COVID-19 in Sask.: Record 410 patients in hospital as of Wednesday - Action News
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Saskatchewan

COVID-19 in Sask.: Record 410 patients in hospital as of Wednesday

Saskatchewans second weekly report of COVID-19 data shows a record 410 patients in hospital with the virus.

42 deaths related to COVID-19 during the week of Feb. 6 to Feb. 12

Saskatchewan's weekly COVID-19 report from Feb. 6 to Feb. 12 shows 42 people died due to the illness during that period. The number of deaths for the past five days has not yet been released. (Georges Gobet/AFP via Getty Images)

Saskatchewan's second weekly report of COVID-19 data shows a record 410 patients in hospital with the illness.

Earlier this month, the Saskatchewan government stopped providing daily updates publicly and now releases weekly reports on Thursdays.

The first reportshowed 384 people in hospital with COVID-19 as of Feb. 9 matching a previous record from Feb. 3.

Most of the data the government provided in the latest summary covers the period from Feb. 6-12.

The exception is the number of hospitalizations, which was current as ofWednesday at noon.

At that point, there were 410 people in hospital with COVID-19. Of those:

  • 181 were admitted for COVID-19.
  • 221 have been determined "incidental" cases,meaning they were not admitted for COVID-19but then tested positive for the illness.
  • Eight are undetermined.

There were 33 people in intensive care with COVID-19 asof Wednesday, up seven from the last report.

The province reported 42 deaths during the week of Feb. 6 to Feb. 12. The number of deaths related to COVID-19 in the past five days has not yet been reported.

There were 2,522 new COVID-19 cases reported in the week from Feb. 6 to Feb. 12, based on the results of 12,079 PCR tests. That number is likely a significant undercount of the actual number of new cases in the province, due to limited PCR testing and the fact results from rapid antigen tests are not included.

During the week of Feb. 6-12, 18,563 doses of COVID-19 vaccine were administered, including2,852pediatric doses and 11,051 booster doses.

The latest report says 55.3 per cent ofchildren age five to 11have received at least one vaccine dose, while 34.7 per cent have received two doses.

New type of risk communication

The Saskatchewan Health Authority's interim senior medical health officersays he thinks the switch to weekly reporting is "a bit premature," but that it eventually had to happen especially given the prevalence of thehighly contagious Omicron variant of the virus that causes COVID-19.

"The reality is the changes in the way that both this particular variant transmits and the testing that we've been able to do means that daily reporting of confirmed cases really doesn't give the same meaning anymore," saidDr. Cory Neudorf, who is alsoa professor of community health and epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan.

"So it's almost more damaging to give daily reports of cases now," he told CBC News on Thursday.

Daily review of hospitalizations, ICU admissions and deaths is needed, he said.

But that should happen within the health-care system to assess how stressed itis, and to informdecisions on what services health-care workerscan or can't deliver.

That kind of information is available internally, Neudorf said.

Local medical health officers are currently looking at how to better communicate the risk of COVID-19 to the public, he said.

"We've trained everybody in a way to be looking daily at these case numbers and all these other metrics. And we need to switch now,"said Neudorf.

"This wave will pass and we'll undoubtedly get future waves of COVID as well, but there will be other things, other respiratory pathogens as well. And we should be taking a consistent approach going forward to how we communicate to the public."

Neudorf says medical health officers have to rely on other indicators such as absenteeism in schools and workplaces, wastewater surveillance and sentinel surveillance.

The latter involves public health workingwith individual physician practices or emergency departments to screen people that have respiratory illnesses and do testing in a subset of people.

Public health will share "risk thresholds" to inform people about the level of circulation in the community and how much precaution people should be taking, Neudorf said.

He says this new type of risk communication will be available in the coming days and weeks.

With a file from Jessie Anton