Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world on Friday - Action News
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Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world on Friday

Procurement Minister Anita Anandsaid Canada is seeing an influx of COVID-19 vaccine supply, and she expects that to continue despite recent export restrictions from the European Union.

Procurement minister says Canada seeing influx of COVID-19 vaccine supply

A person is tested for COVID-19 in Burnaby, B.C., on Friday. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The latest:

Procurement Minister Anita Anandsaid Canada is seeing a surge in COVID-19 vaccine supply, and she expects that to continue despite recent export restrictions from the European Union.

Anand says six million more doses of approved vaccines are expected to flow into Canada over the next three weeks. That would match the six million doses Canada has received since the approval of the first COVID-19 vaccine in December.

"We are closely monitoring the global environment, including export restrictions in a number of jurisdictions," Anand said. "Our officials across numerous departments as well as our suppliers are working ahead of time to ensure that Canada's vaccines continue to arrive in our country."

The influx in vaccines comes as variants continue to spread across the country.

Dr. Sajhad Chaudry of Humber River Hospital administers a Moderna COVID-19 vaccine to Efrain Ricardo Anchante at a community housing complex in Toronto on Friday. (Cole Burston/AFP via Getty Images)

Chief Public Health OfficerDr. Theresa Tam said updated forecasting anddata showthat COVID-19 "still has a few tricks in store." She urged people to hold onand follow public health guidelines as vaccination efforts ramp up.

"While the news of increasing disease activity and shifting trends in severe outcomes is discouraging after so many months of sacrifice, we've made significant progressand as the warmer days approachwe'll have more options to get outside as we work through this critical leg of the COVID-19 marathon," Tam said.

"We are closer now than ever, but it is still toosoon to relax measures and too soon to gather in areas where COVID-19 is still circulating in Canada."


What's happening across Canada

As of 6:45p.m. ET on Friday, Canada had reported956,660 cases of COVID-19, with 40,360 cases considered active. A CBC News tally of deaths stood at22,826.

British Columbia confirmed908 new COVID-19 cases and three additional deaths on Friday.

Alberta identified325 variant caseson Friday,setting a new daily high for the province. Albertareported 717 new cases in total the second straight day that new infections exceeded700 and three more deaths.

Manitobareported 116 newCOVID-19 cases and three related deaths. Public health officials in the province also reported that46 cases of the more contagious B117 coronavirus variant have been identified in Manitoba.

Saskatchewanannounced213 new cases and eight related deaths.

In Ontario,hair salons and outdoor fitness classescan reopen with restrictions in regions that are under lockdown, the province announced.

The announcement comes asOntarioreported 2,169 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday and 12 additional deaths. Hospitalizations increased to 913, according to provincial data, with 359 in intensive care units.

WATCH |Is Ontario ending its COVID-19 lockdowns too early?:

Is Ontario ending its COVID-19 lockdowns too early?

4 years ago
Duration 3:09
Some doctors say lockdown measures should be in place for another few weeks in Ontario, until daily cases drop below 150. They say such a move would have prevented the current surge and perhaps future lockdowns.

InQuebec, health officials reported 950 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday and seven additional deaths. According to provincial data, hospitalizations stood at 481, with 115 people in intensive care units.

Meanwhile,Premier Franois Legault received his first vaccine dose in Montreal.

The updated figures came a day after the province's health department saidthat Quebecers who have had a confirmed COVID-19 infection will only need a single dose of vaccine, which will act as an immunity booster.

WATCH | Coronavirus variants will soon dominate Quebec:

COVID-19 variants will soon dominate Quebec

4 years ago
Duration 3:20
Coronavirus variants are on the verge of becoming dominant in Quebec and the provinces current measures to control spread are not enough, say experts.

New Brunswick reported 13 newcases on all of them in the Edmundston region, located in the northwest of the province.This comes one day after the province stepped up restrictions in the regionin the face of rising variantcases.

Newfoundland and Labrador sawno newcases. The announcement comes oneday before public health officials relax widespread public health restrictions;all health regions in the province will drop to Alert Level 2 as of 12:01 a.m. NT Saturdaydue to the sustained low caseload.

Nova Scotiaconfirmed five new casesas the province moved to further expand vaccine eligibility.

Prince Edward Islandreported three new travel-related cases.

WATCH |Atlantic bubble set for April reopening:

Atlantic bubble set for April reopening

4 years ago
Duration 1:56
Four premiers have planned to reopen the Atlantic bubble in mid-April, allowing people to travel between Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, P.E.I. and New Brunswick without isolating.

Nunavut surpassed the 50 per cent mark of adults in the territory who have received the first dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, according to Nunavut's chief public health officer.

In the Northwest Territories, an outbreak at Gahcho Ku diamond mine has been declared over.The outbreak saw a total of 20 confirmed cases. Of those, eight were N.W.T. residents and 12 were workers from outside the territory, Dr. Andy Delli Pizzi, N.W.T.'s deputy chief public health officer, saidin arelease.

What's happening around the world

As of early Friday, more than 125.6 million cases of COVID-19 had been reported worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University, which runs a coronavirus case-tracking tool. The global death toll stood at more than 2.7 million.

The World Health Organization appealed on Friday for countries to donate doses of approved COVID-19 vaccines to help meet vaccination targets for the most vulnerable in poorer countries.

WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the COVAX vaccine facility, run with the GAVI vaccine alliance, needed 10 million doses immediately as a stop-gap measure.

"COVAX is ready to deliver but we can't deliver vaccines we don't have. Bilateral deals, export bansand vaccine nationalism have caused distortions in the market with gross inequities in supply and demand," Tedros told a news conference. "Ten million doses is not much and it's not nearly enough."

InAfrica,Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta on Friday announced a halt to all movement in the capital, Nairobi, and four other countrieson Friday as the COVID-19 outbreak reached its worst-ever stage in East Africa's richest economy.

In theAsia,South Korea said it will extend its coronavirus distancing rules, which include an outside dining curfew and ban on gatherings of five or more people, for two weeks.

InEurope,asenior European Union official says 55 million doses of Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine will be delivered to EU member states in the second quarter of this year, starting next month.

In theAmericas,Brazil saw a record 3,650 new COVID-19 deaths, with 84,245 new cases of the coronavirus, the Health Ministry said on Friday.It is the second record for daily deaths set this week as the virus continues to devastate Latin America's largest country.

With files from CBC News, The Associated Press and Reuters

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