Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hospitals feeling strain of COVID-19 surge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jan, 2022 04:38 PM
  • Hospitals feeling strain of COVID-19 surge

Canadians in some parts of the country saw surgeries postponed, access to COVID-19 testing reduced and a return to class delayed as provinces continued to struggle on Tuesday with a sustained wave of coronavirus cases and hospitalizations.

Ontario health officials said the province would delay all surgeries deemed non-urgent starting Wednesday as the province grapples with the dual pressures of rising admissions and increased staff absences.

Chris Simpson of Ontario Health, the agency overseeing the health system, said staff need to be redeployed to hospital wards dealing with shortages or to help admit people who are sick with COVID-19. More patient transfers are also likely as hospitals reach capacity limits, he said.

"We need to be prepared for a period of time where the care that's being delivered is not the kind of care we would want to deliver," he said, adding that authorities were doing everything possible to mitigate the risk.

While fewer people are experiencing COVID pneumonia during the Omicron wave, many are being hospitalized for short stays or with chronic illnesses worsened by a COVID-19 infection, Simpson said.

COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations have been surging across the country, driven by the highly transmissible Omicron variant.

Quebec on Tuesday announced it was limiting access to COVID-19 PCR tests to "high risk" individuals, and was asking the general public to stay home and isolate if they have symptoms instead of seeking a test.

The decision is intended to ensure there are enough tests for vulnerable people such as hospital patients and care home residents amid unprecedented demand and expected supply shortages, a health official said.

The province also became the latest to reduce the recommended minimum isolation time for vaccinated individuals to five days, down from 10. Health-care workers in direct contact with patients must stay home for seven days before returning to work.

Dr. Marie-France Raynault, a senior strategic medical adviser to Quebec public health, told a technical briefing that, given the high levels of infection, a 10-day isolation period would "paralyze" society.

"If we don't have firefighters to put out fires, if we don't have police officers to ensure security, if we don't have delivery people so there's food, if we don't have bus drivers, that is also a consideration that we take into account in public health," she said.

She said research suggests people are most contagious in the two days before they develop symptoms and in the two to three days after symptoms appear.

Quebec on Tuesday reported a 196-person increase in the overall number of people hospitalized with COVID-19, as well as 21 more deaths linked to the pandemic.

Providing COVID-19 booster shots is seen as key to fighting the pandemic, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday joined the growing ranks of Canadians who are rolling up their sleeves.

Trudeau received his third shot at an Ottawa pharmacy Tuesday morning, where he could be seen chatting with the pharmacist as the shot was prepared. Afterwards, the prime minister flashed a thumbs up and urged Canadians to get vaccinated.

While Ontario opened eligibility for booster shots to all residents 18 and older in mid-December, Quebec has been slower to expand to the general population. Quebecers aged 55 and over became eligible to book appointments on Tuesday, with the age limit set to drop gradually to include all adults by Jan. 21.

Saskatchewan, meanwhile, said it was opening up fourth doses to people who are immunocompromised, provided it has been three months since their third dose.

Many provinces have also chosen to delay the beginning of in-person schooling in the new year in an effort to limit the spread of Omicron.

Manitoba, which had already pushed back the post-holiday return to Jan. 10 from Jan. 6, announced Tuesday that it was delaying the return of in-person learning by another week. Remote classes will begin next week, Premier Heather Stefanson said.

Prince Edward Island also announced that it will extend public health measures, including online learning in schools, until at least Jan. 17.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

VPD investigates city's 15th homicide

VPD investigates city's 15th homicide
Yesterday morning, staff at a social housing complex near Main and East Cordova streets found Joshua Hough, 43, deceased in his suite. One arrest has been made, and the investigation is ongoing.

VPD investigates city's 15th homicide

Woman hurt in Toronto van attack dies of injuries

Woman hurt in Toronto van attack dies of injuries
Toronto police say in a release that Amaresh Tesfamariam, who was 65, died on Oct. 28. She had been in hospital since April 23, 2018, after Alek Minassian drove a rental van down the sidewalk of Yonge Street killing 10 people and injuring another 16.

Woman hurt in Toronto van attack dies of injuries

Heavy rain, snow forecast for parts of B.C.

Heavy rain, snow forecast for parts of B.C.
The statements for Metro Vancouver, Fraser Valley, Howe Sound and the Sunshine Coast say rainfall amounts of 75 to 120 millimetres is on the way Saturday evening and will continue through to Monday.

Heavy rain, snow forecast for parts of B.C.

Canada, U.S. call for end of fossil fuel subsidies

Canada, U.S. call for end of fossil fuel subsidies
Canada's environment minister says he thinks fossil fuel subsidies should be eliminated as United Nations negotiators wrestle over a final text in the closing hours of the Glasgow climate talks. Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says the subsidies should be phased out with a timeline.

Canada, U.S. call for end of fossil fuel subsidies

Robbery suspect in custody after robbing the same bank twice

Robbery suspect in custody after robbing the same bank twice
Surrey RCMP has arrested a 28-year old man, who is alleged to have robbed the same Whalley bank twice, only weeks apart. On October 16, 2021, Surrey RCMP received a report of a bank robbery in 10200-block of King George Boulevard. The suspect fled with cash prior to police arrival.

Robbery suspect in custody after robbing the same bank twice

Remembrance Day poppy box stolen from A&W in New Westminster

Remembrance Day poppy box stolen from A&W in New Westminster
Police believe there may have been other customers in the restaurant who witnessed the theft. Witnesses were unable to get a description of the suspect but believe he was wearing a hooded sweatshirt.

Remembrance Day poppy box stolen from A&W in New Westminster