The province of Saskatchewan has six new, confirmed cases of COVID-19, as of March 24, bringing the total to 72 confirmed cases.
Sixty per cent of the total cases are males and 40 per cent are females. To date, 5,757 COVID-19 tests have been performed by the Roy Romanow Provincial Laboratory.
Of the 72 confirmed cases, two are 19 years of age and under, 59 are between the ages of 20 and 64 and 11 are 65 years and older.
The case surveillance and testing information, including the regional locations of the confirmed and presumptive positive cases, is available at www.saskatchewan.ca/COVID19.
The Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) is expanding capacity to meet demand for future phases of the COVID-19 pandemic. This is one part of the SHA鈥檚 overall strategy to contain, delay and mitigate COVID-19.
鈥淏ased on what we know from other jurisdictions, it is critical we act immediately to expand acute care capacity to mitigate the impact of COVID-19,鈥 SHA CEO Scott Livingstone said. 鈥淒emand will exceed capacity. All jurisdictions are facing this challenge. We are not alone. We are acting immediately to ensure Saskatchewan residents get the care they need from the right provider, at the right time, with the right supports in place.鈥
Modelling from other jurisdictions suggests that this virus may affect 30 per cent of the population and result in thousands needing hospitalization. This modelling is being updated to ensure it is more specific to the situation in Saskatchewan.
鈥淯nder any scenario, it is critical that we continue to act to escalate our tactics to meet the potential demand,鈥 Livingstone said. 鈥淭hat is why we are stepping up actions on an ongoing basis to do our part in ensuring the safety of Saskatchewan people.鈥
The SHA has already initiated measures to ensure this demand is met. A slowdown of non-essential services to increase bed availability, preserve supplies and support a labour pool for reallocation is already underway.
SHA leadership is activating plans to create additional capacity through:
鈥reation of dedicated spaces to cohort COVID-19 patients within facilities.
鈥reation of COVID-19 designated hospitals in Saskatoon and Regina and other areas of the province, where required.
鈥reation of additional community based acute care capacity where required (e.g. field hospitals in school gyms, community centres, rinks, etc.).
鈥淭his plan will ensure we are prepared,鈥 Livingstone said. 鈥淏ut it won鈥檛 be enough; it has been proven over and over with this virus that no health system in the world can address this challenge alone without the sustained help of the general public.鈥
Actions that people and communities must take to address this challenge include:
鈥ractising good hygiene, washing hands regularly and practicing social distancing (two meters apart wherever possible);
鈥bide by provincial and local travel, self-isolation, event and gathering restrictions;
鈥se medical supplies effectively and efficiently so that they are there when needed;
鈥void visiting our hospitals and long-term care facilities unless there are compassionate reasons for doing so.
A provincial Emergency Operations Centre has been established, as well as Integrated Health Incident Command Centres (IHICCs) for each of the SHA service areas (Saskatoon, Regina, Rural and North).
It is these local IHICC鈥檚 that will be accountable for finalizing and deploying the continuity of services and surge capacity plans on a local level. Changes to services and service locations are already occurring and will be ongoing as we adapt to the increased capacity it will take for the health system to effectively manage the weeks and months ahead. Communities will be updated as changes occur in their areas.
鈥淲e strongly urge every resident in Saskatchewan to abide by the restrictions, guidelines and orders enacted by the Government of Saskatchewan, and help our province slow the rate of transmission of this virus,鈥 SHA Chief Medical Officer Dr. Susan Shaw said. 鈥淭he success of preventive measures will have a direct impact on health system demand for hospital care.聽 The actions of the public will help save lives and ensure our health system is there for when you need it, regardless of the circumstance.鈥