COVID-19 case counts rising in most Ontario public health units, science table reports

Ontario logged 598 new COVID-19 cases, 4 more deaths on Friday

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Caption: Officials in Ontario announced this week that the province would delay lifting capacity limits in more high-risk indoor settings. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Cases of COVID-19 are on the rise in most Ontario public health units and could begin to place an increased burden on hospitals in the coming weeks and months, infectious disease experts warned Friday.
The latest briefing from Ontario's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table shows that transmission of the virus is growing in 26 of the province's 34 public health units. It comes as the Ministry of Health reported 598 new cases and four more deaths linked to the illness this morning.
You can read the science table's full report at the bottom of this story.
Test positivity rates are also rising in a number of public health units, particularly those in southwestern Ontario, the science table said.
The main elements driving increased transmission are colder weather keeping people indoors, the lifting of capacity limits in many settings such stadiums, restaurants and gyms — which are all accepting proof of vaccination — and more indoor gatherings in general.
While public health experts have called the recent rise in cases concerning(external link), it has not yet been accompanied by an increase in the number of patients being treated for COVID-related illnesses in the province's intensive care units. As of Thursday evening, there were 130 people with COVID in ICUs, two fewer than the day before.
WATCH | Caution urged as Ontario's COVID-19 cases increase:

Media Video | The National : Caution urged as Ontario’s COVID-19 cases increase

Caption: Experts are urging caution in Ontario after daily cases of COVID-19 have nearly doubled in the past week, which could be linked to increased capacity limits and gatherings at Thanksgiving and Halloween.

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Vaccines continue to provide significant protection against COVID-19, the science table said. Unvaccinated Ontarians have a six-fold higher risk of developing a symptomatic case, an 11-fold higher risk of ending up in hospital due to those symptoms and a 26-fold higher chance of being admitted to intensive care, the table added.
As cases continue to rise in much of the province, so too will the burden on hospitals, the science table cautioned. The most likely scenario presented in the updated modelling is that ICU occupancy could reach roughly 200 by the end of the December.
In a statement, the Ministry of Health said that the projections vindicate the government's "cautious and gradual plan for reopening," which includes its recent decision to pause further lifting of capacity limits for remaining high-risk settings. Night clubs, strip clubs, sex clubs and bathhouses were due to lose capacity limits next week but those limits will now be in place for at least another month.
"While certain public health trends have increased slightly, an increase in cases was always expected as more people move indoors and as the province safely and gradually lifted certain measures," said ministry spokesperson Alexandra Hilkene in an email.
"Ontario's hospital and intensive care capacity remains stable and the province continues to report one of the lowest rates of active cases in the country."
Hilkene went on to say that the winter months ahead will require "continued vigilance" and that's why the province continues to maintain "strong public health measures such as indoor masking and proof of vaccination requirements to access higher-risk settings."
The government announced in October that it plans, at least for now, to eliminate vaccination requirements as early as Jan. 17, 2022 and all masking requirements by March, moves that widely criticized by many public health experts and physicians.

7-day average of new cases up to 537

Meanwhile, today's case count is about a 6 per cent increase from the same time last week, when the province logged 563 additional infections.
The seven-day average of daily cases rose to 537, a 12th straight day of increases. Last Friday it stood at 404.

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Here are some other key pandemic indicators and figures from the Ministry of Health's daily provincial update(external link):
Tests in the previous 24 hours: 30,230.
Active cases: 4,269, the most since Oct. 12.
Death toll: 9,921.
Vaccinations: 13,468 doses were administered by public health units on Thursday. Nearly 85.3 per cent of eligible Ontarians have had two shots.
Here's the updated modelling from Ontario's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table:

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