A look at the latest COVID-19 developments in Canada
A look at the latest COVID-19 news in Canada:
— Calls are growing for the Ontario government to make COVID-19 tests available to children attending the daycares, with parents saying the lack of access is stoking anxiety. Last week, the province said PCR testing for COVID-19 would be limited to high-risk groups amid soaring infections, and memos from Education Ministry officials outlined a decision to stop reporting cases in schools and childcare settings due to “changes to case and contact management.” Schools across the province are moving classes online this week in response to the rapidly spreading Omicron variant, but daycares – which care for many children too young to be vaccinated – are still open.
— Ontario’s health system is preparing for widespread measures including patient and staff transfers to deal with a growing wave of COVID-19 that’s infecting people at an unprecedented rate. There were 1,290 people in hospital with COVID-19 as of Tuesday, and 266 patients in intensive care. The government announced a series of measures Monday including business and school closures to beat back the Omicron variant spread that’s expected to infect more people. Hospitals across the province were preparing to pause all surgeries deemed non-urgent on Wednesday to free up bed space and hospital workers, and some had already declared themselves strapped for resources, requiring patient transfers and an early ramp-down of surgeries.
— The Quebec Health Department says members of the general public with COVID-19 symptoms will not be eligible for PCR testing and should consider themselves positive if they do not have access to self-tests. The province will reserve PCR tests for those considered “high risk,” such as symptomatic hospital patients, people who live in congregate care and people being transferred between medical facilities, Dr. Marie-France Raynault, a senior strategic medical adviser to Quebec public health, told a technical briefing. Raynault said testing centres are overwhelmed and supply shortages are expected as demand for tests continues to rise elsewhere.