Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Saturday, April 24 - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 02:30 AM | Calgary | 6.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
CalgaryTHE LATEST

Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Saturday, April 24

Calgary's Telus Convention Centre vaccination site reached capacity shortly after 9 a.m. and is no longer accepting walk-ins, Alberta Health Services tweeted on Friday.

Alberta reported 1,592new cases ofCOVID-19 on Saturday

Randy Schroeder, 56, receives a COVID-19 vaccine from public health nurse Nashrin Valani at the Telus Convention Centre in Calgary on April 19, 2021. (Leah Hennel/AHS)

The latest COVID-19 numbers and restrictions:

  • Alberta reported 1,592new cases ofCOVID-19 on Saturday with a testing positivity rate of 9 per cent as the province continues to record case counts in the range seen last December, during the height of the pandemic's second wave.
  • Alberta's totalactive cases rose to19,700, up from19,446reported Fridayand quickly closing in on the previous high of21,138 hit at the height of the second COVID-19 wave in December.
  • Due to an increase in the number of Albertans in the Calgary zone requesting a COVID-19 test, it may takethree to five days from the time someone makes a request to when testing occurs,AHSsaid Thursday.
  • AHS will operate a COVID-19 testing trailer in Banff on April 24 and 25, in the parking lot beside the town's Community Health Centre at Wolf and Lynx streets, the Town of Banff tweeted Friday. Bookings are requiredfor appointments.
  • 158,603Albertans have recovered from COVID-19.
  • The more dangerous and highly transmissible variant cases continue to surge and are now the dominant strains of the virus in Alberta,accounting for 60.9 per cent of total active cases.
  • There are now 584people in hospital, up from 549. There are 129people with COVID-19in intensive care. Five more people have died, for a total of2,064deaths.
  • The provincial positivity rate is 9per cent, and the R-value is 1.09.
  • There were alerts or outbreaks at 612 schools25per cent of allschools in Alberta with 3,502cases since Jan.11.

(Note the latest daily count of new cases in the above chart will usually vary slightly from the net new cases Alberta Health announces each day. For more on why, click here.)

The latest on vaccines:

  • TheAstraZeneca-Oxford COVID-19vaccination effortsgained enormous traction when eligibility was widened Tuesday to include healthyAlbertansages 40 to 55, as many gen-Xers inundated vaccination sites and celebrated by posting vaccination selfies. Prior to that, when it was only open to eligible Albertans ages 56 to 64, thousands of vaccination appointments went unused amid reports of vaccine hesitancy among the older cohort.
  • Calgary'sAstraZeneca/Covishield mass vaccination site at theTelus Convention Centrereached walk-in capacity shortly after it opened at 9 a.m. Friday and will no longer be accepting walk-ins due to a huge surge in demand in the city,Alberta Health Services tweeted. It remainsopen forAlbertans who have booked appointments.
  • Walk-in AstraZeneca vaccinationsare still available at eight other sites in the province, inBrooks, Camrose, Edmonton, FortMcMurray, Grande Prairie, Lethbridge, Medicine Hat and Red Deer.
  • Eligible Albertans wanting an AstraZeneca shot can bookthrough the AHS online booking tool and through Health Link 811.Many pharmacies are also taking bookings, although some haven't received the vaccine.
  • Meanwhile, Phase 2C of the rollout of the Pfizer-BioNTechandModerna vaccines began on April 12, expanding to include 240,000nurses, doctors, dentists and any health-care workers in patient care facilities or providing direct patient care in the community.Correctional facility staff and inmates are also eligible, as well as staff and residents at shelters.
  • The Alberta governmentannounced Wednesday it plans to change employment standards to allow workers three hours of paid leave to get vaccinated against the illness.
  • Other groups in 2Csuch as support staff at workplaces that are at risk for large outbreaks like meat-packing plants andfront-line policing, as well asresidents at group homesand caregivers of Albertans at risk of severe outcomes are expected to begin in the following weeks.
  • 1,361,365 doses of COVID-19 vaccines (includingPfizer-BioNTech, Modernaand AstraZeneca-Oxford) havebeen administered inAlberta.There are now 267,195 Albertans fully vaccinated with two doses.

The latest on more dangerous variants:

  • Alberta announced itsfirst COVID-19 case linked to the B1617varianton Thursday, the variant fuelling the case surge in India.
  • There were1,132new casesinvolvingvariants of concern reportedon Saturday. Variants now comprise 60.9 per cent of all active cases.
  • There are11,999active variant cases,while11,512people have recovered and 66people had died from variant infections.
  • Alberta had22,816 cases linked to variant B117, first detected in the United Kingdom,67caseslinked to variant B1351, first detected in South Africa, and 693caseslinked to variant P1, now spreading inBrazil.

Alberta identified first case of B1617 variant

3 years ago
Duration 2:00
Alberta has confirmed its first case of COVID-19 linked to the B1617 variant fuelling a surge of cases in India.

The latest on restrictions and reopenings:

  • The Government of B.C. is restricting all non-essential travel into or out of all health authority regions, effective immediately.
  • The legal orders are meant to limitthe spread ofCOVID-19, and will bein effect in B.C. until May 25 the end of the May long weekend.
  • The province is working with police enforcementagencies to introduce additional measures to ensure they have the authority to conduct periodic roadside checks into and out of the defined regions.
  • Those who contravene the legal order in B.C. including Albertans may be subject to a $575 fine, B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said Friday.
  • The federal government said Thursday that it will ban passenger flights from India and Pakistan for 30 days amid rising COVID-19case countsin India and concerns aboutmutations of the coronavirus.
  • On April 6, the Alberta government reimposed Step 1 restrictions, including closing restaurants and bars to in-person dining, lowering retail store capacity to 15 per cent and banning low-intensity group fitness activities.
  • Edmonton will spend $12 million this year onCOVID-19 specific initiatives to help the city cope with and move past the pandemic, city council agreed Wednesday.
  • Edmonton and Fort McMurray public and Catholicschools have shifted all students in grades 7 to 12to online learning for two weeks, following an earlier announcementbyCalgary public and Catholic schools to do the same.

See which regions are being hit hardest:

Alberta provided limited data on Wednesday due to a technical issue. Here is thedetailed regional breakdownof active cases as reported by the province on Saturday:

  • Calgary zone:8,283 active cases, down from 8,397 cases reported on Friday (62,583 recovered).
  • Edmonton zone: 5,536active cases, up from 5,307 (59,045recovered).
  • North zone:2,766 cases, up from2,714 (15,643 recovered).
  • South zone: 954 cases, the same as the previous day (8,767 recovered).
  • Central zone: 2,105cases, up from2,035 (12,548recovered).
  • Unknown: 58 cases, up from39(17 recovered).

You can see active cases by local health area on the following interactive map. Scroll, zoom and click on the map for more information:

Find out which neighbourhoods or communities have the most cases, how hard people of different ages have been hit, the ages of people in hospital, how Alberta compares to other provinces and more in: Here are the latest COVID-19 statistics for Alberta and what they mean.

Here are the latest Alberta COVID-19 stories:

How Alberta compares to other provinces and territories: