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Cases of COVID-19 among school-aged kids surge to new heights in Alberta even as testing declines

As Alberta sets new records for COVID-19 cases, the number of cases among school-aged children has also surged to unprecedented heights, even as the number of kids and teens being tested has declined.

Active alerts at 9% of schools in the province, with 561 active cases among them

This photo from Sir Winston Churchill High School in Calgary was taken in September by a student who was concerned about a lack of physical distancing. (Name withheld by request.)

As Alberta sets new records for COVID-19 cases, the number of cases among school-aged children has also surged to unprecedented heights, even as the number of kids and teens being tested has declined.

Data from Alberta Health shows the number of new daily cases has continued to rise among five-to nine-year-olds and has shot up, especially, among 10- to 19-year-olds.

In-person classes resumed at many Alberta schools on Sept. 1 and for several weeks the number of new daily cases had been on the decline.

That changedduring the last week in September, when cases start to rise. The trend has continued through October.

Over the past week on record, an average of 62 cases were recorded per dayamong school-aged kids and teens.


Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, has previously noted there was "a massive increase in the number of children who are getting tested" in September compared with the spring and summer.

But testing volumes have been declining, week after week, throughout October.

The proportion of tests coming back positive, meanwhile, has been growing.

In late September, it was below one per cent.

By the third week in October, it was up to 2.7 per cent.


The previous peak in cases among school-aged kids came in April. At that time, Hinshaw said about eight or nine per cent of tests were coming back positive.

As of Thursday, Hinshaw saidthere were active alerts (involving a single case) or outbreaks (two or more cases)at nine per cent of schools in Alberta, with 561 active cases among thosewho attend these schools.

A total of 101 schools were listed as having outbreaks, including 27 on the "watch" list, meaning they have five or more cases:

  • Airdrie Coopers Crossing School.
  • Calgary Lester B. Pearson High School.
  • Calgary Clarence Sansom School.
  • Calgary Nelson Mandela High School.
  • Calgary Canyon Meadows School.
  • Calgary Ecole de la Rose Sauvage.
  • Calgary John G Diefenbaker High School.
  • Cochrane RancheView School.
  • Edmonton Archbishop O'Leary.
  • Edmonton Centre High.
  • Edmonton Ross Sheppard High School.
  • Edmonton St. Oscar Romero Catholic High School.
  • Edmonton Vimy Ridge.
  • Edmonton Highlands School.
  • Edmonton Austin O'Brien.
  • Edmonton Harry Ainlay School.
  • Edmonton Queen Elizabeth School.
  • Edmonton Louis St. Laurent.
  • Edmonton Edmonton Islamic Academy.
  • Edmonton M.E. LaZerte School.
  • Edmonton Headway School Society of Alberta.
  • Edmonton Aurora School.
  • Edmonton Tipaskan School.
  • Red Deer Hunting Hills High School.
  • St. Albert Elmer S. Gish School.
  • Strathcona County Bev Facey Community High School.
  • Strathcona County Lakeland Ridge School.

You can find a full list of school outbreaks on the Alberta Health website.