COVID-19 deaths, infections mount in western Quebec

Outaouais outpacing more populous Ottawa in most key areas

Image | Covid Test ottawa national arts centre nac winter drive-thru coronavirus

Caption: A nurse opens a test kit as she prepares for a demonstration of a drive-thru COVID-19 testing centre at the National Arts Centre garage in Ottawa on Nov, 18, 2020. Another testing site is opening Tuesday at the McNabb Recreation Centre. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Five more people have died of COVID-19 in western Quebec as that region's deadliest month of the pandemic continues.
Another 64 Outaouais residents have tested positive for the illness, the province said Tuesday.
Thirty-three western Quebec residents have died from COVID-19 in November alone, nearing Ottawa's 38, despite having about one-third of its population.
Along with new cases, known active cases and hospitalizations in western Quebec are also eclipsing Ottawa's totals.

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Ottawa Public Health (OPH) logged 19 new cases of COVID-19 and one more death on Tuesday, while declaring 42 more cases resolved. The city's newest cases are more or less split between people over and under 40.
A total of 8,231 Ottawa residents have tested positive for COVID-19, the vast majority of those cases — 7,540 — now resolved. The number of known active cases in Ottawa has slipped to 323, and 368 people have died.
OPH said a data error with Ontario's provincewide information this week did not affect its local reports.

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Thirty patients are in Ottawa hospitals receiving treatment for COVID-19, including two in intensive care. Those numbers have been steady for about a week, said OPH.
OPH has declared a new COVID-19 outbreak at the Amica Westboro Park long-term care home, bringing the citywide total to 28 active outbreaks including at nine long-term care homes, four schools and one a hospital.