Behind the numbers: 3 COVID-19 takeaways from 2022 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 08:14 PM | Calgary | -16.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Behind the numbers: 3 COVID-19 takeaways from 2022

In 2022, Omicron variants and subvariants reigned, rules largely eased into recommendations, and the Ottawa-Gatineau region saw a shift in the COVID-19 pandemic.

2022 is the region's worst year for COVID deaths, while we saw fewer spikes

Travellers line up with their bags at an Ottawa International Airport counter June 14, 2022.
Travellers at the Ottawa International Airport in June 2022. This year, people were allowed to do move more freely, while being asked with various degrees of urgency to follow recommendations instead of rules. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

In 2022, Omicron variants and subvariants reigned, rules largely eased into recommendations, and the Ottawa-Gatineau region saw a shift in the COVID-19 pandemic.

One local health leader said in an interview this monththere was a turning point in the middle ofspring that evened out the previous spikes and valleys of the various pandemic waves.

At that point,a few decent months in autumn 2021 driven by good uptake of vaccines had been replaced by a few months of the more-infectious Omicron.

"Going into kind of April and May, we actually saw what I call'the wall of immunity' being developed by what's called hybrid immunity," said Dr. Paul Roumeliotis, medical oficer of health for the Eastern Ontario Health Unit.

"You hadmillions of people who got infected despite being vaccinated but not hospitalized, fortunately and at the same time, a whole slew of the population got protected by vaccines."

CBC honed in on three COVID-19trends from the past year that stuck out in weekly updates from public health units.

This piecedoes not account fortheautumn rise of therespiratory syncytial virus (RSV)and the flu, which havecaused more problems late in 2022, such asimmense pressure on children's hospitals.

Region's deadliest year

There have been gaps inthat wall of immunity, though. People who can't mount as strong of a defence account formost of the deaths locally after contracting COVID.

This past year has included nearly half of the more than 2,000 reported COVID-19 deaths in the seven local health authorities.

Six of those seven reported more of these deaths this year than in either 2020 or 2021. Five of them reported more than in 2020 and 2021 combined.

The Renfrew County and District Health Unit has seen about 85 per cent of its COVID deaths in 2022. Two others sit around 80 per cent: Hastings Prince Edward Public Health in the Belleville area andKingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Public Health.

Ottawa is the only health unit in the region that hasn't reported more COVID deaths in 2022, but it'sclose.

CBC News spoke to multiple physicians for a story last monthaboutwho's dying withCOVID-19 in late 2022.

"It's older folks, it's those with immune-compromised states on chemotherapy with advanced cancer, frail comorbidities, that are ending up getting sick with COVID-related illness," said Dr. Bram Rochwerg, a critical care physicianin Hamilton, Ont.

"It's extremely rare to see somebody that doesn't have these comorbidities that ends up in the ICU sick with COVID."

Raising the floor

Coronavirus wastewater readings and COVID hospitalizations each showthe worst spikes of the pandemic came in 2022, and there was fewer lulls between waves. This year's longestlull generally happened in May and June, but worsened in July.

Ottawa also did not go more than 100 days in 2022 with fewer than 20 active, local COVID hospital patients. Ottawa reached 175 days in 2021, and 125 in 2020 if you start the count when the city first reached 20 hospital patients with COVID.

A line graph of COVID-19 hospitalizations since the winter of 2020.
The reprieve from COVID-19 hospitalizations was shorter this summer in Ottawa compared to in past summers (and autumns). Look at the charts around each July. (Ottawa Public Health)

There's a similar story in Ottawa's wastewater measurements.

The weekly average levelin 2021 was in the double digits which is fairly low for almost 150 days. The level never got that low in 2022.

A bar and line graph of coronavirus wastewater levels since June 2020.
Ottawa's weekly coronavirus average didn't get as low in 2022 as the previous two years. It nearly dropped to double digits in March. (613covid.ca)

"Between waves[earlier in the year] we kind of went down, but what we're seeing now is ... we're notgoing as low as we want to be or used to be, we're kind of hovering," Roumeliotis said,in a weekly video update late last month, referring to general wastewater trends across Ontario.

"That's what we'll be seeing. Progressively that will get lower and lower as we vaccinate We're still in a pandemic but we're in a much better situation when it comes to COVID-19."

Vaccine consistency

This year saw updated booster doses that arebetter tailored for current coronavirus variantsand the approval of vaccines for children as young as six months old.

Local demand for all COVID vaccines also evened out.

Once you set aside January's rush for boosters during the last period of centralized school, restaurant and gym closures, OPH generally gave out between 4,000 and 20,000 doses a week from February onward.

In 2021, as many as 132,700 doses were administeredin early July, which was when second dose eligibility expanded.

There's a similar dynamic in the Kingston and Belleville areas, and in Leeds, Grenville and Lanark counties.

A bar graph of daily COVID-19 vaccine doses given in a region.
After the January booster boom, the Kingston area saw its most COVID-19 vaccines given in the first weeks of autumn, when children were back in school. (KFL&A Public Health)

In Ottawa, 2022 saw more than 700,000 COVID vaccine doses given this year compared to about two million the year previous.

With files from Sarah Kester

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The bright spot in your inbox. Stay connected to the city you love with The Highlight, delivered monthly.

...

The next issue of The Highlight will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.