10:44 Ontario reports 407 new cases of COVID-19, but there are no new coronavirus-related deaths.
At 8 a. m. , India maintained its outbreak of coronavirus cases, adding 93337 new infections shown in more than 24 hours.
4:01 a. m. La health care in Canada accounted for approximately 20% of COVID-19 infections at the end of July, higher than the global average.
Latest news about coronavirus from Canada and around the world on Thursday. This record is no longer updated. Click here to read the latest one. Web links to larger stories if available.
(Update) 11:06 a. m. Prime Minister Doug Ford announced that social gatherings will be limited to 10 others indoors and 25 outdoors, across the province.
These limits were imposed in the past only in 3 sensitive regions, Toronto, Peel and Ottawa.
“In recent days, we have noticed an alarming increase in the number of COVID-19 cases in the province,” Ford said at a rare press conference over the weekend. “Obviously, the figures are going in the right direction, they’re taking decisive steps to reduce the duration of un supervisory personal social gatherings in all regions of Ontario. “
The extended boundaries, in place without delay over the next 4 weeks, come with all parties, dinners, barbecues, weddings and other purposes in homes, patios, parks and other recreation areas. Interior and meetings cannot be merged.
The new limits apply to business meetings with staff and other facilities, such as bars, restaurants, cinemas, conference centers, banquet halls, gyms, places of worship, sporting events or performing arts, according to the government.
Ontario is reporting 407 new cases of COVID-19 and a new death today. The figures mark the moment in so many days when the province has recorded more cases over a 24-hour period.
(Update) 10:44 a. m. Ontario today reports 407 new cases of COVID-19 and a new death associated with coronavirus.
The figures mark when the province has registered more instances in a 24-hour period.
Numbers have increased in recent weeks, in Toronto, Peel Region and Ottawa.
Prime Minister Doug Ford lowered the boundaries of social gatherings in those spaces before this week and indicated that he is ready to do the same in other regions.
She is about to make an announcement this morning along with Health Minister Christine Elliott and the province’s deputy health department, Dr. Barbara Yaffe.
Correction – September 19, 2020: This access was updated from an earlier edition indicating that there have been no new coronavirus-related deaths.
10:04 a. m. , Pope Francis urges political leaders to ensure that coronavirus vaccines are available in poorer countries.
He says that in many parts of the world, there is a “pharmacological marginalization” of those who do not have to receive physical care.
Francois met on Saturday with members of an Italian humanitarian organization that collects donations through pharmaceutical corporations and distributes them to clinics and care centres for those most in need.
Francis says many other people are dying in some parts of the world because of the lack of drugs that can be obtained elsewhere, and political leaders will have to take into account their fate.
“I repeat, it would be regrettable if, in the distribution of the vaccine, priority is given to the richest, or if a vaccine has become the asset of this or that country and not of all,” the Pope said.
Francis has in the past called for universal access to the vaccine.
9:30 a. m. Ontario Prime Minister Doug Ford is about to make a rare weekend announcement this morning similar to COVID-19.
No main points were available, but Health Minister Christine Elliott and the province’s Deputy Medical Director of Health, Dr. Barbara Yaffe, they’ll be available, too.
Ford suspended pandemic sessions over the weekend during the summer, as the number of cases in the province decreased.
But they have increased in weeks, and Ontario reported 401 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday.
Most new instances are concentrated in Toronto, Peel Region, and Ottawa, leading Ford to reduce social gathering limits in those spaces before this week.
The prime minister said he planned to tighten restrictions in other spaces as well, at the request of local authorities.
9:00 a. m. Ontario residents flock to COVID-19 detection centers, as the province sees a strong buildup of positive cases, a trend a Toronto psychologist describes as “toilet paper days” at the beginning of the pandemic.
Outside Lakeridge Health Center in Oshawa this week, Stephanie Hammond said she should be tested after having a fever and cold symptoms. His sixth- and fourth-grade children planned to return to school but stayed home for the time being.
“I hope it’s not a coronavirus, ” said Hammond, 46. “These days, even a little challenge in your body terrifies you. “
Completed tests have skyrocketed in the last two weeks. A record 35,826 tests were conducted across the province Thursday, with some testing centers reporting wait times of up to 4 hours. Meanwhile, Ontario has registered more than 300 new cases almost each and every day this week, or 400 new instances on Friday, according to Star’s tally of reports from public fitness units.
Read Gilbert Ngabo’s full story about the star: the check is the new role. How COVID-19 case accumulation is fueling a momentary wave of pandemic anxiety
8 a. m. Nursing doctors hired to care for the citizens of Extendicare Guildwood in Scarborough did not enter space for the devastating COVID-19 outbreak that killed 48 citizens, although administrators “repeatedly” asked for their help.
At Camilla Care Community in Mississauga, where 68 citizens inflamed by COVID died, space-contracted doctors filed phone calls that were not yet “on site for citizens and staff. “It was a similar story in Scarborough’s Altamont care network, where another 53 people died.
And at Woodbridge Vista Care Community in Vaughan, where the virus killed 31 residents, the two doctors who continued to suffer “overwork and exhaustion. “
There are many reasons why some doctors have stayed away, adding non-public fitness issues, recommendations for “virtual visits” from professional organizations, or solving paints safely in one place. But his absence, at least in households with the greatest problems, has gone unnoticed.
Read the full story of Star’s Moira Welsh: Nursing doctors have been continually asked to stop citizens during the COVID-19 outbreak. They didn’t come. As the virus reappears, Ontario sees new rules
At 8 a. m. , India maintained its outbreak of coronavirus cases, adding 93337 new infections shown in more than 24 hours.
On Saturday, the ministry of fitness raised the number of cases in the nation to more than 5. 3 million of nearly 1. 4 billion others. According to the report, 1,247 more people have died in the last 24 hours for a total of another 85,619 people. The country has more than one million active cases with a healing rate of about 80%.
India reports the largest one-day build-up in the world every day for more than five weeks and is expected to peak in the pandemic-affected country in a few weeks, surpassing the United States.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has faced scathing complaints from opposition lawmakers in India’s parliament over his pandemic management amid a shrinking economy, leaving millions unemployed.
More than 10 million migrant workers who had no cash and feared famine left towns and returned to villages when Modi ordered the national closure on March 24. Migration is one of the main reasons why the virus spread to the far reaches of the country. has caused serious economic difficulties. The economy contracted by nearly 24% this quarter, the worst among the world’s major economies.
7 a. m. Members of the federal government’s COVID-19 vaccine working group look anxiously at the Trump administration’s political strain to get a vaccine approved before the U. S. presidential election in November.
The co-chair of the work organization, dr. Joanne Langley, and member Alan Bernstein, explicitly fear the “vaccine hesitation” in Canada, the phenomenon in which others have doubts about taking a vaccine that can be easily obtained in Canada. for fear of their safety.
Langley says that when, despite all that is found, a vaccine that opposes COVID-19 is found, governments and fitness professionals will have to organize a vigorous data crusade to counter the opposition.
And that probably wouldn’t help President Donald Trump say that a pandemic vaccine could be implemented as early as October, which raises the view that he is rushing the timetable to increase his chances of re-election on November 3.
6:00 AM. Diala Charab and Yehya Al-Ayoubi are very happy to start running as nursing assistants after arriving from Lebanon on Sunday.
Despite COVID-19 restrictions that save others from coming to Canada, nurses were exempted and relocated as part of a pilot assignment to bring qualified refugees to the country.
“Diala was given her closing visa (COVID-19) . . . I got a visa after the Beirut explosion. “Al-Ayoubi said.
“Things were hectic, yet we just wanted to come here and be useful and productive to other people in this society. “
Charab, 25, and Al-Ayoubi, 29, will enroll in VHA Home HealthCare staff in Toronto as non-public workers.
Ernesto Sequera, HAV’s director of human resources, said in a statement that the company is pleased to bring health care personnel to Canada to meet the urgent need for more skilled home professionals during the pandemic.
4:01 a. m. La health care in Canada accounted for approximately 20% of COVID-19 infections at the end of July, higher than the global average.
In a report previously published earlier this month, the Canadian Institute of Health Information said that 19. 4% of the other people who tested positive for the virus as of July 23 were health workers. Twelve health workers, nine from Ontario and 3 from Quebec, died of COVID-19, he said.
The World Health Organization said in July that physical fitness accounted for 10% of global COVID-19 infections.
A national federation of nurses’ unions attributes the infection rate to a slow reaction to the pandemic, labor shortages and lack of non-public equipment.
4:01 a. m. A union representing Ontario hospital staff is involved in protecting the province’s plan to expand COVID-19 to pharmacies, while Prime Minister Doug Ford drove Friday to launch the program next week.
Ontario is expected to disclose a plan in the coming days to give network pharmacies the opportunity to contract COVID-19 while dealing with waiting hours at some of the province’s 148 assessment centers.
Ford said last week that he had had conversations with teams representing pharmacists and primary stores that own Shoppers Drug Mart and Rexall.
But the chairman of the Council of Hospital Trade Unions, a branch of the Canadian Public Employees Union, said the plan could put others with the virus in contact with vulnerable seniors or other medically engaged individuals.
“Send the public to a pharmacy and mingle with other people who care about developing COVID-19 and having a symptomatic Array . . . I find it reckless and potentially not very safe,” Michael Hurley said.
12:34 p. m. The Italian government of public fitness warns that the average age of coronavirus patients is expanding as other young people infect their most fragile parents and grandparents, which can test the hospital system.
The Higher Institute of Health published its weekly surveillance report on Friday when the country where COVID-19 hit the most sensitive in the West recorded the number of new infections, 1907, since May 1, with a total of 35,668.
While Italy has not experienced the thousands of new daily infections that other European countries have seen recently, its workload has increased by more than seven weeks. Initially, most new infections affected other young people returning from vacation spots. who are now infecting their elderly and most fragile relatives at home, with an average age of positive cases last week of 41 compared to August 30.
The institute warned that if the fitness formula does not overflow, it is in danger of being even greater if italians do not strictly comply with hidden mandates and standards of social estating.
12:34 p. m. The World Health Organization’s emergency leader said new global coronavirus cases appear to have peaked at around 2 million and 50,000 deaths per week.
Dr Michael Ryan says that while the number of COVID-19 cases internationally did not expand exponentially, the weekly number of deaths remained very worrying.
“This is where emerging countries should be with their fitness systems under nine months of pressure,” Ryan said.
He says there have been recent outbreaks in Europe, Ecuador and Argentina, adding that the lack of giant increases in Africa and other countries may simply reflect the lack of evidence.
10:49 p. m. Friday, September 18: Conservative leader Erin O’Toole conducted the COVID-19 test.
His positive result on Friday night came hours after the leader of Bloc Québécois, Yves-Fran’ois Blanchet, issued a message that he too had tested positive.
The two men will no longer attend next week’s Throne Address, and Blanchet is expected to be aisled until at least September 26 and O’Toole at least until October 1.
On Friday night, Quebec Prime Minister Francois Legault said he would be given a COVID-19 test he had met with O’Toole this week.
10 p. m. Friday, September 18: Four black consumers at rebel nightclub at 11 Polson Street tested positive for COVID-19, according to Toronto Public Health.
The 4 instances shown visited the club on September 11 from 22. 30 a. m.
“Anyone who’s been to the nightclub this time would probably have been exposed to COVID-19,” said TPH’s deputy medical fitness director, dr. Vinita Dubey, in an email to The Star.
He asked everyone who visited the club for previous periods to monitor themselves for symptoms until September 25.
Read the full story: Toronto’s waterfront nightclub connected to 4 instances of COVID-19 stays open