum to control symptoms and test for symptoms of the disease.
Alberta sees first case of COVID-19 transmission in schools
Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s medical director of health, announced Friday that the province had had its “first case of COVID-19 most likely passed on to a school. “
“It’s not unforeseen and it’s no cause for alarm,” Hinshaw said. “Even with the cautious technique we’ve adopted, we expected to see examples of transmission in schools one day. Let me repeat that it is inevitable.
The broadcast took place at Waverley School in Edmonton, a public elementary school in Kenilworth. One student is believed to have been the “source” of the infection for another.
“At this point, there is no evidence to recommend that the school want to transfer to another learning model, or that others and students are at risk,” Hinshaw said.
According to CBC, which obtained confirmation from the school board in question, approximately 12 academics in a combined elegance of half a year and seven staff members will now be isolated for 14 days at home, monitor symptoms and go through tests. 1,000 scholars are remote because they had the same elegance as a patient when they infected.
I ask that Waverley not be subjected to accusations of insecurity, as I heard in St. Louis. Wilfrid #YYC when they were transferred to a level of surveillance. Parents, teachers, and academics are concerned and looking to succeed over the challenge of having their ID cards on the news. (6/10)
– Dr. Deena Hinshaw (@CMOH_Alberta) September 18, 2020
On Friday, 78 other people attended school while contagious among academics and staff. Fifty-seven of the 2,415 schools in the province reported an infectious case. Of those cases, none were hospitalized, Hinshaw said.
A week earlier (September 11), there were 29 schools across the province where a user attended while contagious, with 32 instances connected to schools, prompting 3 outbreaks.
There are currently thirteen school outbreaks in Alberta, in which one school has had at least two cases. One of the schools, St. Wilfrid Elementary School, had at least five cases.
On Friday, Alberta Health Services announced 107 new instances of COVID-19. In the same section, the user died, while 165 patients recovered. Of the 1,424 recently active instances in the province, 711 are in the Edmonton domain and 450 are in the Calgary domain. There are another 44 people in the hospital, seven of whom are in intensive care.
Nova Scotia is the province free of COVID-19
Nova Scotia fitness officials announced that their latest COVID-19 patient has recovered, there are no more active instances in the jurisdiction.
It is the province without an active case of COVID-19. There are also no recently inflamed patients in Canada’s 3 territories.
The last known patient in Nova Scotia on 7 September. During the pandemic, the province recorded 1,086 cases; this includes 65 deaths and now 1,021 more people who have recovered.
Nova Scotia has already declared COVID-19 loose on 10 August. But since August 14, fitness officers have discovered 15 new patients, all of whom have recovered since then.
Despite Friday’s positive news, Nova Scotia’s provincial government has to renew its state of emergency until 4 October.
Ontario reports latest cases since June and replaces Quebec for maximum recently inflamed patients
The province announced 401 new instances of COVID-19 on Friday, marking the peak of one day from June 2.
Now, on the eighth day in a row that Ontario has surpassed the two-hundred-case mark, before the recent period, the province had not published more than two hundred cases since June 29.
The highest number of recent patients was known after Ontario laboratories recorded 35,826 COVID-19 tests. Ontario has now published a 1. 1% positivity rate in 3 of the last six events, the percentage since June 23.
Of the top group of recent cases, 130 met in Toronto, 82 in Peel and 61 in Ottawa, the 3 regions that will now face the largest collection restrictions on Friday. There have also been 19 cases in Halton and 12 in Middlesex-London, as the region continues to face an epidemic related to Western University. The other 29 public fitness teams reported 10 or fewer cases of COVID-19, and 15 reported no new cases.
Since Thursday’s report, another 176 people have recovered, but no more have died of the virus. In Ontario, there are now 2,652 active cases of COVID-19, the maximum as of June 14.
While Quebec announced Friday that it had 2,643 active instances, Ontario now has the maximum number of inflamed patients in all jurisdictions in Canada, a name Quebec maintained for most of canada’s pandemic. Quebec still has the maximum instances consisting of 100,000 inhabitants.
Among newly inflamed patients in Ontario, Toronto leads the group with 806 active cases, followed by Peel (566), Ottawa (437) and York (247). The other 30 public fitness equipment is less than 85.
Eleven new cases were known in schools for a total of 72, however, one was also removed from the count. Cases range from 60 of the province’s 4,828 educational institutions, an increase of nine since Thursday. students, while the other six have not yet been known through the Ministry of Health. Four new cases were also reported in day care centers and personal day care (one child, 3 employees) for a total of 76.
There are two new instances between citizens of long-term care homes and five new instances involving fitness workers. Two hundred instances are between 20-39 years, maximum of all age groups. There were also 99 instances among people over 40 to 59 and 67 involving others 19 years of age or younger.
Of the recently inflamed patients in the province, 58 are hospitalized, 20 in intensive care and 10 require a ventilator.
More than 400 academics in Quebec have COVID-19 since reopening
Quebec announced Friday that 44 other academics and 10 members tested positive for COVID-19.
There are now 272 schools (out of 2,685) that have had a reported case, an increase of 25 since the previous day. There are now 401 academics and 106 members who have contracted the virus since schools opened on August 27. At least 189. The bubbles of elegance to date have been sent home and invited to be informed remotely, 16 more than in Thursday’s report.
Quebec fitness officials announced 297 new instances of COVID-19, marking the eighth consecutive day when more than two hundred instances are reported. The last time he had a similar era in early June.
During the same 24-hour period, no one died, however, the government added one more death to its death toll (5,792), which happened on an unknown date, according to a press release. Another 266 instances were reported as resolved, which is now 2,643 instances active in the province.
Leader of Bloc Québécois examined for viruses
The leader of the Bloc Québécois, Yves-François Blanchet, diagnosed with COVID-19.
In a message from his office, Blanchet said he was doing “perfectly well” but will stay away at his home in Shawinigan, Quebec, until September 26, according to Quebec’s public fitness rules.
“The leader of Bloc Québécois stresses the importance of estating, dressed in mask and hand washing and invites Quebecers to stick to the government’s mandates if they have any symptoms or if they have been in close contact with an affected person. “The statement says.
Earlier this week, Blanchet’s wife, Nancy Déziel, was also diagnosed with COVID-19, which led the leader of the Bloc to be examined as a precaution as well.
According to The Canadian Press, Blanchet has already 16th; one of his staff members had tested positive, which led several members of his group and other attendees to isolate themselves as well.
Blanchet, the first leader of a federal party to test positive for COVID-19, at the beginning of the pandemic, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also moved remotely after his wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau diagnosed him with a respiratory virus.
Updates from Canada
British Columbia announced 139 new instances of COVID-19 on Friday. It links its September 10 production to the second highest peak of instances since the start of the pandemic. The province announced a record 165 new patients on September 17. Forty more instances were also added to their total number of instances (7,842) that were known between August 11 and September 16 through Vancouver Coastal Health. In the last 24 hours, 78 people have recovered and 3 have died. This means that there is now a record 1,803 active cases in British Columbia.
Newfoundland and Labrador have known their first new case since September 12, this time involving a man from the Central Health Region between the age of 20 and 39, who recently returned to the United States, according to a press release. was asymptomatic on his return to Newfoundland and Labrador. There are currently two active cases throughout the province.
Another user has recovered in New Brunswick, which means that an active case remains in the province. Since Tuesday’s latest P. E. I. Update, a patient has recently been infected.
“There has been an increase in concern in the number of cases in Winnipeg,” says one of the city’s fitness officials in Manitoba, the city with 29 of the province’s recent top 40 cases. The remaining cases are in interlake-Eastern (four), Prairie Mountain (four) and Southern Health (three) socio-fitness regions. Eight other people have also recently recovered, meaning there are now 325 active instances in Manitoba; Winnipeg is 239. Prairie Mountain is only 38, having been the epicentre of the province in August. “Prairie Mountain Health’s recent good fortune shows that focusing on the basics can decrease COVID-19 transmission,” says the press release, with the region returning to the yellow precautionary point as a component of Manitoba’s color-coded pandemic reaction formula on Friday.
Saskatchewan fitness officials learned 19 new cases in Saskatoon (12), Regina (four) and Central West (three). Of the most recent cases in Saskatoon, six met in brandt industries, according to a press release. It was also recently recovered, leaving the number of active instances in the province at 113. Of the recently infected patients, 24 live in networked living environments, while 61 are at their epicenter in Saskatoon.
‘Super spread event’ leads to 21 infections in Saskatchewan
At least 21 cases of COVID-19 were connected to a rally at a saskatoon house after 47 other people attended the event.
Saskatchewan’s medical director of health, Dr. Saqib Shahab, said the party demonstration serves as an “uplifting narrative” because he is now a “super spreader. “
Collection limits are limited to another 30 people when physical distance can be maintained among others who are not from the same household. Since then, the organizer of the occasion has been fined $2,000, but the main points about the nature of the collection have not been shared.
“Things like that can grow like a snowball very quickly, and that’s what we want to avoid as we go along. Because you can initiate chains of transmission that can cause secondary infections,” Shahab said.
There have been at least 160 other people who have since become known as close contacts who have attended, adding some cases that would possibly be similar to schools. Health officials expect more cases to be known in the coming days before the chain. transmission is resolved.
“The way to keep COVID-19 out of our schools is to keep it at a low point of infection in our communities, and times like this don’t help,” Prime Minister Scott Moe said.
On Thursday, fitness officials said there have been 14 cases among academics in the province lately, but no transmissions were reported.
Health also announced that they had known seven new cases in Saskatchewan beyond 24 hours in Saskatoon (four), southeast (two) and southwest (one).
Four other people have also recovered, meaning there are now 109 active instances in the province. Saskatoon’s domain is home to 50 of those other recently infected people; active instances in the domain are similar to giant concentrations and interprovincial displacement, Shabab said.
British Columbia reports a one-day spike
British Columbia fitness officials have known 165 new cases of COVID-19, the maximum in 24 hours since the start of the pandemic.
The top recent patient organization known after a record 7,674 tests, however, the update remains part of a worrying trend for the province, as there is now also a record 1,705 active cases in British Columbia.
Dr. Bonnie Henry, a provincial fitness officer, said the buildup in some cases is related to performing upgrade tests, but fitness officers continue to see cases similar to exhibition events, such as personal meetings.
With Ontario applying new restrictions to collection limits on Thursday, Henry said British Columbia will not do the same. A maximum of 50 more people are still the number they will look to have in a position to set boundaries, but Henry reminded other people that “the fact that he can accommodate 50 other people in his small back garden doesn’t make it safe. “
Henry said the province is now seeing the virus spread to other areas.
“Now we’re witnessing an overflow in hospitals,” Henry said. “We see our elders, our grandparents, our elders, the other people in our lives who are at their best, probably to end up in the hospital or die from this virus, are sometimes understand because we don’t pay enough attention as young people, and unknowingly take it home and spread it to the other people we love.
Exhibitions due to meetings have been a major fear for British Columbia, as two hotel parties around Canada Day in Kelowna have resulted in dozens of cases in the province, as well as imaginable exposure warnings for a variety of businesses.
Officials continue to ask residentS ‘B. C. to review the developing list of public exposure warnings as a component of contact search efforts.
Another user also died in the last 24 hours of the province, involving a resident of a long-term care home, raising the death toll to 220. Another 73 people have also recently recovered from the respiratory virus. Of the 1,705 active cases in the province, 57 other people are hospitalized, 22 of them in intensive care.
Worried about the continuing stretching in Ontario, 21 more in schools
Ontario reported 293 new instances of COVID-19 on Thursday, marking the seventh consecutive day on which the province has surpassed two hundred instances. Prior to the recent period, the province had not registered more than two hundred instances since 29 June.
The maximum number of recent patients was known after Ontario laboratories conducted 35,134 COVID-19 tests, the current amount within 24 hours of the start of the pandemic.
Of those cases, 85 met in Toronto, 63 in Peel, 39 in Ottawa, 37 in York and 12 in Halton. The other 29 public fitness teams reported 10 fewer cases, while 14 did not report new patients. The government announced new collection restrictions for Toronto, Peel and Ottawa, which were Ontario’s hot spots.
21 new instances were known in schools for a total of 62, spread across 51 of the province’s 4,828 educational institutions; of the most recent instances, five involve students, 4 are teachers, while the remaining 12 have not yet been known through the Ministry. Two new cases were also reported in day care centers and houses (one child, one member) for a total of 72.
There have been no new cases among citizens of long-term care homes, however, there are six new patients involving fitness workers. One hundred and sixty-nine cases are among people aged 20 to 39, at most in all age groups. 66 cases among the elderly 40 to 59 and 37 involving others 19 years of age or younger.
Since Wednesday’s report, another 179 people have recovered and 3 have died from the virus. In Ontario, there are now 2,427 active cases of COVID-19, the maximum as of June 16. Toronto leads the way with 725 recently infected patients, followed, through Peel (528), Ottawa (407) and York (216). The other 30 public fitness equipment is less than 80.
Of the recently infected patients, there are 53 in the hospital, 21 of them in intensive care and 12 requiring a fan.
Montreal reports a giant buildup, creating an even larger peak from the start of the week.
Quebec fitness officials announced 251 new instances of COVID-19, marking the seventh consecutive day when more than two hundred instances were reported. The last time he had a similar era in early June.
On Thursday, Montreal fitness officials announced 248 instances that have been reported to the public between September 10 and 15, meaning that, between September 13 and 15, the province announced more than three hundred instances according to the day, a brand that had not surpassed since June 1. This includes 90 more instances for September 15, bringing the peak of the day to 382, the largest number of instances in 24 hours from June 1.
On Thursday, the province announced that another 208 people have recovered; two others died in their last 24-hour period, but the province also added deaths between 10 and 15 September, extending the death toll to 5791. Quebec, the maximum of all jurisdictions in Canada.
The province also announced that a few other 35 academics and 8 members tested positive for COVID-19; there are now 247 schools (out of 2,685) that have had a reported case, 10 more than the previous day. 357 academics and 96 who have contracted the virus. To date, at least 173 bubbles of elegance have been sent home and invited to be informed remotely, an increase of 32 since Wednesday’s report.
The Quebec government will ban restaurants and microbreweries from promoting alcohol after midnight on Thursday, a rule that came into effect this month for bars and the province will also provide more data on its color-coded alert system, which was introduced on September 8 Different compliance measures are put in place depending on the color alert , for example, for meetings.
Canada updates
Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador continue to have an active case; have met a new patient since September 7 and September 12, respectively. In Tuesday’s latest Prince Edward Island update, there is still an active case in that province as well.
Another user has recovered in New Brunswick, which now has two COVID-19 assets.
Eleven new cases have been known in Manitoba in the Winnipeg (eight), Southern Health (two) and Prairie Mountain (one) fitness regions. Another user has also recovered, which means that there are now 293 active cases throughout the province. recently infected patients, 209 are in Winnipeg, while the other 4 regions have fewer than 40.
Alberta’s fitness officers have known 146 new cases of COVID-19, but no new deaths have been reported in the province beyond 24 hours. By contrast, another 158 people have recovered, bringing the number of active cases in the province to 1,483. Recently infected Americans, 751 are in Edmonton’s domain and 470 in the Calgary domain. A new outbreak of COVID-19 has been reported in a school, for a total of 10, meaning there are at least two cases among other infectious people in the school.
There are 251 new instances of COVID-19 reported in Ontario on Tuesday, following the recent trend of more than two hundred new instances each day. Less than part of this amount, 117, was reported as newly recovered in the same period. and Health Minister Christine Elliott said hot spots for new instances remain the public fitness regions of Toronto, Ottawa and Peel, with 73, 51 and 42 new instances, respectively. Four more virus-like deaths were also reported.
In Quebec, 292 new instances of COVID-19 were reported during the last 24 hours of the report, as well as five other virus-like deaths, one of which occurred in the last 24 hours, while the others occurred between 8 September. and 13. La province has also published an update on the effect of COVID-19 on schools; 283 infections were reported in 172 schools and 144 study rooms were closed due to the virus, adding 130 in the public school system. Students account for 217 of the infections at the school, while another 66 are staff members. 249 of the instances are in the public school system.
Prince Edward Island was the only province to see new cases in the Canadian Atlantic on Tuesday. There were two cases, one of a man in his fifties who is not a doctor and an essential worker, the other a child related to a known case. Now it is thought that the child is cured. There have been no new cases in Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia or New Brunswick.
On Tuesday 17 new instances of COVID-19 were known in Manitoba, a case is a fitness employee and is connected to the epidemic at Bethesda Place; There are now 8 employees and six citizens who have contracted COVID-19 in this long run Public Aptitude also warns against imaginable exposure to St. St. Christian School. Aidan of Winnipeg on Thursday, September 10 and Friday, September 11. Records show that the patient was asymptomatic and that the case was not acquired at school.
‘It’s amazing’: 3 new epidemics reported in Alberta schools
There are now six outbreaks in Alberta, after fitness officials were informed of 3 others who reported at least two cases of COVID-19 over the weekend.
The most recent schools with outbreaks come with Ross Sheppard High School in Edmonton, Lester B High School, Pearson in Calgary and Auburn Bay School, a K-4 school in Calgary The 3 schools that first reported outbreaks last week come with Henry Wise Wood High School and St. St. Wilfrid in Calgary, as well as Chinook High School in Lethbridge.
“With the highest levels of network transmission in recent weeks, it’s not unexpected to see cases between school and students,” dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s medical director of health.
There are currently 42 cases among 35 schools in Alberta with cases of cOVID-19, compared to 32 out of 29 schools reported throughout the province on Friday. However, Hinshaw stated that Alberta’s physical condition had not yet noticed transmission in the school environment, however, that transmission would occur. have happened in the community.
Hinshaw said he used the term “epidemic” as a precaution when there are at least two cases among other people who were around the school when they were infectious.
When there is a case among schoolchildren in a class, everyone else is sent home to isolate themselves for two weeks. Hinshaw apologized for the inconvenience this has caused families and noted that this technique is used to collect data on maximums at risk of coVID-19 after school exposure. The province’s technique is expected to evolve over time.
“Even with a cautious approach, chances are that as the school year progresses, we’ll see examples of transmission in schools,” Hinshaw said. “Our purpose is to keep the transmission as low as possible. “
Alberta’s Education Minister Andre Corbould said there are 2,380 schools open and they operate in any case, representing approximately 98% of the province’s schools.
On Monday, Hinshaw also provided an update on the number of COVID-19 instances in the province. Between Friday and Saturday, 105 new instances were known, followed by 173 instances known after a record number of tests) and 140 new instances as of Monday, another user also died, extending the death toll in the province to 254, while another 323 people recovered.
Of the 1,538 active instances in Alberta across the province, 654 are in the Edmonton domain and 557 are in the Calgary domain. The northern area has 232, while the central and southern spaces have less than 50.
“Today’s figures are all afraid of us”: Ontario has recorded more than 300 cases for the first time since the beginning of June.
Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford pleaded citizens with giant meetings shortly after the Ministry of Health reported 313 new CASES of COVID-19 on Monday, the maximum in 24 hours from June 6.
Of recent cases, 112 have been known in Toronto, 71 in Peel and 60 in Ottawa, which are the 3 regions Ford has described as “hot spots”. There have also been 13 cases in York, which is a hot spot, as the other 31 public fitness teams reported fewer than 10 new cases, while 15 of them reported no new cases on Monday.
“Today’s numbers are a fear for everyone,” Ford said. “Let me be very clear, each and every option is on the table. We will take all mandatory measures, adding other closures. “
Monday’s update marks the fourth day in a row that Ontario has reported at least two hundred instances. Prior to the recent section, the province had reported no more than two hundred instances since June 29. In Ontario, there are now 2,027 active instances of COVID-19, as of June 30, Toronto leads the way with 625 recently infected patients, followed by Peel (517), Ottawa (318) and York (159). The other 30 public fitness equipment is less than 70.
Ford said public fitness officials in Toronto, Peel and Ottawa have attributed spikes in cases to giant gatherings, which are consistent with sonal gatherings, not bars or restaurants. The prime minister noted that the majority of the population followed rules and protocols, but that the movements of only five that match the percentage of those who did not comply can lead to the spread of the virus as a “forest fire”.
“It drives me crazy. I’m here like a preacher, telling other people every day, “Don’t let your guard down, don’t let your guard down, ” said Ford. “People, those [meetings] I’m going to have to stop . . . I’ll be the first father, the first grandfather, the prime minister. I just don’t need those other people to have sloppy parties. That’s what it’s all about. ‘
The maximum number of recent patients was known after 29,540 COVID-19 tests, the lowest in the last 4 days, leading to a positivity rate of 1. 1%, as of June 23.
Of the recent patient group, 167 were 20 to 39 years old, the maximum of all age groups, followed by 71 cases between the ages of 40 and 59. One case is a long-term care resident and another is a physical care worker. outbreak at Western University was also recently reported through the Middlesex-London Health Unit, which reported six cases on Monday.
On Monday, Ford’s government will return to the Ontario Legislature to discuss additional steps it can take to curb the spread. Ford said the province is not yet at a wave moment “in its own right,” so it’s time to slow down the trend of instances like early summer.
Health Minister Christine Elliott said the province hoped it would not have to postpone one of its regions to Stage 2 of the province’s reopening plan, given the number of paintings the regions have put up to reopen.
Elliott, on the other hand, noted how a wave at the moment will be much more complicated for the province than the first. In parallel with the flu season, hospital capacity is reduced, as long-term care homes have had the ability to restrict the spread of COVID-19. as a component of their protocols. Hospitals also continue to operate with a buildup of surgeries from the first closure.
In the most recent 24-hour streak, the province also reported one more death, bringing the death toll to 2,816. One hundred and thirty-three patients have recovered in the last 24 hours of the province.
Of those infected lately, there are 47 in the hospital, 17 in intensive care and 8 who want a fan. The ministry of fitness noted that around 35 hospitals did not provide information over the weekend.
Regarding the continued drive in Quebec
Quebec fitness officials met 276 new instances of COVID-19 in their final 24-hour sequence. In addition to the 279 instances announced on Sunday, Monday’s announcement marks the peak that the province has recorded since June 3.
It is also the fourth day in a row that the province has announced more than two hundred instances. The last time he had a similar series from June 4-7. The government has already reported more than 100 instances in 17 consecutive reporting periods; prior to the recent stretch, it had recorded less than a hundred cases on 14 of its last 18 occasions.
In recent weeks, the virus has spread throughout the province in environments such as schools and bars: of the recent 276 maximum cases, 60 met in Quebec City, 39 in Montreal, 32 in Chaudiére-Appalaches, 31 in Montérégie, 27 in Lanaudiére, 20 in Ottawa and 18 in Laval.
Quebec figures reflect its production two days earlier. More recently, it made 20,173 s for COVID-19. This is the fourth time in a row that laboratories have made at least 20,000 seconds, a point they had never reached before.
No one has died in the last 24 hours of the province and 160 patients have recently recovered, which is now 2,054 active instances in the province, the maximum of all jurisdictions in Canada, according to Steve Faguy of Montreal Gazette, this is the first time the province has had more than 2,000 active instances since August 5.
Throughout the pandemic, Quebec, Canada, is the most affected province and has lately the highest number of cases (64,262), active cases and deaths (5,780) of all jurisdictions in the country.
Updates from Canada
BEFORE CHRIST. Fitness officers have taken stock of their last 3 reporting periods. In the first, from Friday to Saturday, fitness officers met 137 new instances of COVID-19, the highest moment in the province in 24 hours of pandemic. , 119 cases were known, followed by 61 until Monday. There is now a record 1,594 active cases in British Columbia, while its disturbing trend in COVID-19 continues. During the same three-day period, another 173 people recovered, but six others also died, including five others in long-term care homes and the first victim in the Northern Health area.
No new cases have been known in Nova Scotia or Newfoundland and Labrador, as these provinces continue to record one and two active cases, respectively.
A new patient has been met in New Brunswick, the first since September 10. The last diagnosed user is in his twenties and lives in the Moncton area. The case is related to travel, according to a press release. There are now 3 active instances in New Brunswick.
According to the most recent IP update on September 11, 8 patients are recently infected. Health officials are expected to provide their weekly updates on Tuesday.
21 new cases of COVID-19 have been known in Manitoba, 17 of them in the Winnipeg Health Region, while the rest are in Southern Health (three) and Interlake-Eastern (one). Three patients also recovered in the last 24-hour era of the province, now there are 257 active cases in the province. Winnipeg has 171 of those recently inflamed patients, while Prairie Mountain Health is now at 43.
Saskatchewan fitness officials have known 8 new cases of COVID-19 in Saskatoon (six), southwest (one) and south-central (one). Three cases of the province’s total were also eliminated, such as a false positive and the other two concerned others who were not residents of Saskatchewan. Another user has also recovered in the province, raising the number of active instances to 103. Saskatoon’s domain has the maximum number of patients inflamed lately with 43, followed through the East Centre. spaces have fewer than 10 instances.
Seven Toronto strip clubs cause COVID-19 exposure alert
Toronto Public Health (TPH) warns of possible exposure to COVID-19 at a strip club, after seven other people who were on site tested positive.
Six workers and one consumer were diagnosed with the virus after being at Club Paradise, located in 1313 Bloor St. W. , between August 29 and September 10. Cases began to arise on September 4, according to a TPH press release.
Anyone who was at Club Paradise between those dates is asked to monitor COVID-19 symptoms for 14 days after their last visit. They also make a special effort to stay within six feet of other people, wearing a mask in public spaces. and wash your hands.
The threat to consumers is lately “low,” while Club Paradise has taken the voluntary resolution to close for an era of two weeks.
“Investigations conducted through TPH inspectors on August 20 and September 5 revealed that the facility complied with all reopening protocols,” read in the press release.
Toronto Public Health has published a list of rules for adult entertainment venues. Among them, knee dancing is prohibited, while institutions must keep a consumer diary to facilitate contact-seeking efforts.
Based on the data provided in Club Paradise’s contact search logs for and customers, TPH tracked all known close contacts. These Americans were told to isolate themselves for 14 days and get tested.
In August, more than 500 more people were invited to self-insulate for 14 days after a Toronto Strip Club worker at Brass Rail Tavern tested positive for COVID-19. Initial research revealed that the site did not comply with COVID- 19 protocols. A visitor also tested positive later.
Quebec reports its last since early June
Quebec fitness has known 279 new instances of COVID-19, the maximum in 24 hours since June 3.
It is also the third consecutive day on which the province has registered more than two hundred instances. The last time the course was similar from June 5 to 7. The government has reported more than 100 instances in 16 consecutive reporting periods; prior to the recent stretch, it had recorded less than a hundred cases on 14 of its last 18 occasions.
In recent weeks, the virus has spread throughout the province in several settings: of the 279 recent maximum cases, 57 met in Montreal, 42 in Quebec City, 38 in Montérégie, 27 in Laval, 26 in the Laurentides, 21 in Lower San Lorenzo, 20 in Chaudiére-Appalachians, 17 in Estrie and 15 in Ottawa.
Quebec figures reflect its production two days earlier. More recently, it made 20,479 s for COVID-19. This is the third time in a row that laboratories have made at least 20,000 seconds, a point they had never reached before.
“All Quebecers have a duty and that’s to save them a momentary wave. “We are not on a momentary wave, but the trend is not good,” Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault said Friday.
“I don’t plan and I don’t expect to have to enter each and every house, so I ask the population, please look at the number of cases, look at the virus. It’s serious, so don’t do it, big parties without following the guidelines.
Another user died in the last 24 hours of the province, however, the death toll remains at 5780, as an investigation made us think that a death announced in the past was not actually due to COVID-19.
240 patients have also recently recovered. Across the province there are 1,938 active cases, 65 more than Saturday. Of the recently infected patients, 124 are hospitalized, 19 of them in intensive care.
On Saturday, several thousand more gathered in downtown Montreal to protest the Quebec government’s new masking mandate; allows police to fine those who do not wear masks if necessary, for example, in closed public places.
Throughout the pandemic, Quebec, Canada, is the most affected province and has lately the highest number of instances (64,986), active instances (1,938) and deaths (5,780) of any jurisdiction in the country.
The worrying stretch continues in Ontario, reporting more than two hundred instances for the third day in a row
On Sunday, Ontario announced that it had recorded 204 new cases of COVID-19 in the last 24 hours of the province.
It is now the third day in a row to report at least two hundred instances, with officials pronouncing 232 on Saturday and 213 on Friday. Prior to the recent era, the province had not registered more than two hundred instances since June 29. The last time he had three consecutive days above two hundred was in the era of June 4-6.
Of the recent 204 new highs, 63 met in Toronto, 47 in Ottawa, 35 in Peel and thirteen in Windsor-Essex. 27 of the 34 public fitness teams reported five or fewer cases, while 16 did not report new patients.
“It’s not the fault of the city of Toronto or the Peel region,” Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford said Friday. “This happens, we have to paint together. Everything I asked to avoid those big meetings. Just respect the rules and everyone will. “
Of the recent group of 204, 106 were people over the age of 20 to 39, the maximum of all age groups, followed by 38 cases among people aged 40 to 59. Seven are long-term care citizens and two are physical care workers.
The instances met after the province conducted 31,143 COVID-19 screenings, marking the third consecutive day on which more than 30. 000. La rate of positive testing was completed in the last 3 days 0. 7%. the rate of 0. 7 is the highest the province has observed since July.
During the last 24-hour era, the province also reported a new death, involving an LTC resident, raising the death toll to 2,815. Another 204 patients recovered in the last 24-hour era of the province.
Across Ontario, there are now 1,848 active instances of COVID-19, the maximum as of July 4. Toronto leads the rankings with 545 recently infected patients, followed by Peel (486), Ottawa (280) and York (156). fitness sets are less than 60.
Of the recently infected, 39 are hospitalized, 14 in intensive care, and nine require a fan. The Department of Health noted that about 35 hospitals did not provide information over the weekend.
Updates from Canada
No new instances have been known in Nova Scotia or New Brunswick, as those provinces continue to have one and two active instances, respectively. update on Friday, there are 8 active instances in the province.
Nor have new cases been known in Newfoundland and Labrador. In a press release, it was said that an alleged known case at the Iron Ore Company of Canada (IOC) mine in Labrador turned out to be negative. On Saturday, the province announced its first case. since September 5, involving a user who recently returned from Newfoundland and Labrador. There are now two active instances in NL
Eighteen new cases have been known in Manitoba, adding 11 in Winnipeg, 3 in Southern Health, two in Interlake-Eastern and one in each in the northern regions and Prairie Mountain. Another 17 have also recovered, meaning that there are now 239 active cases in recent infected patients, 154 are in Winnipeg and 44 in Prairie Mountain, which was once the epicenter of the province.
There are 17 new cases in Saskatchewan in Saskatoon (14), Central West (one) and East Central (one). The location of the 17th case is still pending. According to a press release, at least six of the 14 instances in the Saskatoon domain are similar to a user meeting. Another user recovered in the last 24 hours of the province, leaving 99 active instances in the province. 38 are in the Saskatoon domain and 26 in the East Central domain. The other 11 spaces have fewer than 10 active instances.
Nunavut remains the only jurisdiction that has not had a positive case of pandemic. The Northwest Territories do not have active instances, as does the Yukon after its other two instances were resolved on August 13.
Ontario reports an increase in cases since June
Ontario reported 213 new COVID-19 cases on Friday, in 24 hours from June 29.
This is the first time the province has eclipsed at least two hundred instances daily since July 21 and the sixteenth consecutive day when it registered more than one hundred instances of COVID-19. In early August, Ontario was able to stay below 3 digits seven times in a row because it had a habit of reporting less than a hundred cases.
Of the recent 213 highest cases, 71 met in Toronto, 38 in Peel, 37 in Ottawa, 15 at Waterloo and 14 in York. Of Ontario’s 34 public fitness units, 26 reported five or fewer cases, while 18 reported no new cases. Of all newly known patients, 143 are under 40 years old (67% of cases).
“It’s not the fault of the city of Toronto or the Peel region,” Ford said Friday. “This happens, we have to paint together. Everything I asked to avoid those big meetings. Just follow the rules and everyone will be fine. »
In the last 24 hours, another 124 people have recovered, while the province has subtracted a death from its death toll of 2,813. There are now 1,657 inflamed patients in Ontario, the maximum as of July 9.
To end the week of paintings, the province has also entered a public online page that will track the number of instances of COVID-19 in schools. As of Friday morning, there were thirteen instances in Ontario schools, adding nine members. are in French Catholic schools in Ottawa.
Quebec reports the latest since June
Health in Quebec has known 219 new instances of COVID-19, the highest they have announced since June 7.
Among the recent highest cases, 42 are in Quebec City, 40 in Montreal, 20 in Montérégie, 19 in Bas-Saint-Laurent and 18 in the two regions of Outaouais and Chaudiére-Appalaches, according to the Montreal Gazette.
This is the third time in the last six days that the province has registered at least two hundred instances of COVID-19. The government also reported more than a hundred instances in 14 consecutive reporting periods. Prior to the recent tranche, it had recorded fewer than a hundred cases on 14 of its last 18 occasions.
“All Quebecers have a duty and it is to spare them a momentary wave. We are not in a momentary wave, but the trend is not good,” Prime Minister Francois Legault said Friday.
“I don’t plan and I don’t expect to have to enter each and every house, so I ask the population, please look at the number of cases, look at the virus. It’s serious, so don’t do it, big parties without following the guidelines.
In recent weeks, the virus has spread throughout the province in a variety of environments. On Friday, authorities announced that they would ban karaoke, while ordering bars to keep customer records from now on. Quebec City on August 23 connected to more than 80 instances, with known secondary instances in at least 3 schools.
On Friday, the province withdrew knowledge of its COVID-19 prestige in schools, which Legault indicated is because the data is incomplete and unreliable.
Across Quebec, there are now 1,846 active cases of COVID-19, with 219 patients recovering. No one has died in the last 24 hours in the province, however, the government has added 3 more deaths to its death toll since later dates. It was also eliminated because investigations showed that the causes of death were not attributable to COVID-19. The death toll is now 5774.
Updates from Canada
There were 132 new cases in British Columbia, the time when the largest daily accumulation was recorded in the total number of cases in the province. That’s just Thursday’s 139 increase. Another 83 patients have recovered, but the number of active cases in the province has reached some other record of 1,461.
Officials continue to ask residentS ‘B. C. to verify the developing list of public exposure warnings as a component of contact search efforts. On Thursday, there were 3,198 other people who were isolated and were being actively monitored through British Columbia because they were in contact with a known COVID-19 patient.
No new cases have been known in Nova Scotia or Newfoundland and Labrador, as the number of active cases remains in two and one, respectively. One patient has recovered in New Brunswick, reducing the number of active cases to two, while 3 cases have been resolved on Prince Edward Island, where 8 patients have been infected lately.
By the time of the day in a row, manitoba fitness officers learned 15 new cases of COVID-19; They met 8 in Winnipeg, 4 at Prairie Mountain and 3 at Southern Health. Another eighty-8 people have recovered, which has reduced the number of active cases to 287. This is the fewest active cases the province has had in weeks.
Thirteen new cases have been known in the spaces of East Central (seven), Saskatoon (four), Far Northeast (one) and Regina (one) of Saskatchewan. Five other patients have also been recovered, bringing the number of active cases in the province to 66; 20 of these inflamed patients are in the Saskatoon area, the maximum of all spaces. Health officials also warn of possible exposure to COVID-19 at Regina International Airport, which involves from Toronto.
A resident of the Good Samaritan Care Center in Edmonton died, marking the most recent death in Alberta; however, the death toll remains 253, as it was discovered that a death recorded in the past was not related to the virus. COVID-19 in the same domain as 161 patients; reduces the number of active instances to 1444.
Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s medical director of health, said there were 29 schools in the province that a user attended while contagious, with 32 cases similar to those schools. Three school outbreaks remain active.
Three COVID-19 outbreaks reported in Alberta schools
Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta’s medical director of health, said three schools had at least two other infected people, but that lately there is no evidence of wider transmission.
“As we call those outbreaks, that’s a very careful use of the term,” Hinshaw said Thursday. “We are acting very cautiously in dealing with two cases that are in a school while contagious within 14 days as an epidemic, even when the cases are in the same family. “
Two of them are in Calgary: Henry Wise Wood High School and St. Wilfrid, the third is Chinook High School in Lethbridge.
On Thursday, there were 113 new cases, five deaths and 199 cures, while the number of active cases in Alberta was reduced to 1,494. Across the province, there are 24 cases in 21 schools, Hinshaw said.
To learn more about how Alberta Health Services plans to deal with all 3 outbreaks, read here.
Manitoba records the first case since reopening
Manitoba’s director of public health, Dr. Brent Roussin, said Thursday that the province has known its first school case.
The unidentified seventh grader at Churchill High School in Winnipeg had been screened for COVID-19 before the first day of school on Tuesday, had no symptoms. .
“This individual did everything he intended to do and did not identify any close contact in this area,” Roussin said.
The Winnipeg School Division told The Canadian Press that the student wore a mask in his studies and also kept a physical distance all the time.
On Thursday, Roussin announced 15 new instances in Manitoba’s last 24-hour sequence, adding Winnipeg. However, with 57 instances recently resolved, its number of active instances has fallen to 360, the lowest in weeks.
For more information on Manitoba’s first school case, read here.
British Columbia records the newest daily cases
On the same day schools opened in British Columbia, fitness officials announced a record 139 new instances of COVID-19.
The provincial fitness official, Dr. Bonnie Henry, said that in the long run we may be waiting for cases in schools, which has happened in other provinces of the country, however, a system-full closure would only occur in serious circumstances.
“That would mean we were on a desperate stage in many other facets of our network and that’s what we’re looking to avoid,” Henry said Thursday.
With the latest update, there are now 1,412 inflamed patients in the province lately, the largest number the pandemic has ever reached. Officials continue to ask B. C. residents. to review the developing list of public exposure warnings as a component of contact search efforts.
To be more informed about how B. C. will balance your school reopening plan with your disturbing coVID-19 trend, read here.
Updates from Canada
In Ontario, 170 new cases of COVID-19 were reported on Thursday. The province also reported an additional death. Most of the new cases were in the Toronto domain with 55 cases, while the York Region and peel region recorded 28 and 22 new cases. Of Ontario’s 34 public fitness regions, 28 reported five or fewer new cases and 14 reported no new cases. There are currently 1567 active cases throughout the province, with 142 patients recovering.
There were 188 new reported cases in Quebec, as well as two more deaths related to the virus, one of which occurred in the last 24 hours of the province. With 224 patients recently recovered, there are now 1,847 active cases in Quebec. To curb the growing number of infections in the province, Quebec will impose fines from Saturday on Saturday for those who refuse to wear masks.
On Wednesday, all in-person activities and categories were cancelled at two Cégep schools in the Lower St. Lawrence of Quebec after several academics tested positive for COVID-19. According to fitness officials, the cases are similar to a party held in the region at the end of August, where more than a hundred people were present.
A Resident of New Brunswick tested positive for COVID-19 in Quebec, bringing the total number of active cases in the province to three. The individual will remain in Quebec until he recovers.
Elsewhere in the Canadian Atlantic, the number of active cases in Nova Scotia has been reduced to two; Newfoundland and Labrador did not register new instances for the fifth consecutive day, with the number of active instances in one. Prince Edward Island announced new instances on Thursday after several of them met earlier in the week, similar to foreign travel. there are still 11 active instances on the island.
Saskatchewan fitness officials learned of six new cases in the same 24-hour era in which six other people have recovered. That means there are still 59 active instances throughout the province, adding 16 in Saskatoon (most of its areas).
Ontario reported 149 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, below what it reported earlier in the week. Overall, the province saw a slight increase in the number of cases in relation to recoveries. Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault to identify key spaces for cooperation amid the virus.
At the same time, in Quebec, 180 new instances of COVID-19 have been identified, above the threshold at which the government expects to maintain new instances. Specific mountaineers are requested not to meet with a circle of family and friends to consult. prevent the spread of the virus.
Across the Canadian Atlantic, cases have remained largely stable. In Nova Scotia, there has been a imaginable re-infection of a user in a long-term care center; Authorities are confirming the case, which was announced on Monday. New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador did not report any new case. Prince Edward Island met two new instances, bringing the total number of active instances to 11.
Manitoba reported new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday. Lately there are 404 active instances in the province. The update comes when the ruling Conservative Progressive Party has announced plans to take control of the legislature next month with near-normal operational procedures.
In Saskatchewan, a new case of COVID-19 was identified, bringing the total number of active instances to 59. One user remains under intensive care with the virus in Saskatoon.
Alberta saw 98 new cases reported Wednesday, most of the cases active in the Calgary and Edmonton regions. The province also introduced an online map to track COVID-19 cases in schools, as the province showed that there were 16 cases in 16 of its schools. All instances were hired outside the school.
In British Columbia, one hundred new instances of COVID-19 have been identified. With 37 patients recently hospitalized with the virus, adding thirteen in intensive care, the province has been experiencing its number of hospitalizations lately since May 27. More than 3,000 other people are hospitalized, being monitored lately due to exposure to known instances.
On Tuesday, Ontario reported 375 new instances of COVID-19 in the following two days, as no WorkDay reports were made. There were 180 new instances on Tuesday and 195 new instances on Monday, so the increases the province has noticed since The regions with the maximum number of new instances on Tuesday were the fitness regions of Toronto (48), Peel (42) and Ottawa (37). Toronto Mayor John Tory said at a news convention Tuesday that many of those new instances are young. 65% of new cases in Toronto in the last month before the age of 40. Of Ontario’s 32 public fitness units, 28 reported five or fewer cases, and 18 reported no new cases.
In Quebec, 163 new instances met on Tuesday. The last two days saw the number of new instances exceed two hundred depending on the day. Among those known as COVID-19 affected were the mayor of Longueuil and six imaginable instances who took buses from french Catholic school forums in Ottawa. There are now 1,944 active cases of COVID-19 in Quebec, adding 105 at the hospital.
Across canada’s Atlantic, the maximum dramatic accumulation of COVID-19 occurred on Prince Edward Island. Two new instances have been identified, plus 4 new Instances reported on Labor Day, bringing the total number of active instances in the province to nine. All active instances are similar to foreign ones and all have been detected while others are ingilising after arriving on Prince Edward Island, in accordance with government guidelines. Nova Scotia, Nova Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador have not noticed any new identified instances.
Canada’s largest doctor is concerned about rising cases in Canada
Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s director of public health, said she is “concerned” about the trend of expansion in cases across the country.
Instead of holding a press conference on Monday, Tam issued a warning to Canadians about his stage at COVID-19. During the following week (August 30 to September 6), Canada reported an average of 545 instances consistent with the day, 25% more than the week, when 435 cases were reported per day. Two weeks earlier, there were an average of 390 cases in line with the day.
“The average daily number of instances has increased in recent weeks,” Tam said in his press release. “This is a fear and a reminder that we all want public fitness measures to keep COVID-19 on the slow-burning path we want.
As the fall months approach, Tam warns Canadians to pay more attention to the occasions they encounter, especially as the colder climate adjusts activities indoors.
“While I know we’re all looking ahead to combine with our long circle of family and friends for the holidays, indoor meetings might not be suitable for all Canadians or families,” Tam said in a press release that includes a list. questions you ask yourself before attending an event.
Over the next week, some of Canada’s largest provinces have noticed that trends in their cases continue to grow. Some fitness officers have linked accumulation in cases to accumulation in meetings, basically among young people.
In last week’s B. C. La update, he announced its largest build-up in instances since the start of the pandemic. The 121 new instances on Friday were only the 124 instances reported a week earlier, however, the upgrade still led to a record number of active instances of 1233. Officials continue to ask BC residents to check the developing list of public exposure warnings as a component of contact search efforts.
Alberta finished the week with 1,433 active cases. According to the Alberta Health Services, this is the number of recently inflamed patients the province has had since May 10.
Ontario recorded a 3-digit build-up in cases every day of last week. In early August, the province was able to stay below 3 digits seven times in a row because it had a habit of reporting less than a hundred cases. On September 5, fitness officials also announced 169 new instances, the highest daily case since July 24.
In Quebec, fitness officials have recorded more than a hundred cases for example in the following week, as a component of a record 10-day era of a three-digit increase. Prior to the recent tranche, it had recorded fewer than a hundred cases in 14 of its last 18 instances. On September 6, Quebec reported 205 new instances of COVID-19, its highest peak in a day since June 7. On Friday, the province also announced that 46 of its schools had at least one case of COVID -19 in the first week of school.
Saskatchewan and the Atlantic provinces have noticed that their COVID-19 case trends have stabilized, but last week, Prince Edward Island recorded 3 cases after all its other patients recovered on 31 August.
In Manitoba, the number of active instances in the province is no longer at a record level, which was not unusual in the August part, on July 14 the province had almost no active instances, that day after all its first patients recovered. , fitness officials diagnosed five more people. Since then, Manitoba has noticed its upward trend. On August 12, for the first time, the province surpassed two hundred active instances. On August 26, it reached the mark of 400, which has not been. able to fall ever since.
Montreal, in Quebec City, leads the province in 3 months
Health in Quebec has known 216 new instances of COVID-19 in its last 24 hours, the maximum since June 7.
This comes a day after the province recorded 205 cases, now the tenth consecutive era in which the province has recorded more than a hundred cases, before the last tranche had remained below that mark on 14 of its last 18 occasions.
Of the highest recent cases, 63 met in the Montreal area, 51 in the Quebec City region, 34 in the Montérégie region and 18 in the Laval and Lanaudiére regions.
The recent number of cases in Montreal and Quebec City is higher than saskatchewan (34), Prince Edward Island (three), Nova Scotia (two), Newfoundland and Labrador (one) and New Brunswick (one) combined to report last week (41).
Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubé said on August 25 that Quebec will not exceed 160 instances per day, equivalent to about 20 instances per million inhabitants. Now he’s overshadowed that mark five times in a row.
The recent update is part of a trend of concern for the province, as it is now going through the COVID-19 pandemic at the same time as its plan to reopen the school.
On Friday, Quebec fitness officials published a list of 46 schools that had a COVID-19 case among students or staff the first week of reopening; however, Dubé claimed that there had been no outbreak and that, in the maximum number of cases, the school had had a remote case involving an inflamed outdoor user in the school environment.
For example, on Wednesday, fitness officials announced that a karaoke outbreak in Quebec City had inflamed 40 customers, causing the best schools to spread among 3 academics in 3 other schools.
Throughout the pandemic, Quebec led the country with a total of 63,713 cases of COVID-19. Eighty-nine patients recovered in the last 24 hours of the province. No one died, however, the government added one more death to its death row of 5,770 between August 31 and September 5.
There are now 1,983 active instances of COVID-19 in Quebec, the maximum of all provinces in Canada. According to Steve Faguy of Montreal Gazette, it is now the ninth consecutive day when the number of active instances in the province is higher, most recently up to 126.
Updates from Canada
Ontario fitness officials said they will provide a statistical update on coVID-19 prestige in the province on Labor Day. The province will have an update on Tuesday for its last two 24-hour periods.
A new case has been known in Nova Scotia, the first since 31 August. The maximum number of recent patients is in the central domain and is lately being investigated through the fitness authorities. There are currently 4 active cases in Nova Scotia.
No new cases have been known in Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick or Prince Edward Island, as they continue to have two, 3 and 3 active cases, respectively.
Fifteen new cases have been known in Manitoba, including seven in Winnipeg, six in Prairie Mountain and one in the East and South regions of Interlake. Five of these cases are close contacts of previous known cases. Twelve other patients recovered in the last 24-hour period of the province, leaving Manitoba with 412 recently infected citizens.
Eleven other people were diagnosed with Saskatchewan. Se diagnosed two cases in the north-northwest areas of Saskatoon and the west central, and one in the central-east, southwest, south-central and southeastern areas. Still pending Another user has also recovered, leaving the province with 58 active instances.
Quebec reports its latest cases in 3 months
Quebec reported 205 new CASES of COVID-19 on Sunday, marking its one-day peak from June 7.
The province has now reported more than a hundred cases in nine consecutive reporting periods. Prior to the recent tranche, it had recorded fewer than a hundred cases on 14 of its last 18 occasions.
On August 25, Health Minister Christian Dubé said Quebec will not exceed 160 instances of the day, equivalent to about 20 instances over millions of people. Now you’ve eclipsed that mark on 4 consecutive occasions.
Prime Minister Francois Legault said thursday that Dubé’s statistics are “a target,” but that doesn’t mean the province will “automatically” return to blockades if the target is not reached. imposed on subregions, the province as a whole.
Of the last 205 cases, they met in Montreal, 48 in Montérégie, 32 in Quebec City and 14 in Laval.
Throughout the pandemic, Quebec is Canada’s hardest-hit province with a record 63,497 cases, including 55,871 cured patients (61 since Saturday) and 5,769 deaths, leaving the province with 1,857 patients inflamed lately, the maximum of them in all provinces.
Since schools opened on August 27, the province has been national news. Quebec fitness officials on Friday published a list of 46 schools that have had a COVID-19 case among academics or staff the first week of reopening. However, Dubé said there had been no outbreak and that, in the maximum number of cases, the school had had a remote case involving someone inflamed outdoors from the school environment.
For example, on Wednesday, fitness officials announced that an outbreak of karaoke bars in Quebec City had inflamed 40 customers, causing the best schools to spread among 3 academics from 3 other schools.
Updates from Canada
Ontario reported 158 new instances on Sunday, marking the eleventh consecutive day on which the province has registered more than one hundred instances of COVID-19. In early August, the province was able to stay below the 3 digits seven times in a row because it had made a habit of reporting less than a hundred cases. Of the maximum number of recently known patients, 49 are in Toronto, 44 in Peel, 21 in Ottawa and 16 in York. Twenty-nine of the 34 public fitness teams reported five or fewer cases, while 20 after five consecutive days without death, the province recorded two on Sunday, with the death toll at 2,813; in the province there are 1,390 active instances (the maximum since July 30), with another 111 patients recovering in the last 24-hour era of the province.
Two other patients have recovered in Nova Scotia, leaving 3 active cases in the province. Another case was also settled in New Brunswick, leaving 3 active cases in that jurisdiction as well. No new cases have been reported in Newfoundland and Labrador or Prince Edward Island. since they have two and 3 active instances, respectively.
29 new cases were known in Manitoba, spread out in Winnipeg (17), South (seven), Prairie Mountain (three) and Interlake East (one). Seven of these cases are close contacts of a known case in the past, while One is related to travel. There is also a patient who is connected to an assisted living facility located next to the Donwood Manor Personal Care Home. Donwood Manor has introduced epidemic protocols, the threat of further spread is considered low. Six other people have also recovered, bringing the number of active cases in Manitoba to 409.
Saskatchewan fitness officers have known 8 new cases. There are 3 in Saskatoon, two in the center-east area and the northwest, Regina and southeast spaces each have a new patient each. None of them have recovered in the last 24 hours of the province. there are now 48 active instances in the province.
Nunavut remains the only jurisdiction that has not had a proven positive case of pandemic. The Northwest Territories do not have active instances, as does the Yukon after its other two instances were resolved on August 13.
Alberta and British Columbia provided case updates over the weekend, but on Friday there were 1,433 and 1,233 active cases, respectively. Over the weekend, a Calgary high school informed parents of a case at their school after it opened for school 2020-21 year on Tuesday.
Ontario reports an increase in cases since July
Ontario fitness officials announced 169 new instances of COVID-19 on Saturday, marking the highest peak in the province’s since July 24.
The last patients, who met after the labs conducted 28,672 tests, are basically found in Peel (46), Toronto (42), Ottawa (30) and York (19). Twenty-eight of Ontario’s 34 public fitness teams reported five or fewer cases, while 19 did not report new patients.
Peel, Toronto and Ottawa recorded more new cases On Saturday than Saskatchewan, Manitoba and the 4 Atlantic provinces together (27).
The update comes a day after Peel recorded 72 cases, which came to the attention of Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford. The region includes Caledon, Mississauga and Brampton, which are the epicenter.
“In fact, I’m involved in what’s happening in Brampton,” Ford said Friday. “Anyone who makes plans to have a big party this weekend: cancel or we wouldn’t hesitate to avoid it. . . Brampton, you can’t throw parties in your backyard, I can’t tighten that too much.
During the summer, Brampton was at the highlight of some parties, especially the one that attracted two hundred other people at the end of July. The Premier said that although outdoor collection limits are limited to one hundred in Ontario, other people do not have more than 10 people in their backyards because it is difficult to take social distance precautions.
The recent update is now the tenth consecutive day when the province has more than a hundred cases of COVID-19. In early August, the province could remain below 3 digits seven times in a row because it had a habit of reporting less. one hundred instances.
Of the 1,345 active instances in the province (the maximum since July 31), Peel leads with 390; Toronto has 374 recently infected patients, Ottawa 198 and York 105; the other 30 regions have fewer than 75.
In a positive e, Ontario recorded a new death toll for the fifth consecutive day, with a death toll kept at 2,811. Its 16 patients have also recovered in the last 24 hours of the province.
Nearly 50 in Quebec have had cases of COVID-19 since they
Quebec fitness officials published a list of 46 schools that had a COVID-19 case among academics or staff the first week of reopening.
Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubé called it a “very smart news story” because fitness officials have not noticed epidemics, meaning there has been no spread in the school environment. Rather, it is an exclusive case between a student or member with COVID-19 who attended one of the 3,100 schools in the province.
“We knew we’d have cases when we opened schools. Not surprising,” Dubé said On Friday in French. “We can involve those bonfires. We just want to give fitness officials a chance to paint in those conditions to restrict the threat. “epidemics and our children.
Next week, the province will begin publishing daily knowledge-sharing data on the number of instances in schools in the province. Dubé said in a statement, accompanying the initial list, that the Quebec government “has made it a point of honor, since the beginning of the pandemic, be transparent and disclose the applicable data. “
The province ordered academics to participate in face-to-face courses as of August 27, with medical exceptions, a resolution that generated complaints from parents and teachers.
Throughout the first week, the province made headlines from various COVID-19 conditions in schools. On the southern coast of Montreal, the Collége Francois sent home an elegance the first day after the father of one of his academics tested for the virus.
At the time, more than 20 teachers at a momentary school in the lower Laurentides had to isolate themselves after two of them tested positive for COVID-19, forcing 500 undergraduate and 11 students to return home because there was no one to do so. Teach.
On Wednesday, a karaoke bar outbreak in Quebec City resulted in a best-school distribution among 3 other students from 3 other schools.
This is the moment when Quebec has welcomed academics back into classrooms since the beginning of the pandemic. Elementary schools in Quebec opened on May 11 (with the exception of those in the Montreal area) for the first time in Canada. schools, schools and post-momentary establishments have been forced to remain closed.
During its first stay of reopening, which had voluntary participation, the province recorded 78 cases between schoolchildren and in the first 3 weeks, in some cases schools had to be closed for several days, while a school in Trois-Riviares had almost a total classroom of about 12 academics who contracted the virus.
Provincial updates
Quebec reported 175 new instances of COVID-19 on Saturday. The province has now reported more than a hundred instances in 8 consecutive reporting periods. Prior to the recent stretch, it had recorded less than a hundred instances on 14 of its last 18 occasions. He did not die in the last 24 hours of the province, however, officials added two deaths between 29 August and 3 September to his death toll of 5,769. While 86 more people have recovered since Friday, 1,713 patients remain inflamed lately in the province.
Nova Scotia did not report new instances for the fifth consecutive day, with remaining active instances in the province. There are also 4 active instances in New Brunswick and 3 on Prince Edward Island.
Newfoundland and Labrador reported their first case since August 28, the last patient is a woman, between the age of 20 and 39, who recently traveled from the United States and has been remote since she was returned. There are now two active instances in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Health officials in Manitoba have known 21 new cases of COVID-19, adding 10 in Winnipeg, 4 in Southern Health and Prairie Mountain Health and 3 in the Interlake-Eastern region. Eight of these cases are closed contacts from previous known cases, and one is a physical care employee at Concordia Place Personal Care Home in Winnipeg. Another 17 people have recovered in the province, bringing the number of active cases to 426.
Five new cases have been known in the Saskatoon (three) and south-central (two) spaces of Saskatchewan. Another patient also recovered in the same period, leaving 40 active cases in the province. On Saturday, the Saskatchewan Health Authority published a list of places where others may have come into contact with an infectious patient; the spaces are scattered throughout Saskatoon, Coronach and Moose Jaw.
British Columbia is accumulating in cases, maximum of active cases
BEFORE CHRIST. Fitness officers have known 121 new cases of COVID-19, marking when it is accumulating in its total number of cases since the start of the pandemic.
On August 28, a week today, the province recorded 124 cases.
The recent maximum update raises the number of active instances in the province to 1,233, the highest the pandemic has ever noticed. British Columbia has noticed that its active instances are accumulating on an upward trajectory in recent times, with 319 active instances happening in the province on August 4 and 162 on July 4.
Health officials did not hold a press convention on Friday to discuss the recent peak, however, during the following month they have attributed construction to an accumulation in personal meetings, such as indoor parties that remain a problem, especially among young people who have interaction with alcohol.
“We have it in our hands, in our efforts to straighten our curve, ” said Dr. Bonnie Henry, Provincial Health Administrator. ” And that’s what we want to focus on now. We’re on that edge. We are on this precipice, so to speak, where we have to take steps to make sure we can move forward in the fall and keep our curve down.
Exhibitions due to meetings have been a major fear for British Columbia, as two hotel parties around Canada Day in Kelowna have resulted in dozens of cases in the province, as well as imaginable exposure warnings for various companies.
Officials continue to ask B. C. citizens to learn about the developing list of public exposure warnings as a component of touch tracking efforts. Currently, in British Columbia, another 2792 people isolate themselves and are being actively monitored through public health as they were in contact with a patient known to have COVID-19.
“This particular weekend, decide to be small. Choose to spend more time with your home bubble than with an organization of strangers,” Henry said.
“Let’s make this long Labor Day weekend a single purpose of continuing to prevent those chains of transmission and pass through our curve. And of course, let’s keep doing it by being kind, calm and safe. . . “
In addition to the maximum number of recent cases, officials said there was an additional death, which extended the death toll to 211; there was also a new residential service outbreak in KinVillage in the Fraser Health area. A total of 10 long-term or lifetime. assisted care services and two acute care services have active outbreaks.
‘I’m worried’: Ontario has one of its highest case spikes since July, and most new cases come from Brampton, Peel
While Peel reported on Friday, 72 of Ontario’s 148 cases, Prime Minister Doug Ford expressed fear as the region begins to see an increase in the number of patients, mainly in Brampton.
Ford said he had tried to touch Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown about the situation, as the city accounts for 3% of the province’s population, but accounts for 40% of recent cases.
“I’m involved in what’s happening at Brampton,” Ford said. “I made three calls to the mayor this morning. Patrick, if you’re listening, I want to get in touch with you, find out what’s going on there. “
On Friday, Ontario fitness officials announced 148 new cases of COVID-19 and links its accumulation on Aug. 29 to the largest spike the province has recorded since July 24.
Of the recently known cases, 72 were in Peel, 41 in Toronto and thirteen in Ottawa. The other 31 public fitness teams reported five or fewer cases, 12 of which did not report new cases.
The 72 instances of Peel are more than those of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and the 4 Atlantic provinces combined to report (48) on Thursday and Friday.
“Anyone who makes plans to have a big evening this weekend: cancel or we wouldn’t hesitate to close it. “enough. “
The prime minister said that even though outdoor collection limits are limited to one hundred in Ontario, other people don’t have more than ten people in their backyards because it’s hard to take social distance precautions. Ford also warned that they oppose sharing substances.
“You don’t owe percentages of anything. I don’t care if it’s those bites, or drinks,. . . not the percentages. It’s easy. “
During the summer, Brampton was the highlight of some parties, especially one that attracted two hundred other people at the end of July.
On Friday, the Peel District School Board (PDSB) also showed that it had heard a case at Brampton Elementary School, Ross Drive Public School, which involved a staff member who was in construction on August 27. The Council’s North Field Office after being on site on August 28. Both spaces will remain open.
In the last 24 hours of the province, 116 patients have been recovered; however, there have been 1,282 inflamed patients across Ontario lately, the maximum since August 2.
Among those patients, there are 66 in the hospital, adding thirteen in intensive care and 8 that require a fan.
For the fourth day in a row, the province did not record COVID-19-like deaths, but the government eliminated a death, so that the death toll is 2811.
Canada updates
Quebec reported 184 new instances of COVID-19 on Friday. In addition to the 187 new instances registered last day, the province recorded the largest accumulation in its total number of instances since June 8. The province has reported more than a hundred instances, in seven consecutive reporting periods. Prior to the recent stretch, it had recorded less than a hundred instances on 14 of its last 18 occasions. Another user has died in the last 24 hours of the province, but the government has also eliminated a death of his 5,767 deaths. While 109 more people have recovered since Thursday, 1,626 newly inflamed patients remain in the province.
No new cases have been known in Nova Scotia; However, the user has recovered, which means that there are now five active instances in the province. Newfoundland and Labrador still have one infected patient lately, while New Brunswick has four.
Prince Edward Island has known a new case, involving a boy in his overdue adolescence who arrived in the province after a trip abroad and has been fired since his return on August 29. The news comes after Prince Edward Island recorded two instances on Thursday, which were his first new patients since August 18. The 3 maximum recent patients are the only active cases in the province.
Manitoba reported nine new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, adding six in Winnipeg, two in the Southern Health Region and one in its epicenter, the Prairie Mountain region. In the same period, 44 other people recovered, bringing the number of active instances in the province to 422. According to a press release from fitness officials, the two instances at Southern Health are not similar to the non-public care home Bethesda Place in Steinbach, which recorded two deaths among its citizens on Thursday.
Saskatchewan fitness officials learned of 4 new cases in the same 24-hour period when 4 patients recovered from the respiratory virus. The maximum number of recent cases was dispersed in the north-central, central-west, southwest, and central-south areas. There are still 36 active instances in the province.
Alberta Medical Director of Health announced 164 new instances of COVID-19 on Friday, but noted that a user had died within the last 24 hours of the province. Hinshaw showed that there was a case at a school in Edmonton, but did not provide any earlier in the day, the respective school board showed that the case at Sainte-Jeanne-d’Arc school, however, a spokesman did not say whether the case concerned a student or an adult after the schools opened this week in Alberta. The recent maximum update, there are 1,433 instances displayed in the province, adding 638 in the Calgary domain and 544 in the Edmonton domain.
‘We’re reaching a critical threshold’: Quebec reports its biggest case spike since June
Quebec announced 187 new instances of COVID-19 on Thursday, the largest accumulation in its total number of instances since June 8.
The province has reported more than a hundred instances six times in a row and before the recent stretch, it had recorded no less than a hundred instances on 14 of its last 18 times.
“We are reaching a critical threshold,” Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault said Thursday.
On August 25, Health Minister Christian Dubé said Quebec will not exceed 160 instances of the day, equivalent to about 20 instances over millions of people.
Legault said On Thursday that Dubé’s statistics were “a goal,” but that doesn’t mean the province will make an “automatic” return to the locks if the target is not reached, but reminded the audience that “there are many other points to consider. . . . . If the maximum of the business in bars, the resolution would be easy to do.
Legault said it plans to replace the province’s COVID-19 restrictions at this time; if restrictions are implemented, they will be imposed on the subregions, the province as a whole.
Recently, Canada’s hardest-hit province has experienced peaks in the Quebec City region, eastern municipalities and the Montreal area, Legault said.
Outbreaks have been reported throughout the province; this includes since they opened a week ago on Thursday.
More recently, a karaoke bar outbreak in Quebec City brought 40 positive consumers, resulting in a secondary spread to academics in 3 schools. On Thursday, TVA News also reported that two small teams of Montreal Elementary School academics are isolated at home because they were in contact with COVID-19 patients.
Legault said the province’s return-to-school plan is moving forward as planned. Ruptures were expected, but the province did not have to close a full school due to an epidemic, thanks to its concept of “class bubble”.
On Thursday, a Quebec parent organization went to court to force the Ministry of Education to grant an online learning option to all families. At the moment, classroom learning is mandatory, for those who are the subject of a medical ion.
The province has not yet published statistics on the number of cases in schools and students, however, the prime minister said the public can expect more in the coming days.
“So far, it’s under control, but we must be careful, ” said Legault.
In the past, Legault has stated that it would rule out the closure of dams or the ban on activities such as karaoke if the spread of COVID-19 continued at an alarming rate.
Throughout the pandemic, Quebec recorded the number of instances (62,933) and deaths (5,767) of any Canadian jurisdiction. On Thursday, the province announced three more deaths, but they all happened until August 27.
Quebec also has the maximum number of patients inflamed lately with 1,551, according to B. C. knowledge. Ministry of Health, Quebec has the infection rate consistent with millions of inhabitants of any province.
BEFORE the ‘JC. au’ as modeling knowledge shows a ‘dramatic increase’ in cases among young populations
For the eighth time in the pandemic, British Columbia fitness officials provided the latest knowledge they gathered to perceive how COVID-19 spread throughout the province.
Recently, officials have noticed a “dramatic increase” in cases among others over the age of 20 to 39, Dr. Bonnie Henry, provincial fitness officer. Since mid-July, fitness officials have warned that they oppose giant gatherings, especially when it comes to alcohol; has resulted in an accumulation of cases and warnings of exposure to COVID-19 throughout the province.
As of Thursday, the province had a record 1,175 COVID-19 assets.
“We have it in our hands, in our movements, to push back our curve, ” said Henry. “And that’s what we want to focus on now. We’re on that edge. We are on this precipice, if you will, where we have to take steps to make sure we can move forward in the fall and keep our curve down.
Henry noted that there has also been a slight increase in cases among older populations, but that the average age of a COVID-19 patient in the province is now 41 years, compared to the mid-1950s in the early stages of the pandemic. .
The national broadcast remains applicable at all stages of the pandemic, however, in the latter stages, officials have noticed a significant increase in transmission in restaurants, bars and lounges, as well as at parties and personal events. These parameters have been related to the younger population.
“This deserves not to be a surprise,” Henry said.
Henry stated that there had also been a transmission in the Array. However, there have not been many occasions when COVID-19 has spread from the public.
Compared to other provinces, Henry showed that British Columbia did well, while its number of views fluctuated around one; the government has noted that it is building up alongside well-known exposure events.
“This particular weekend, he decides to spend small. Choose to spend more time with your home bubble than with an organization of strangers,” Henry said.
“Let’s make this long Labor Day weekend a single purpose of continuing to prevent those chains of transmission and pass through our curve. And of course, let’s keep doing it by being kind, calm and safe. . . “
Exhibitions due to meetings have been a major fear for British Columbia, as two parties at hotels around Canada Day in Kelowna have resulted in dozens of cases in the province, as well as imaginable exposure warnings for a variety of businesses.
Officials continue to ask residentS ‘B. C. to verify the developing list of public exposure warnings as a component of contact search efforts.
On Thursday, officials announced 89 new instances of COVID-19. There are now 1,175 active instances, 39 of which were recovered in the last 24 hours of the province.
Another user died in a long-term care home, which raised the death toll to 210.
Two new outbreaks have been reported in long-term care services at Cherington Place in the Fraser health region and at Point Gray Private Hospital in the Vancouver coastal health area. However, the outbreak at Maple Ridge Seniors Village has been declared complete, now nine long-term or lifetime care services assisted and two acute care services with active outbreaks.
Updates from Canada
Two women in Manitoba, one in their 80s and one in 90 years, are the latest victims of COVID-19 in the province. They were a component of the ongoing epidemic at the Bethesda Place Personal Care Home in Steinbach. Four other people have died, as a component of the epidemic, while the death toll in the province is now 16, health officials believe the first positive case in Bethesda Place was a fitness employee who hit the virus in the community. On Thursday, Manitoba also announced 20 new cases of the virus, adding thirteen in Winnipeg and six in its epicenter, the Prairie Mountain Health region. Another 15 people have also recovered, leaving 457 active cases in the province.
Ontario reported 132 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday. This is the eighth consecutive day that the province records more than one hundred cases of COVID-19. In early August, the province was able to stay below 3 digits seven times in a row because it had a habit of reporting less than a hundred cases. Of the maximum number of recent patients, 45 were known at Peel, 31 in Toronto and 22 in Ottawa. The other 31 public fitness teams reported five or fewer cases, while 18 reported no new patients. During the same period, Ontario did not record any case. new deaths, but some 119 recovered. There are currently 1,249 active cases in the province, the maximum since August 3.
No new cases have been known in Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick or Nova Scotia, as these provinces continue to record one, 4 and six active cases, respectively.
Prince Edward Island is no longer exempt from COVID-19, and fitness officials pronounced two new cases on Thursday: or involve an essential staff who are not part of the fitness care industry. Island. 24 August. The province the only province that had no active instances after all its patients recovered on September 1. The last time you announced a new case on August 18.
Ten new instances of COVID-19 have been known in Saskatchewan’s most recent 24-hour streak. Newer patients were diagnosed in the Saskatoon (six), Midwest (two), North Central (one) and South Central (one) areas. According to a press release, “all active instances in Saskatoon and many of the active instances in the rest of the province are similar to trips outside the province”. Three other people have also recovered in the province, meaning there are now 36 active instances in the province; 17 of them are in Saskatoon.
One hundred and thirty more people have been diagnosed with COVID-19 in Alberta, but no one has died in the last 24 hours of the province. There are now 1,415 active cases in the province, with 118 in recovery. Among the recently infected patients, there are 639 in the Calgary domain and 537 in the Edmonton domain, which has 22 of the province’s 46 hospitalizations.
Quebec City karaoke bar outbreak causes secondary infections for students
A karaoke bar in Quebec City, which produced 40 instances among participants, has now caused secondary infections among students.
There are 3 cases that have been known among the scholars of 3 of the six in the city who recently faced COVID-19 These 3 patients are connected to the 40 cases that have been known among customers who visited the Kirouac Bar for a karaoke night in August. 23, said Dr Jacques Girard, who heads the Quebec City Public Health Authority.
Girard expects more cases in the coming days, as some of the original 40 consumers visited at least six other bars in the city the same night. One of the consumers “did the big tour” and “went everywhere,” Girard said.
It was also reported that some of the patients went to other bars while waiting for their COVID-19 tests, after being asked to self-insulate over the weekend, when cases arose. Array Some of the consumers tested positive, but there are lately no additional links to the bars as of Wednesday.
“We now have evidence that those other people who tested positive for COVID, who possibly would not have had the effects of their tests and who were contagious, went elsewhere,” Girard said. “He was there when our alarm went off. “
Girard now asks who has been at a bar in Quebec City for the following week to get the COVID-1nine test. The Kirouac Bar has closed its doors until nine September.
Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubé nodded to Bar Kirouac on Tuesday and noted that he is seeking fines for consumers and staff after social media videos showed consumers in close contact and sharing microphones.
According to The Globe and Mail, who spoke with Bar Kirouac owner Lucien Simard, there were between 35 and 40 consumers and one member on the site on August 23. The asset has a capacity of one hundred people.
“The attack rate, the proportion of positives is important,” Dr. Girard said, noting that the stage in the room is an “explosive cocktail. “
The province has already dealt with bar-related outbreaks in July, which led fitness officials to introduce new rules, such as a ban on dancing. However, karaoke and making a song are still allowed, but Quebec public fitness director Horacio Arruda said the province now contemplates a karaoke bar.
Arruda and Girard have described it as a harmful activity, because “people get excited, exchange microphones, start making a song with their friends who need them. So the droplets are in the air and you’re contaminated. “
Schools in the province have also been dealing with COVID-19 cases since the province’s facilities opened on August 27. Official provincial knowledge was not disclosed on Wednesday about the number of cases between youth and staff.
As a precautionary measure, Quebec City school principals sent at least a hundred inflamed children’s classmates home, according to The Globe and Mail.
Updates from Canada
BEFORE CHRIST, fitness officials announced 104 new instances of COVID-19 on Wednesday. This is the sixth time since August 15 that the province has registered at least one hundred instances consistent with the day; Before the recent stretch, there had never been a three-digit increase. The recent update raises active instances of the province to a record 1,127, a few hundred other patients have recovered since Tuesday. new outbreak at a gym at Surrey Memorial Hospital, however, the outbreak at Langley Memorial Hospital has been declared over.
Ontario reported 133 new cases of COVID-19, its timing is accumulating in general cases since July 31 Of these patients, 43 were known in Toronto, 34 in Peel, 15 in the York region and 12 in Ottawa. 34 public fitness teams reported five or fewer cases, while 21 did not report new patients. No one has died in the last 24 hours of the province, but 137 patients have recovered. There are currently 1,236 active cases in the province.
Health officials in Quebec have announced that they have known 132 new cases of COVID-19. Two more deaths were added to the province’s 5,764 figure, but none of them occurred in the last 24 hours of the province. With 77 newly recovered patients, there are now 1,467 active cases in the province.
No new cases have been known in Nova Scotia or Newfoundland and Labrador, as these provinces have one and six active cases, respectively. New Brunswick has met a new patient involving a foreign employee in transit in the Moncton area. There are now 4 active cases on Prince Edward Island remains the province without an active case, after fitness officials announced that their last patient had recovered on Tuesday.
Twelve new cases have been known in Manitoba, adding 8 at its Epicenter Prairie Mountain Health. There are now 454 active cases in the province, with 20 in recovery; this is the time when Manitoba has noticed a decrease in the number of infected patients lately.
Saskatchewan fitness officials announced two new instances, adding one in the Northwest and South Central areas. However, another 4 people recovered in the same 24-hour period. There are now 29 active instances in the province, the smallest since June 14.
A in his 60 years in southern Alberta died, bringing the death toll in the province to 242. Health officials also met 114 new cases of COVID-19. 108 patients have also been recovered, meaning there are now 1,403 active cases. Of the recently inflamed patients, 632 are in the Calgary domain and 538 in the Edmonton domain.
Ontario reported 112 new instances of COVID-19 in the last 24 hours on Tuesday, also reported one death and 92 recoveries, bringing the number of active instances in the province to 1,240. Of Ontario’s 34 public fitness units, 27 reported five or fewer new cases, while 18 reported no new cases.
In Quebec, 122 new cases of viruses, as well as two COVID-19-like deaths, have been reported, both occurring between 25 and 30 August, hospitalizations decreased by two, but the number of others in resuscitation increased by two.
In the Canadian Atlantic as a whole, only Nova Scotia has noticed a new case of COVID-19. The province also stated that one of the active instances, a student at Sainte-Anne University in Church Point, Nova Scotia, had not strayed far enough. , and the government is now looking for who may have contacted her. No new cases have been reported in Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick or Prince Edward Island.
Stricter masking regulations are being established after a recent outbreak of cases in Manitoba. The health government reported 18 new cases of COVID-19 in the province, such as several cures, bringing the total number of active cases to 459.
Alberta has announced 164 new instances shown of COVID-19 in the province, bringing the number of active instances to the current position nationally: 1,398, only 1,414 in Quebec. Two other patients died, an 80-year-old man and a 90-year-old woguy residing in an on-the-spot care center with an active epidemic.
British Columbia reported 58 new cases in the province and one death. BEFORE JC currently has 1,124 active cases: 31 are hospitalized, 10 of them in resuscitation. In a statement, Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix wrote: “We will do this We must prepare for the demanding situations that may need to be addressed in the autumn with renewed commitment, new routines and proven protective measures.
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