Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Monday, March 22
With hospitalizations on the rise, Alberta will not move to Step 3 of its reopening plan, the province's health minister announced on Monday. Based on transmission rates, the province expects to have 300 people in hospital within a week.
Health minister says Alberta won't move to Step 3 of COVID-19 reopening plan
The latest COVID-19 numbers:
- On Monday, Alberta reported 456 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the number of active cases in the province to 6,176.
- Of the new cases, 110 involved the highly infectious variant strains of the virus, which now account for 16 per cent of all active cases of COVID-19 in Alberta.
- The province reported Monday that 280 people are being treated in hospital for COVID-19, 48 in intensive care beds. Five more people have died.
- To date, 1,711 cases involving variants of concern have been identified. Of those, 715 people have recovered while 17 have died.
- Almost all variant cases are the strain first identified in the U.K. (B117), and 18 are the strain first identified in South Africa.
- Last week, Alberta also reported the first two cases of the variant strain first identified in Brazil, known as P.1. There have been no new cases since.
- 7,547 coronavirus tests were completed Sunday with a positivity rate of about 6.1 per cent.
- To date, 134,246 Albertans have recovered from COVID-19.
The latest on reopening and restrictions:
- The Alberta government will not be moving into the next phase of reopening, Step 3. Health Minister Tyler Shandro said on Monday that no restrictions will be eased at this time due to hospitalizations being on the rise.
- According to the provincial plan, to move to Step 3 there must be fewer than 300 people in hospital, and that total must be dropping. On March 3, there were 252 Albertans in hospital with COVID-19 — on Monday that number had grown to 280.
- That number is a "warning sign" the province has to take seriously, Shandro said.
- Outdoor social gatherings can have up to 10 people. The rules are enforceable with $1,000 fines.
- All indoor social gatherings are limited to household members only.
- People who live alone can have up to two close contacts:
- These must be the same two contacts throughout the duration of the restriction.
- If the close contacts do not live alone, visits cannot be held at their home.
- Single parents who only live with their children under 18 are permitted to have up to two close contacts.
- Retail stores and malls were allowed to increase their capacity to 25 per cent of fire code occupancy, and youth sports teams and activities were allowed to resume with up to 10 participants. Masks and physical distancing are still required.
- Restrictions also eased for child, youth and adult performances, including singing, theatre and playing wind instruments, though participants must follow the same restrictions as for youth sports.
- Banquet halls, community hall and hotels can host permitted performance activities, wedding ceremonies with up to 10 people, and funeral services with up to 20.
- Rules for indoor fitness still require that gym visits must be scheduled or by appointment — no drop-ins allowed.
- Low-intensity individual and group exercises are allowed without a trainer. Public health rules must be followed, including wearing masks and physical distancing.
- High-intensity activities — without a mask — are allowed only for one-on-one workouts with a trainer. Trainers must still be masked.
- No sports games, competitions, team practice or league play is allowed.
The latest on the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines:
- The province told CBC News that 94,400 doses of the Moderna vaccine expected to arrive March 24 have been delayed. They now expect to receive only 28,500 doses the week of March 24, and 65,900 doses on or around March 30.
- The delay has impacted shipments to pharmacies and vaccine appointments. The province says any pharmacy which has had to adjust appointments will reach out to patients directly.
- Alberta has opened up appointments for the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines to everyone eligible in Phase 2A on Friday after starting the rollout on March 15. This means the following can book appointments:
- Anyone born in 1956 or earlier.
- First Nations, Métis and Inuit people born in 1971 or earlier. (Those living on-reserve or on-settlement should book through a local clinic.)
- Staff and residents of licensed seniors supportive living facilities not included in Phase 1. (They will receive a direct email from AHS with a unique link to go online and book their immunization appointments.)
- How to book if you're eligible:
- Participating pharmacies: Now booking all eligible ages, no matter the birth year.
- Alberta Health Services (online or 811)
- First Nations, Métis and Inuit people born in 1971 or earlier who are living on reserve or on settlement should book through a local clinic.
- About 487,493 doses of vaccines have been administered and 93,414 Albertans have been fully vaccinated as of March 21.
- The rate of vaccination is 11,024.5 doses per 100,000 population.
- Vaccinations for those 75 and older (born in 1946 or earlier) are still available at those pharmacies as well as at immunization sites operated by AHS across the province.
- The Alberta government laid out its plan on March 15 for Phase 2B of the vaccine rollout, which will be for people born 2005 to 1957 (ages 16 to 64) with certain high-risk underlying health issues like chronic conditions affecting certain organs and those suffering from cancer. For the full list of health conditions see here. It's expected that the timeline will be between April and June, but it will depend on supply.
- The government says Phase 2C of the rollout will include health-care professionals such as physicians, nurses, pharmacists, dentists and support staff. As well, designated support persons for those living in continuing care will also become eligible in the stage.
- AHS announced Monday it would open a large-scale vaccination centre at the Calgary Telus Convention Centre on April 5. The site will have 100 vaccination stations and, at full capacity, it could deliver 5,000 shots per day, officials say. There will be no drop-in appointments. Free parking will be provided.
- If shipments arrive as scheduled, the province says all adults in the province will receive their first dose by the end of June.
- Premier Jason Kenney announced Thursday that 259 pharmacies in 107 communities are now administering COVID-19 vaccine across the province. Participating pharmacies can administer about 66,000 doses per week, he said.
- Kenney said he expects over 500 pharmacies will be participating by next month, reiterating his promise to offer at least one dose to all Albertan adults by June.
The latest on AstraZeneca-Oxford/Covishield vaccine:
- As of March 10, Alberta began offering the AstraZeneca-Oxford/Covishield vaccine as an option for adults who do not have a severe chronic illness in a staggered rollout to Albertans born 1957 to 1971 and First Nations, Métis and Inuit (FNMI) persons born 1972 to 1976.
- However, not everyone in those age ranges was immediately eligible: the province staggered the rollout starting with the oldest and expanding it a birth year or two at a time depending on vaccine supply.
- The province received only 58,500 doses of AstraZeneca-Oxford/Covishield in its first shipment of the vaccine. As of Sunday afternoon, Hinshaw said more than 92 per cent of the province's current supply of AstraZeneca-Oxford and Covishield vaccine doses had been booked.
- Given the dwindling supply, the province shut down online bookings, with limited appointments available only by calling Health Link at 811.
- The government says more appointments and birth years will be added as more AstraZeneca supply becomes available.
- The U.S. has announced plans send 1.5 million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine to Canada, which could arrive by the end of the month. Plans are still being worked out.
- Healthy Albertans in those age ranges can also choose to wait until Phase 2D begins in May to receive the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine if they don't want the AstraZeneca vaccine. However, AHS stressed that AstraZeneca has been proven to be highly effective in preventing serious illness and death in adults 18 to 64.
The latest on COVID-19 rapid testing:
- The Alberta government has announced it would ship nearly one million rapid COVID-19 tests to be used in hospitals, schools, long-term care facilities and private companies including Suncor, Syncrude, CNRL and WestJet.
- A COVID-19 rapid testing pilot project to screen students and staff without symptoms is beginning at two northeast Calgary schools:
- Testing began March 18 at Rundle School for Grades K-6.
- Testing begins March 22 at St. John XXIII School for Grades K-9.
- "By quickly identifying those who may have COVID-19 but do not have symptoms, we are hoping to learn if this type of testing would be an effective tool to manage outbreaks," Education Minister Adriana LaGrange said on March 11.
- Canadian energy giant Suncor will focus its COVID-19 rapid-testing efforts on hundreds of fly-in, fly-out workers that will be conducting planned maintenance in northern Alberta over the coming spring and summer.
- The company, which is getting an additional 100,000 testing kits from the Alberta government, is prioritizing turnaround employees since they present an increased risk for bringing the novel coronavirus into the sites, Sylvie Tran, Suncor's vice-president of environment, health and safety, said on March 16.
See which regions are being hit hardest:
Here is the detailed regional breakdown of active cases as reported Monday by the province:
- Calgary zone: 2,598, up from 2,465 (51,452 recovered).
- Edmonton zone: 1,407, up from 1,374 (53,378 recovered).
- North zone: 789, up from 778 (12,316 recovered).
- South zone: 780, up from 762 (6,659 recovered).
- Central zone: 585, up from 575 (10,329 recovered).
- Unknown: 17, unchanged (112 recovered).
Find out which neighbourhoods or communities have the most cases, how hard people of different ages have been hit, the ages of people in hospital, how Alberta compares to other provinces and more in: Here are the latest COVID-19 statistics for Alberta — and what they mean
You can see active cases by local health area on the following interactive map. Scroll, zoom and click on the map for more information.
Here are the latest Alberta COVID-19 stories:
- For the latest on what's happening in the rest of Canada and around the world, see here.
With files from The Canadian Press