Ontario's 7th wave of COVID-19 is here, top doctor confirms amid exponential growth - Action News
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Ontario's 7th wave of COVID-19 is here, top doctor confirms amid exponential growth

Ontario has officially entered its seventh wave of COVID-19, driven this time by the Omicron BA.5 subvariant, the province's top doctor confirms.

Test positivity above 10% for 1st time since May, says province's science advisory table

Indicators suggest Ontario is now in the midst of another wave of COVID-19 driven by the Omicron BA.5 subvariant, the province's science advisory table says. (Alex Lupul/CBC)

Ontario has officially entered its seventh wave of COVID-19, driven this time by the Omicron BA.5 subvariant, the province's top doctor confirms.

"Sadly yes, we're in another wave," Dr. Kieran Moore, the province's chief medical officer,told CBC News Wednesday after Ontario's COVID-19science advisory table pointed toexponentialgrowth in most public healthunits.

The BA.5 subvariant has been rising slowly since early June but really started to "take off" mid-month, becoming a dominant strain, Moore said. Approximately 60 per cent of confirmed cases now are a result of the subvariant, Moore said.

Ontario can likely expect another four to five weeks in this wave, which is now in about its third week, he said, adding infections are expected to increase over the next 10 days before beginning to slow.

As for fourth doses, Moore says the focus has been to prioritize boosters for those over 60 years of age and those most vulnerable, while encouraging third doses for the rest of the population.

The province is now reviewing eligibility for fourth doses, however, and will have more to say in the coming weeks, he said.

WATCH |Ontario's top doctor confirms 7th wave of COVID-19 has begun:

Ontario's top doctor confirms 7th wave of COVID-19 has begun

2 years ago
Duration 1:01
According to the province's top doctor, 66 per cent of new circulating strains are now the BA.5 strain, driving an increase in test positivity and hospitalizations.

The new wave comes amid the summer monthswhen many are spending more time outdoors something that would have otherwise been expected to help curb the spread of transmission, raising questions about what will happen as more people head indoors later in the year.

"Lots of unknowns for the fall but I can assure all Ontarians we're preparing for it," said Moore.

"We may ask Ontariansto wear masks as we go indoors into the fall and we may mandate it if our health system has too many people getting admitted, too many people waiting in emergency departments... All of us want to maintain our health system capacity."

In a series of tweets Wednesday, the science table pointed to several key indicators signalling the beginning of a wave,little more than a month after the end of mostpublic health measures, including mask mandates.

Test positivity above 10% for 1st time since May

For the first time since May, test positivity is above 10 per cent, with wastewater signals rising across theprovince overall and within most regions, the science table says.

Around 80 per cent of public health units are seeing exponential growthin cases, though the group says the actual reproduction number is hard to nail down since the province moved to limitPCR testing.

On top of that, Ontario is seeing its first increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations since May, with the number of people admitted for the virus higher than at any time last summer.

The latest numberstracked by the science table show that as of June 29, 605 people were hospitalized with the virus. That's an increase of 89 people from the week before.

An estimated six people per day died from the virus as of July 3, up from three the week before, the group says.

Indications ofa new wave in Ontario comeas several G10 countries have already seen a jump in cases driven by Omicron subvariants, including France, the U.K., Italy, Belgiumand Switzerland, among others.

Get 3rd doses 'now' if you haven't already, group says

The group says current evidence does not suggest BA.5 is more severe than strains that drovepreviouswaves or that it will lead to the level of hospitalizations seen at earlier points in the pandemic.

"However, any surge comes at a time when hospitals are already dealing with staff shortages and record wait times this impacts all of us," the advisory tablesaid.

"And if BA.5 spreads widely, we may see a rise in deaths among higher risk groups such as the elderly as was observed during the previous waves."

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The group advises anyone in a crowded indoor public setting to wear a high-quality mask and to ventilate as much as possible by opening doors and window for air flow.

Anyone over the age of 18 who hasn't had a third dose of a COVID-19 vaccine should "get it now," the group says.

Anyone age 60 or over or immunocompromised should also take their fourth dose now, it says, noting while updatedvaccines targeted to newer variants might be available this fall, "it makes sense to get the vaccines you are eligible for now."

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"You can be re-infected by BA.5 even if you have recently been infected with an earlier strain," the group says. "Non-severe infections can still be disruptive to your life and increase long COVID risk."

Providing a clear, full picture about the state of COVID-19has become increasingly difficult over the last several months, after the provincial government restricted lab testing and stopped publishingschool-related data.

On June 11, the province also switched to weekly reporting of COVID-19 dataafter more than two years of daily updates.

With files from Mike Crawley