Ontario sees 1,371 new COVID-19 cases, another record day for vaccinations
43,503 doses of vaccines were administered yesterday, province says
Ontario reported another 1,371 cases of COVID-19 on Friday as a pilot project to offer vaccines at pharmacies expands.
With the exception of March 8, when a data issue caused the case count to be artificially inflated by about 300, this morning's number is the highest on a single day since February 7.
It comes one day after Ontario's COVID-19 science advisory table revealed that virus variants of concern now account for about 42 per cent of all new infections in the province.
The additional cases reported today include 371 in Toronto, 225 in Peel Region, 111 in York Region and 109 in Hamilton, according to Minister of Health Christine Elliott.
These public health units saw double-digit increases:
- Ottawa: 83
- Thunder Bay: 52
- Simcoe Muskoka: 43
- Windsor-Essex: 39
- Sudbury: 37
- Waterloo Region: 36
- Durham Region: 35
- Halton Region: 34
- Middlesex-London: 31
- Lambton: 27
- Niagara Region: 22
- Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph: 19
- Northwestern: 13
- Eastern Ontario: 12
- Brant County: 11
- Chatham-Kent: 10
- Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District: 10
(Note: All of the figures used in this story are found on the Ministry of Health's COVID-19 dashboard or in its Daily Epidemiologic Summary. The number of cases for any region may differ from what is reported by the local public health unit on a given day, because local units report figures at different times.)
They come as labs completed 64,611 tests for SARS-Cov-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, and logged a test positivity rate of 2.4 per cent.
Labs also confirmed 49 more cases of the variant first identified in the United Kingdom, bringing the total to 1,005. A single additional case of the variant found in South Africa was identified, while six more instances of the variant identified in Brazil were confirmed.
Identifying a specific variant of concern requires whole genomic sequencing, an intensive process that leads to significant reporting lags, sometimes up to several weeks.
That means those figures don't represent the actual number of cases linked to variants of concern. A total of 6,859 samples that tested positive for COVID-19 also screened positive for a tell-tale mutation that points to the presence of a variant of concern.
An updated analysis from the science advisory table this morning suggests that the reproduction value — an estimate of how many people each positive case will go on to infect — for variants of concern is about 1.26. Any value above one suggests that the rate of new cases is growing.
The seven-day average of daily total cases, which climbed to 1,269 today, has been trending steadily upward for the last week.
The Ministry of Education reported another 137 school-related infections: 99 students and 38 staff members. There are currently 34 schools due to the illness, or about 0.7 per cent of all publicly-funded schools in Ontario.
Public health units recorded the deaths of 18 more people with the illness, pushing the official toll to 7,127.
Meanwhile, it was a second consecutive day of record-high vaccinations, with 43,503 doses administered yesterday. A total of 282,748 people in Ontario have been given both shots of a vaccine.
Today, more pharmacies were expected to begin offering appointments for a shot of the AstraZeneca vaccine to people aged 60 to 64.
WATCH | Toronto pharmacist Victor Wong discusses Ontario's vaccine rollout:
The pilot project is running in three public health units: Toronto, Windsor-Essex and Kingston, Frontenac and Lennon & Addington (KFLA).
Of the initial shipment of 194,500 doses, pharmacies are set to administer about 165,000, while the remaining 29,500 will go to primary care providers.
Primary care physicians in six public health units are expected to begin offering shots as soon as this weekend.
Furthermore, Toronto announced this morning that residents aged 80 and over will have opportunity to book one of 133,000 spots for an immunization at three mass vaccination clinics opening next week.
4 regions tightening restrictions
On Monday, four public health units will be moving to new colour-coded levels in the provincial COVID-19 framework, tightening restrictions in all four regions.
The following changes take effect Monday, March 15, 2021 at 12:01 a.m.
- Lambton Public Health will move into Grey-Lockdown from Red-Control.
- Northwestern Health Unit will move into Red-Control from Yellow-Protect.
- Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit will move into Yellow-Protect from Green-Prevent.
The province moved Public Health Sudbury and Districts region into the Grey-Lockdown level as of 12:01 a.m. Friday from Red-Control.
Capacity limits increasing for weddings, funerals
The province also announced a change for capacity limits at weddings, funerals and religious ceremonies for regions in the Grey-Lockdown level. Starting Monday, these events will be allowed to have up to 15 per cent capacity indoors and up to 50 people outdoors. That's a change from previous rules, which allowed just 10 people to gather both indoors and outdoors.
Corrections
- A previous version of this story contained a photo caption with an incorrect name and age for the woman in the photo. She is Guerina Morra, 81.Mar 12, 2021 3:51 PM ET