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COVID-19 fight moves to "new and somewhat different phase": Moe

Wednesday marked a notable milestone for the province of Saskatchewan in its fight against COVID-19. “Today will be our last regularly scheduled COVID briefing,” Premier Scott Moe said at the latest media conference Wednesday.
Premier Moe and Dr. Shahab
Premier Scott Moe and Dr. Saqib Shahab at the final regularly scheduled COVID-19 news conference. Facebook photo.

Wednesday marked a notable milestone for the province of Saskatchewan in its fight against COVID-19.

“Today will be our last regularly scheduled COVID briefing,” Premier Scott Moe said at the latest media conference Wednesday.

Moe prefaced that announcement by noting that on Sunday, July 11, after 485 days of public health orders and restrictions and of “the government telling you how to live your life,” the remaining restrictions would end.

“As you can see there is no mission accomplished banner that is hanging behind me,” Moe said. That was because even though the restrictions were coming to an end, COVID is not, he said

“This fight against COVID does need to continue, but it will shift into a new and somewhat different phase,” Moe said.

“Instead of trying to control the COVID infection rate through government imposed restrictions and government rule, we can now control COVID through vaccines,” said Moe.

As it was the final briefing, Moe took the time at the news conference to thank a multitude of people, including Saskatchewan people for doing their part by following orders and getting vaccinated. He also thanked essential workers, health care workers and professionals, and others, as well as Dr. Saqib Shahab, Saskatchewan’s Chief Medical Health Officer.

“Saskatchewan is in a very good place,” Moe said of the latest numbers. He noted the seven day average was 31, way down from the peak of 287 in mid-April. He credited this to Saskatchewan people “going out and getting their vaccinations, and also that the vaccines were highly effective in preventing COVID-19.

Of those eligible, 71 percent had received at least one shot and 50 percent their second dose. Anyone over the age of 12 was eligible to receive a shot and Moe said there was an ample supply of vaccines available in the province.

Some numbers were also provided at the news conference showing the stark difference in case numbers for those vaccinated and those unvaccinated.

Dr. Shahab showed a series of slides that reported there has been just over 2,032 cases of COVID-19 in June. Of those, 80.8 percent were people who were unvaccinated. 17.5 percent had their first dose, and just 1.8 percent were fully vaccinated.

Among COVID-19 hospitalizations, just five out of 102 hospitalizations had been fully vaccinated. There were zero ICU cases and zero deaths from fully vaccinated people reported in June.

Moe made the point that COVID-19 was “a disease of the unvaccinated,” and repeated a message at the news conference that vaccines are effective and urged people to take time and get vaccinated.

Going forward, officials didn’t rule out the possibility of outbreaks. Officials did acknowledge at the news conference a major outbreak at Hatchet Lake Dene Nation in the province’s far northeast, an outbreak that has been linked by local officials to more than 109 cases in the area. Those numbers have not yet been added to the province’s tally.

“We will see some clusters like right now in the far northeast,” Dr. Shahab acknowledged. He said those would be managed by community leadership and public health, and there would be a surge in contact tracing and testing. He said outbreaks would still happen, primarily among those unvaccinated or under-vaccinated.

As for the situation at Hatchet Lake Dene Nation, the province was asked about what supports it was providing. Dr. Shahab noted whenever there is a cluster it is “all hands on deck.”  

Saskatchewan Health Authority CEO Scott Livingstone said they have offered assistance to support the outbreak response, contact tracing is under way, and they have activated surge capacity and additional staff has been mobilized. There is also a community door-to-door approach for vaccinations and lots of support from local leadership, he said.

“There’s lots of things going on, we’re monitoring the situation,” Livingstone said, who pledged to provide any support or resources their partners needed.

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