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Canada forecasts show rapid coronavirus spread, new restrictions needed – Reuters

Canada forecasts show rapid coronavirus spread, new restrictions needed – Reuters

OTTAWA (Reuters) – Longer-range forecasts project the second wave of the coronavirus spreading rapidly through Canada, and all the major provinces need to impose more restrictions, federal health authorities said on Friday.

FILE PHOTO: Paramedics transport a patient to Mount Sinai Hospital as the city enters the first day of a renewed coronavirus disease (COVID-19) lockdown due to a case numbers spike in Toronto, Ontario, Canada November 23, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio

Although many of the 10 provinces have already reimposed some limitations on businesses and limited gatherings as numbers continue to spike, chief public health officer Theresa Tam said more action was needed to reduce pressure on the healthcare system as hospitalizations soar.

“The current daily case count far exceeds the peak of the first wave… There is little indication that this upward trajectory will change without further intensifying public health measures,” she told a briefing.

Local authorities should implement “restrictions, closures and control measures” while urging people to cut their interaction with others, she added.

Tam said that by Dec. 25 the domestic cumulative death toll could be between 14,410 and 14,920, with the total number of cases ranging from 531,300 to 577,000. Canada has so far reported 13,109 deaths and 442,069 cases.

Howard Njoo, Tam’s deputy, said the second wave was exerting enormous pressure on the healthcare system.

In some parts of the country “we’re on the point of being completely overloaded”, he told the briefing.

Next week, Canada is set to become only the second Western nation after Britain to start vaccinating against the coronavirus. The first 30,000 doses of Pfizer Inc’s COVID-19 vaccine are set to arrive in the next few days.

The United States could also begin a massive vaccination program next week, with U.S. regulators expected to soon authorize emergency use of the Pfizer vaccine.

“We’re entering into a very tricky period of time,” Health Minister Patty Hajdu told the briefing, citing the start of the Christmas holidays when people are likely to gather.

“We’re going to have to be very, very cautious in the next several weeks.”

Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Franklin Paul, Jonathan Oatis and Bill Berkrot

Published at Fri, 11 Dec 2020 15:18:00 +0000

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