Nova Scotia reports record 148 new cases of COVID-19 Saturday - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 11:41 PM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia reports record 148 new cases of COVID-19 Saturday

Nova Scotia reported 148 new cases of COVID-19 Saturday to bring the total number of active cases in the province to 713.

Province warned that test backlog could mean higher numbers

Cathy Faulkner, left, receives the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine from Dr. Linda Ferguson in Truro in March. Nova Scotia reported 148 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Nova Scotia reported 148new active cases of COVID-19 on Saturday the highest number of new daily cases since the start of the pandemic.

Nova Scotia Health labs conducted 16,578 tests on Friday, by far the highest number of tests conducted in a single day.

There were 129 cases in the central health zone, 17 in the eastern zone and two in the western zone.

Two of the cases in the central zone are residents of theClarmar Residential Care Facility in Dartmouth and are related to a previous case at the facility. The province said Thursday that all residents have been fully vaccinated with two doses of vaccine.

Another case in the central zone is a staff member at Shoreham Village care facility in Chester.

Residents of that facility have been isolated as a precaution and all staff and residents are being tested. According to a news release, all residents had received both doses of COVID-19 vaccine.

Thirty people are in hospital with the virus, including five in intensive care.

Situation more serious than ever before

On Friday, Dr. Robert Strang, the province's chief medical officer of health,stressed the gravity of Nova Scotia's current outbreak. He said the situation is now more serious that at any other point during the pandemic.

Now is a critical time for people to stay home and follow all other public health restrictions, he said.

Strang also said Fridaythat the province had a backlog of 45,000 tests because of increased testing. They wereawaiting processing and data entry.

He warned that some of those would be positive, leading to higher new case counts in the coming days.

"We need to be prepared for substantially higher case numbers over the next few days," he said.

Strang said he hoped the backlog would be cleared over the weekend.

According to posted provincial figures, one per cent of tests conducted Friday came back positive, the highest positivity rate since the last outbreak in November.

During the first wave of the pandemic last spring, when the province was doingfewer than1,000 tests per day mostly on symptomatic people, the daily positivity rate hit a high ofsix per cent.

Change in testing eligibility

Theprovince's testing strategy is temporarily changing so that primary assessment centres are open only to:

  • Anyone with symptoms.
  • Anyone who has been notified that they are a contact of a known case, even if they are asymptomatic.
  • Anyonewho has been at a publicly listedexposure location, or has been directly notified by Public Health they have been to an exposure site. This includes anyone who is asymptomatic, and thoseclassified as a low-risk exposure.
  • Anyone who has travelled outside Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador, even if they are asymptomatic.
  • Anyone who has been scheduled to undergo testing before surgery.

Asymptomatic testing for everyone else is still available atpop-uprapid testing sites.

Vaccines

As of this week, more than 30 per cent of eligible Nova Scotians have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

As of Friday, Nova Scotians aged 40 to 54were able to start bookingthe AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, as the province previously reporteda surplus of about 10,000 doses.

There are nearly 200,000 Nova Scotiansbetween 40 and 54, and all of those new appointments were booked within hours on Friday.

New case in school

A case of COVID-19 case connected to Hants East Rural High School was identified on Saturday.

In a letter sent to families and guardians, principal Leanne Searle said Public Health is working to identify students and staff who mayhave been close contacts.

Searle said close contacts will be contacted and that Public Health is recommending that all students at the school be tested even if they are asymptomatic.

A notice sent later Saturday changed that position, saying all students and staff do not need to be tested, just those identified by Public Health.

The school will be cleaned this weekend. At-home learning will continue as scheduled next week.

Potential exposure sites

Nova Scotia Health issued a list of new potential exposure sites and flights Friday night.

Atlantic Canada case numbers

  • Newfoundland and Labradorreported five new cases Saturday.There are 33active cases and three people in hospital related to the virus.
  • New Brunswickreported 18 new cases Saturday for a total of 141 active cases. The province reports five people in hospital with the virus, two in intensive care.
  • P.E.I.announced two new cases Friday for a total of 12active cases, none in hospital.