What you need to know about COVID-19 in Ottawa for the week of April 11

6th wave causing hospital problems, calls for holidays outside

Image | mask covid coronavirus bus transit ottawa

Caption: People sit and wait in an OC Transpo bus shelter in Ottawa in April 2021. (Andrew Lee/CBC)

Recent developments:
COVID-19 is surging as part of a sixth wave in Ontario and Quebec. Eastern Ontario(external link)'s coronavirus wastewater average leads that province and the situation is worsening in the Outaouais.
This puts vulnerable people, including children, at higher risk of serious health problems and is causing some staff shortages in both schools and local hospitals. Some hospitals such as CHEO(external link) have had to cancel surgeries,
Hospitalizations have generally risen without approaching records — and it's not clear how high they will go with current immunity and treatments.
Ottawa's medical officer of health is recommending that residents take any holiday celebrations outdoors, wear masks and open windows when indoors, and consider keeping gatherings small.
Ontario has expanded both PCR test and antiviral treatment eligibility. Quebec is now giving the Novavax vaccine for first and second doses as an alternative to mRNA shots.

What are the numbers to watch?

Testing strategies have changed under the contagious Omicron variant and many people with COVID-19 aren't reflected in case counts. Hospitalization numbers and the wastewater signal offer additional data that can help fill in the picture.
There's more information in our daily story on key numbers.
Ottawa
The weekly average and daily levels of coronavirus in Ottawa's wastewater(external link) have set records this wave. The average dropped Tuesday for the first time this month.
There were 18 Ottawa residents in local hospitals for treatment of active COVID-19 as of Thursday's OPH report. Two needed intensive care.

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Ottawa has had 68,739 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 767 residents have died from the illness.

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The wider region
Communities outside of Ottawa have about 100 COVID-19 hospitalizations, more than half in western Quebec. About 15 of those patients need intensive care. These numbers don't include Hastings Prince Edward Public Health(external link).
Recent wastewater data from the Kingston area(external link) includes stable, high levels in the city and a record high to its west. The wastewater signal is stable across (external link)Leeds, Grenville and Lanark counties.(external link)
In the rest of eastern Ontario, 447 people with COVID-19 have died. The death toll is 298 in western Quebec.

Embed | Ottawa-Gatineau area confirmed COVID-19 cases

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About 5.2 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered to people in the Ottawa-Gatineau region.
Rates of eligible eastern Ontarians with at least two vaccine doses range from 80 to 92 per cent; adults with a third dose range from 58 to 71 per cent. These numbers aren't regularly available for western Quebec.

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How can I manage risk?

COVID-19 spreads through droplets that can hang in the air. People can be contagious without symptoms, including after getting a vaccine.
The dominant Omicron BA.2 subvariant is more contagious, but generally less deadly for vaccinated people without underlying conditions.
This level of spread puts vulnerable people at risk and can make covering for isolating staff a challenge.

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Officials say people need to take personal responsibility(external link) as government rules transition to recommendations.
They're urging people to get all vaccine doses they're eligible for — especially if they're over 50 — stay home when sick, wear medical masks in crowded and indoor spaces, keep their hands clean, distance, see others outdoors(external link) and limit close contacts, while also taking community spread and vaccine rates in the area into account.
WATCH | Holiday advice from Ottawa Public Health:

Media Video | (not specified) : Vera Etches encourages smaller Easter gatherings, maybe even outside

Caption: With the record-high amount of COVID in Ottawa's wastewater, Dr. Vera Etches urges residents to limit gatherings for a third straight Easter.

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What are the rules?

There are no provincial vaccination requirements or capacity limits in Ontario and Quebec. Ontario and Quebec isolation rules have loosened for some close contacts.
Masks are only mandatory in certain indoor settings in Ontario. All of Ontario's COVID-19 rules are expected to end April 27.
Some places may choose to continue requiring people wear masks, be vaccinated or both. Mask rules may be different in places that fall under federal jurisdiction, like the Ottawa airport.
Quebec has pushed back plans to lift most mask mandates until April 30 at the earliest.
Travel
Travellers older than 12 years and four months must be fully vaccinated to board a plane or train in Canada.
People have to be fully vaccinated, pre-approved and asymptomatic to enter Canada without quarantining.
The U.S. requires all adults crossing a border to be fully vaccinated. People flying there will need proof of a recent negative COVID-19 test or recent COVID recovery.
Travellers who need a test(external link) have local options to pay for one.

Vaccines

Vaccines curb the spread of all variants of COVID-19 and go a long way toward avoiding deaths and hospitalizations without offering total protection.
Six COVID-19 vaccines are safe and approved in Canada, with some age restrictions.
Eastern Ontario
Eligible people can look for provincial appointments online(external link) or by phone at 1-833-943-3900.
Adults can book third shots once 84 days have passed since their second. Third doses are available for ages 12 to 17 after 168 days.
Fourth doses are being offered to everyone age 60 and above and select groups. The recommended time after a third dose varies.
Check local health unit websites(external link) for clinics and any locally specific rules. Some pharmacies and family doctors offer vaccines through their own booking systems(external link).
Western Quebec
Eligible residents can get an appointment online(external link) by calling 1-877-644-4545. There are also walk-in clinics(external link).
Everyone age 12 and up is eligible for a third dose; the general recommended wait time after a second is three months.
Fourth doses are available for people age 60 and above and some higher-risk groups.

Symptoms, treatment and testing

COVID-19 can range from a cold-like illness(external link) to a severe lung infection, with common symptoms including fever, a cough, headache, fatigue and vomiting. If you have severe symptoms, call 911.
"Long-haul" symptoms can last for months.
Mental health can also be affected by the pandemic and resources are available to help(external link).
Ontario(external link) and Quebec(external link) are using antiviral treatments on people with a higher risk risk of severe COVID-19 problems who have tested positive. They have to start within a certain period of developing symptoms.
Quebec is giving the Paxlovid pill for free at pharmacies with a medical professional's referral.
Ontario expanded eligibility in mid-April(external link) to groups including everyone age 70 and over. Health-care providers are empowered to prescribe them to other people if they deem it necessary and Ontario pharmacies are now able to give Paxlovid alongside clinical assessment centres(external link), where people can get a test and treatment.

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Tests
Ontario(external link) and Quebec have limited laboratory-checked PCR tests to people at higher risk due to the demand generated by Omicron.
Ontario also expanded this eligibility in mid-April(external link) to match that antiviral expansion; everyone age 70 and over and immunocompromised adults can now get them, for example.
Qualified people can check with their health authority(external link) for locations and hours. Other people with symptoms should assume they have COVID-19 and isolate.
Both provinces are giving rapid tests away at participating stores and child-care settings. People can also buy them. People in Quebec can report rapid test results online(external link).
First Nations, Inuit and Métis
Indigenous people, or someone travelling to work in a remote Indigenous community, are eligible for a PCR test in both Ontario and Quebec.
Inuit in Ottawa can call the Akausivik Inuit Family Health Team(external link) at 613-740-0999 on weekdays for testing and vaccines in Inuktitut or English.
Akwesasne(external link) has COVID-19, test and vaccine information online or at 613-575-2341. Masks remain(external link) mandatory indoors this month(external link) in some settings. About 2,000 residents have tested positive and 19 have died between its north and south sections.

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People in Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg can call 819-449-8085 for a test on Wednesdays, if they qualify. Rapid tests are available at the health centre. It had more than 175 confirmed cases and one death as of mid-January; more than 150 since Dec. 3, 2021.
Pikwàkanagàn(external link) has ended its COVID hotline, referring people to its health-care services instead. The community didn't have any confirmed COVID-19 cases until December 2021; it had 114 confirmed cases as of March 11.
The Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte(external link) are keeping mask mandates for government buildings(external link) until April 19. Anyone who's interested in a PCR test or vaccine can call 613-967-3603, rapid tests are available at the wellbeing centre on weekdays. It had 91 confirmed cases until it stopped sharing its count in January, with two deaths.