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Expect more COVID-19 hospitalizations, Health P.E.I. CEO says

The headof Prince Edward Island's health authority expects to see more COVID-19 hospitalizations in the coming weeks, as a spike in Omicroninfections hits hundreds of households acrossthe province.

Gardam says high vaccination rates seem to be holding against Omicron

Dr. Michael Gardam told CBC News: Compass host Louise Martin Queen Elizabeth Hospital will see more COVID-19 hospitalizations in the coming days. (CBC)

The headof Prince Edward Island's health authority expects to see more COVID-19 hospitalizations in the coming weeks, as a spike in Omicroninfections hits hundreds of households acrossthe province.

"I think that for now we are doing just fine, but I also know and fully expect that we'll see more cases in hospitals by the end of this week, next week," said Dr. Michael Gardam, the chief executive officer of Health P.E.I.

"We still have a few more weeks to go before we reach our hospitalization peak."

In an interview withCBC News: Compass, Gardamtold host Louise Martinhe is "moderately confident" about the province's capability to handle increasing case counts.

"I do think we have all the plans in place to manage that OK."

Gardam's comments come as P.E.I. deals with rising COVID-19 infections. The province has averaged 150 official daily cases for the past seven days.

A record new casecount of 222was announced Wednesday, with the active case count in the province at1,378.

Three people are currently in hospital because of COVID-19, one of whom isin intensive care.

A photo of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, taken on Dec. 22, 2021. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Gardam said if it were a new wave of the Delta virus variant sweeping through P.E.I., rather than theOmicron variant, "we would be in trouble now."

While it is difficult to predict when the province will reach a peak number of Omicron cases, Gardam said he expects it to happen soon.

"I suspect that parts of Canada will start peaking in their cases by the end of this week. So our hospitalizations are going to go (up) for a couple weeks."

Stopping other services creates other problems

Gardam said he is expecting tens of cases to be admitted to Charlottetown'sQueen Elizabeth Hospital.

Hospitals will provide the necessary amount of capacity for COVID-19 hospitalizations, he said, adding the issue is figuring out other hospital services that need to be scaled down.Shutting down some non-COVID-19 services can be harmful, he said.

"One of the things we learned throughout the first wave when I was still in Toronto was that you can shut all sorts of stuff down very quickly and you can create lots of capacity, but then you create enormous harm because now people can't get care for other things besides COVID," he said.

"Sowhat we're doing is we're looking out sort of 48 hours in advance and making our best educated guess on how many cases we might have presently and what we have to scale back."

At the moment, the QEH has not needed to reduce other hospital services to accommodate COVID-19 patients, Gardam said.

Absenteeism affecting capacity

Another issue facing P.E.I.'s ability to handle more hospitalizations is a temporarily diminishednumber of hospital staff, Gardam said.

"Roughly 50 or 60 staffat least are either in what we call work quarantine or their home because they actually have COVID."

'Our job's to worry about that and frankly, we're doing very well right now.' (CBC)

As of Jan. 1, 92.3 per cent of Islanders aged 12 and above are fully vaccinated, and 95.5 per cent received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Gardam said P.E.I's high vaccination rate is a factor for low hospitalizations so far.

"That's not preventing a lot of infections these days, but the literature clearly shows that it is able to largely prevent people from getting really sick and ending up in hospital," he said.

Gardam said he's a bit surprised with the low number of hospitalizations in the province, due to most Islanders not having pre-existing immunity from previous variants, such as Delta.

"I'm just going to keep hoping that's that's the case, aswell, you know, planning for something worse."

WATCH | See Gardam's interview with Louise Martin in Wednesday's CBC News: Compass:

with files from CBC News: Compass

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