Vaccine rollout will be different in each region, Ontario government says - Action News
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Toronto

Vaccine rollout will be different in each region, Ontario government says

Ontario reported another 1,058 cases of COVID-19 on Monday, as one long-standing hot spot for the illness moves back into the province's colour-coded system of restrictions.

Stay-at-home order in effect in Toronto, Peel and North Bay-Parry Sound until at least March 8

The York Region and Lambton public health units returned to the province's colour-coded system of COVID-19 restrictions today. Both are now in the red 'control' level. (Lars Hagberg/The Canadian Press)

Ontario's COVID-19 vaccine rollout could look different in each of its 34 public health units as the province receives more doses in the coming weeks, the government said Monday.

Solicitor General Sylvia Jones said Ontariois "empowering" local health units to draw up their own specific plans to distribute the vaccine, and all have been submitted to the government for approval.

Vaccines will be distributed to health units based on population, Jones said, and while they must follow the province's plan to vaccinate priority populations first, they can also determine the best way to serve the needs of their communities.

Ontario reported another 1,058 cases of COVID-19 and 11 more deathson Monday, as one long-standing hot spot for the illness moves back into the province's colour-coded system of restrictions.

The new cases in Monday's update include 325 in Toronto, 215 in Peel Regionand 87 in York Region, where businesses are allowed to reopen and non-essential retailers and restaurants can welcome customers back with capacity limits.York formally moved into the red "control" level of Ontario's reopening framework this morning, meaning its stay-at-home order has been lifted.

Vaccine delivery will be different between communities

Jones said public health units must adhere to the provincial plan for priority populations but they can determine the best way to serve the needs of their communities.

"They are not new organizations," she said. Jonesaddedthat they have historic health data on their communities and have close relationships with the hospitals in each region.

"We are ensuring through our vaccine distribution that the people most close to their communities the public health units are making the decisions on what is the fastest and easiest and most equitable way to ensure that people get the vaccines they need," she said.

Ontario expects to receive a more steady supply of COVID-19 vaccines in the coming weeks as delivery issues that previously slowed the rollout have been resolved.

The province has so far been focused on vaccinating the highest priority groups, which include residents and staff in long-term care homes. Residents aged 80 and older, Indigenous adults, and seniors in congregate care have been identified as the next in line for the shot.

The province is creating an online booking system to help expand its vaccine rollout in the coming weeks. The second phase of its distribution plan, slated for April, is to target the 80 and older group, and then residents aged 65 to 75 through primary care clinics and pharmacies. It also includes mass vaccinations sites, led by local health units, for residents aged 16-60, and mobile sites for high-risk groups.

The rollout is then set to shift into a third phase in August,when all other remaining residents can get the shot. A total of 569,455 vaccine doses have been administered in Ontario so far.

Opposition leader Andrea Horwath said the province needs to take a more active approach to the local rollouts and ensure all health units have the necessary resources required to speed up distribution.

"It's worrisome that the government looks like they're planning to lay any problems at the feet of public health units, which is unfair," she said."The government really needs to have a much stronger and effective control over what's going to happen with the vaccination."

Stay-at-home order lifted in York region

York Region has consistently logged some of Ontario's highest COVID-19 case counts, but the local medical officer of health requested that the province move it back to the tiered framework to bring it in line with most of Ontario's other public health units.

"As of midnight, all but three of our health units have entered the coloured framework. To be clear, that's not an opening up, that's a relaxing of the measures to a lower level," saidDavid Williams, Ontario's chief medical officer of health, at a press conferenceMonday. He said the daily average is hovering around 1,000 cases a day."We will be fairly quick at moving things up if they're going in the wrong direction," he said.

"Those numbers are still staying in the lower end but we have to be very cautious, and we are very concerned about where they might go," Williamssaid.

The province is also monitoring new variants of concern. Testing so far has confirmed 400 variants of concern in Ontario, with 390 cases of the B117 variant first reported in the UK.

A stay-at-home order remains in effect only for Toronto, Peel and North Bay-Parry Sound until at least March 8.

Other public health units that saw double-digit increases in confirmed cases were:

  • Hamilton: 56
  • Ottawa: 51
  • Waterloo Region: 48
  • Simcoe Muskoka: 47
  • Durham Region: 45
  • Thunder Bay: 32
  • Halton Region: 28
  • Northwestern: 26
  • Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph: 18
  • Niagara Region: 14
  • Lambton: 10
  • Windsor-Essex: 10

(Note: All of the figures used in this story are found on the Ministry of Health's COVID-19 dashboard or in itsDaily Epidemiologic Summary. The number of cases for any region may differ from what is reported by the local public health unit, because local units report figures at different times.)

The cases logged today come as Ontario's lab network completed just 31,163 tests for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, and reported a test positivity rate of 3.3 per cent.

The seven-day average of daily cases rose to 1,045. A precipitous fall in the seven-day average that began on Jan. 11 has started to level off.

There are now about 10,335 confirmed, active infections provincewide.

According to the Ministry of Health, there were 646 people with COVID-19 in hospitals. Of those, 280 were being treated in intensive care and 189 needed a ventilator.

Public health units also recorded another 11 deaths of people with the illness, pushing Ontario's official toll to 6,872.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Education reported 55 more school-related cases of the illness, 47 students and eight staff members.

The ministry also released early results from its asymptomatic testing program, which was recently introduced as part of the government's plan to reopen all publicly funded schools.

A total of 3,706 students were tested at 416 schools, broken down by public health unit as:

  • 336 schools in Peel Region
  • 40 schools in Toronto
  • 35 schools in Ottawa
  • Three schools in Sudbury
  • Two schools in Hamilton

The testing confirmed COVID-19 cases in 32 students, or .86 per cent of all those tested. Two additional tests are pending in Peel Region.

The ministry said it plans to offer weekly updates on the results of the program.

Later today, the province's chief public health officer is due to testify before a commission investigating how Ontario's response to COVID-19 affected long-term care homes.

Dr. David Williams' comments will not be live-streamed, but the Long-Term Care COVID-19 Commission is expected to post a transcript at a later date.

Funding for 373 more PSWs

The Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development says it will spend $4.1 million tohelp train hundreds of personal support workers.

In a statement, the ministry said the money will go toward eight projects in regions especially hard-hit by thepandemic, and help train 373 new PSWs.

Severalof the projects are already underway, while others will start in the spring, the release said.

Some of the funding will also be used to develop educational resources meant to reduce PSWsexposure to infections.

With files from The Canadian Press