Canada's COVID case count set to hit 1 million next week as variants spread - Action News
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Canada's COVID case count set to hit 1 million next week as variants spread

After a period of relative quiet, Canada's COVID-19 case countis again on the rise as virus variants take hold. The nation is expected to post a cumulative case count of roughly 1 million next week, according to new data released by the Public Health Agency of Canada.

Daily COVID-19 case counts could hit 12,000 a day if Canadians maintain or increase contacts

Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam says COVID-19 isn't done with us yet, and Canadians need to remain vigilant. The number of cases reported since the pandemic began is expected to jump from 951,000 to between 973,000 and 1,005,000 over the next week. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

After two months of relative stability, Canada's COVID-19 case count is expected to rise rapidly in the coming weeks as virus variantstake hold.

Canada is projected to hit roughly1 million total cases next week, according to data released today by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).

While the vaccination campaign has ramped up after a period of scarcity, the rollout can't keep pace with the spread of the virus, said Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer. Tam today urged Canadians to reduce their contacts in the medium-term while provinces and territories deploy more shots in the monthsto come.

"COVID-19still has a few tricks in store and we need to hold on together a bit stronger and longer until vaccines have us protected," Tam said.

While the setback is "discouraging," she said, better days are ahead. "We are closer now than ever, but it's still too soon to relax measures."

Asked today when things mightreturn to a pre-pandemic"normal," Tam said that day isnot imminent. With the caseload curve trendingup, variants accelerating and vaccine distributionstill quite low, a post-COVID-19 Canada is still months away, she said.

"It's not going to be, 'Here's a date and after that date all is going to be good.' It's data, not dates," she said. "By the fall that's what I think we should be aiming for."

WATCH: Tam is asked when life will return to a pre-pandemic normal

Tam is asked when life will return to a pre-pandemic normal

3 years ago
Duration 3:37
Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada's chief public health officer, responds to a question about the pandemic's likely end date.

COVID-19 variantslike B117, which is thought to have originated in the U.K., now account for a high proportion of new cases and make up half of all new cases in some areas. There are roughly 3,000 new cases being reported each day nationwide, up from about 2,000 a month ago.

Case count could rise to 12,000 a day

With variants now circulating widely, PHAC said the case count could rise to12,000 a day if Canadians maintain or increase the number of people they are in contact with daily. The public health measures in place in most jurisdictions will be "insufficient" to keep cases at bay,the agency said.

Alberta, B.C. and Ontario are projected to see the biggest spike in daily cases early data suggestvariants are particularly widespread in these provinces. PHAC predictsOntario alone could record as many as 10,000 cases a dayif public health measures are relaxed or maintained at their current level.

While an increase in the number of newcases is almost certain over the coming weeks in the six provinces west of Atlantic Canada, PHAC says thatthe country will be able to hold the line at 5,000 cases a dayif Canadians reduce theircontacts.

PHAC is projecting the death rate will be relatively lower than it was with past caseloadspikesbecause some of the most vulnerable people longterm care home residents, seniors, Indigenous adults have been vaccinated.

WATCH: Quebec epidemiologist expects COVID variants to become dominant strains by July 1:

Quebec epidemiologist expects COVID variants to become dominant strains by July 1

3 years ago
Duration 1:41
Quebec Institute of Public Health epidemiologist Dr. Gaston De Serres says that variants are spreading rapidly in the province and could make up all of the province's cases by July 1 unless new pandemic restrictions are enforced.

Tam warned, however, that the B117 variant may lead to more severe cases and could prove to be more deadly.

The public health agency said it expects many of the new cases to come from people aged 20 to 39. While death is less likely in this demographic, younger patientsstill facethe prospectof severe health outcomes.

"The younger people, you're going to get some people who are going to end up in hospital," Tam said.

PHAC is predicting the cumulativecase count the number of cases reported since this pandemic began will jump over the next week from 951,000 to between 973,000 and 1,005,000.

The spread of the variants which are more transmissible than the strain first discovered in Wuhan has also resulted in an increase in hospitalizations. There are now some 2,200 people in hospitals 600 of them in intensive care units.

But the vaccination campaignis starting to bear fruit, with case counts among the 80-plusage cohort declining dramatically.

While there were 35 cases per 100,000 people aged 80 or older in January, the case rate has dropped to less than 5 per 100,000.

Most provinces and territories have been directing the early supply of mRNA vaccines like Pfizer and Moderna to seniors. About 60 per cent of all people over the age of 80 have received at least one shot, PHAC said.

The number of outbreaks in long-term care homes is also much lower than it was just three months ago. There were as many as 500 long-term care home outbreaks at any one time in December, while there have beenfewer than 100 reported throughout March.

While the surge in variants is troubling news a year into this pandemic, PHAC presented data Friday that may offer some hope.

In Israel and the U.K. two countries that were among those hithardestby variants earlier this year caseloads have dropped dramatically because vaccines have been deployed widely.

In three months' time, their case rates have gone from being the highest in the Western worldto among the lowest. In Israel, for example,the daily case rate has gone from 1,000 new cases per onemillion people to less than 100 per one million over the last 12 weeks.

Israel now has enough supply to vaccinate every citizen with a single shot, while 32 million shots have been deployed in the U.K., enough to vaccinate half of all Britons with a single shot.

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