Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Sunday, Jan. 16 - Action News
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Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Sunday, Jan. 16

Alberta is now close to 63,000 active cases of COVID-19 the highest total yet since the pandemic began. And Dr. Deena Hinshaw, the chief medical officer of health, says that the actual number is likely 10 times higher.

A total of3,380people havedied of the virus in Alberta since the pandemic began

Staff on the ICU Unit at the Peter Lougheed Centre in Calgary on April 17, 2020. (Leah Hennel/AHS)

EDITOR'S NOTE:Daily case counts have never been perfect, but at this point in the Omicron-driven wave, they're a deeply flawed metric.Throughout the pandemic, the case counts have been based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing done by provincialbodies like Alberta Health Services, but those testing protocols have shifted to prioritize high-priority groups and people in higher risk settings, like health-care workers. So there are likely to be thousands of cases goinguntested, or tested but not reported, since there is no system for cataloguing at-home rapid antigen tests.

As a result, CBC News willde-emphasize case counts in our coverage, in favour of data and metrics that experts now say are more illuminating such as COVID-19 hospitalizations and intensive care unit (ICU) admissions, which help us understand Omicron's impact on the health-care system andseverity of illness it causes, as well as thetesting positivity rate, which if it starts to level out and come down could indicate the wave has peaked.


The latest COVID-19 numbers:

  • Alberta COVID-19 infections are at record highs as the highly infectious Omicron variant spreads through the province.The following numbers were releasedJan. 14:
  • Hospitalizations:
    • There were822people with COVID in Alberta hospitalson Jan. 14. A week previous, on Jan. 5,there were 553infectedpatients in hospital.
    • There were 81people with COVIDin intensive care on Jan. 14, compared with54 on Jan. 5.
    • ProvincialICU capacity (including additional surge beds) is now at 80per cent. Without the additional surge spaces, provincial ICU capacity would be at 112per cent.
    • Alberta could see record COVID-19 hospitalizations withinweeks, according to projections from Alberta Health Services' COVID-19 early warning system.
    • Emerging data from other jurisdictions indicates Omicron may not hit intensive care units as the Delta variant did but will likely impact other areas of the health-care system in emergency wards and ambulatory care.
    • Dr. Eddy Lang, department head of emergency medicine in the Calgary zone, estimates about 10per cent of all hospitalized patients in Calgary zone are positive for Omicron.Roughly half of themare there to be treated for other conditions and happen to test positive. But those patients need to be isolated from others within the hospital which takes additional resources, time and space.
  • Positivity rates:
    • Alberta'spositivity rate on Jan. 13was 37.2 per cent, much higher than seen in earlier waves.
    • The province reported five more COVID deaths on Jan. 14. A total of3,380people havedied of the virus in Alberta.
  • Case counts:
    • There were6,163new cases reported Jan. 14.
    • Alberta announced 64,129active cases of COVID-19, the highest at any point in the near two-year stretch of the pandemic.
    • Hinshaw said the true figure is likely 10 times that numbergiven that high caseloads have overwhelmed the ability of the system to test outside high-priority groups.

Acute care outbreaks:

  • As of Jan. 14,there are outbreaks at 22 AHSand Covenant Health acute care facilities across the province.
  • There are four hospitals in the north zone, seven hospitals in the Edmonton zone, four hospitals in the central zone, five in the Calgary zoneand two in the south zone affected.
  • Drumheller Health Centre, one of the hospitals affected, hastemporarily postponed inpatient surgical procedures due to the outbreak at the centre, AHSsaid Jan. 11. Day surgeries will continue as scheduled.

School reopenings:

  • The University of Calgary announced on Jan. 14 that it isextending online classes until Feb. 19, with a return to in-person classes after Reading Week, beginning on Feb. 28.
  • The University of Alberta is also delaying itsreturn to in-person activities until Feb.28.
  • Students in Albertaheaded back to class on Jan. 10. Education Minister Adriana LaGrange has promised thousands of test kits and medical-grade maskswill be delivered to students and parents over the next few days.
  • The winter break for K-Grade 12 students wasextendedto Jan. 10 as COVID-19 case numbers surged.
  • Because of the disruption to learning, January diploma exams havebeen cancelled.
  • Students in grades 4 to 9 will be able to access free, prerecorded, online tutoring resources starting this week to help them catch up on skills and learning they may have missed.
  • Later this year, that tutoring will be expanded to more subjects and will include live tutoring.
  • School authorities will continue to be able to shift classes or grades to at-home learning for short periods of time to address outbreaks.
  • The Calgary Board of Education says it expects staffing shortages to persist as the fifth wave continues. On Jan. 11, more than 1,200 staff were absent, the board said.The number of absences is a 50 per cent increase over the previous three-year average for this point in time, the board said.
  • Daycares remain open.
  • The Omicron variantprompted several post-secondary institutions across the province toreturn to online learningfor the first few weeks of the winter term.

Testing:

  • Health Minister Jason Copping said Wednesday only 500,000 of the 16 million rapid antigen testspromised by Ottawahave arrived and that the balance of the 10 million from private suppliers is also tied up in delays and global supply chain bottlenecks.
  • Many Albertans have been struggling in the past two weeks to get their hands on rapidtests. The tests were first available on a widespread basis before the holidaysand Albertanscan access them forfree on a first-come, first-serve basis through participating pharmacies and AHS locations.
  • Effective Jan. 10,PCR tests are available onlyfor select groups, which includes health-care workers, correctional facility staff and returning international travellers in order to screen for new variants. Previously, lab-based PCR tests were also available to those who did not have access to rapid tests.
  • Hinshaw says with the positivity rate near 40 per cent, transmission is higher than it's ever been before and the provincelikely has 10 times or more COVID-19 cases than are being diagnosed through PCR tests.

Wastewater monitoring:

  • As the Alberta government scales back on widespread PCR testing to focus on those in high-priority settings, the province is now relying on wastewater surveillance more than ever before to track the prevalence of COVID-19 in Alberta.
  • The province's wastewater and the amount of infection in it has been monitored for two years by a group of 23 researchers in a joint project with the University of Calgary and the University of Alberta.
  • The data isupdated publiclythree times perweek.
  • Itdepicts the amount of SARS-CoV-2 RNA the virus that causes COVID-19 that's in the province's wastewater.
  • The virus isshed in peoples'feces before symptoms arise, sovalues in the data associate strongest with cases occurring six days after thesamples arecollected.
  • Dr. Michael Parkins, one of the research leads, said on Jan. 7 that it'simportant not to overinterpret individual data points, such as apparent drops in infection, but rather understand trends over time.
  • "Our data trends up, up, up.... I don't think we've seen the peak yet," he said.

WATCH|How researchers use wastewater to monitor COVID-19 spread:

How researchers use wastewater to monitor COVID-19 spread in Alberta

3 years ago
Duration 2:27
As the Alberta government scales back on widespread PCR testing, focusing on those in high-priority settings, the province is now relying on wastewater surveillance for COVID-19 more than ever.

Isolation times:

  • As of Jan. 3, people with at least two doses of vaccine who test positive for COVID-19 need to isolate for only five days instead of 10.
    • If symptoms continue past five days, fully vaccinated people must continue to isolate untilfeeling better.
    • If they're symptom free after five days, they must wear a mask around others at all times when they're outside their home.
    • The change does not apply to people who aren't fully vaccinated, who must continue to isolate for10 days or until their symptoms end, whichever is longer.
    • Health Minister JasonCopping said the change followed evidence that suggests fully immunized people have shorter infectious periods.
    • This change also follows the approach taken by Ontario and some other provinces, as well as the latest guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control in the United States, Copping said.
    • Exceptions will be provided for workplaces where disruption of service for 24 hours or more would be harmful to the public, and where there is no other way to continue the service except by bringing workers back before their isolation period has ended, Copping said.
    • In these circumstances, additional public health measures will be required. For example, Copping said returning workers would not be allowed to remove their masks when in the same room as anyone else at any time.

Health restrictions:

  • Premier Jason Kenney says Alberta will not be following Quebec's plan to impose a financial penalty on those who refuse to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Hesays data shows the unvaccinated are proving to be a vastly greater burden on the hospital system than the vaccinated, but making them pay extra would not be fair.
  • The leaders of Alberta's largest public and private sector unions called in an open letter on Jan. 11 for drastic lockdown measures immediately to fight the spiralling COVID-19 Omicron variant. Buta spokesperson Kenney says the United Conservative government is following and acting on the scientific dataand that such restrictions arenot being considered.
  • New public health restrictionsin Albertatookeffect on Dec. 24. They include:
    • Venues in the Restrictions Exemption Programthat seatmore than 1,000 people are to be at 50 per cent capacity.For venues with capacity of 500 to 1,000 occupants, 500 people is the limit. No food or drink can be consumed in these venues.
    • Restaurants, pubs and bars areto have a maximum table capacity of 10 people. Mingling between tables andinteractive activities like dancing or billiardsare not permitted.
  • The tightened restrictions came after Kenneyloosenedprivatesocial gathering restrictions on Dec. 15,scrapping the rule that only people fromtwo households can get together indoors. He said social gatherings couldconsist of people from any household, but shouldn't exceed10 people (not counting those under age 18).He also dropped therequirement that everyoneat indoor social gatherings be fully vaccinated.
  • Alberta has had arestrictions exemption program,a voluntary vaccine passport system, in place as ofSept. 20 after suffering through adisastrous fourth wave of COVID-19.A full list of restrictions and exemptions is available on the government's website.

Vaccinations:

  • As of Jan. 12, Alberta placed last of all provinces and territories in terms of the percentage of eligible people (ages five and up) who had received the COVID-19 vaccine,according to CBC's vaccine tracker.
    • 72.9per cent of the province's total population or 76.8per cent of eligible Albertans(ages five years and older) have received two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, according to CBC's vaccine tracker.
    • 79.5per centof the province's total population, and 83.5per cent of those ages five and older, have received at least one dose.
  • The province said as of Jan. 3, more than onemillion people have had a booster shot. Butan additional two million Albertans have received their first two doses and are eligible for a booster.Anyone aged 18 and older who received their second COVID-19 vaccine at least five months agois being urged tobook a booster dose.
  • The City of Calgary's mobile COVID vaccination program is continuing until at least Jan. 17, and will be providing booster shots at various locations around Calgary.Itwas slated to end on Dec. 31,but the city said Monday it has received additional vaccine supply from the province.

Which regions are being hit hardest:

Here is thelatest detailed regional breakdownof active cases, as reported by the province on Jan. 14:

  • Calgary zone: 29,544.
  • Edmonton zone: 24,062.
  • Central zone:3,817.
  • North zone:3,031.
  • South zone:2,956.
  • Unknown:719.

COVID in Alberta in charts and graphs:









Here are the latest Alberta COVID-19 stories: