Ontario officially moves to weekly reporting of COVID-19 data. Here's what the latest numbers show - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:40 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Ontario officially moves to weekly reporting of COVID-19 data. Here's what the latest numbers show

Ontario has officially switched to weekly reporting of COVID-19 data, after more than two years of daily updates.The last daily data came on Thursday. The change means that, for data specifically,CBC News will also move to publishing weekly stories in Ontario.

As of Thursday, there were 491 people with COVID-19 in hospitals with 109 in ICU

Dr. Kieran Moore, Ontarios chief medical officer of health, said last week that COVID-19 indicators are moving in the right direction in the province. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Ontario has officially switched to weekly reporting of COVID-19 data, after more than two years of daily updates.

The last daily data came on Thursday. The change means that, for data specifically,CBCNews will also move to publishing weekly stories. The Ministry of Health says that its databases will be refreshed by 2 p.m. on Thursdays.

Providing a clear, full picture about the state of COVID-19 in Ontario has become increasingly difficult over the last several months, afterthe province restricted lab testing and stopped providing school-related data publicly.

As of Thursday, there were 491 people with COVID-19 in hospitals. That's down from 536 at the same time last week.

Of those patients, 109 were being treated in intensive care. Roughly 55 per cent of people in ICU were admitted due to symptoms from the illness, while 45 per cent were already in critical care when they tested positive for the virus.

Over the course of the last seven days, another 33 Ontarians with COVID-19 died. The province's official death toll stands at 13,357.

According to Ontario's COVID-19 science advisory table, the signal of the virus in wastewaster has been steadily rising since the end of May. The last confirmed data point came on June 10, and while an extrapolation suggests the signal will continue to increase, those projections, however, are based on incomplete data.

A surge in the wastewater signal has portended every wave of the virus. For now, though, the rate of increase seems to be slower than previous waves caused by the Omicron variant.