麻豆视频

Skip to content

COVID-19 variant cases hitting the south; cases getting younger

Regina continues to be a hotspot of COVID-19 but other parts of the province are seeing concerning rises as well. At the latest Sask. Health Authority news conference Thursday afternoon, chief medical health officer Dr.
Dr. Shahab
Dr. Saqib Shahab speaks at the latest virtual SHA update on COVID-19. Microsoft Teams screenshot.

Regina continues to be a hotspot of COVID-19 but other parts of the province are seeing concerning rises as well.

At the latest Sask. Health Authority news conference Thursday afternoon, chief medical health officer Dr. Saqib Shahab noted they are seeing increases in the rural south, Weyburn and area, and Moose Jaw and area.

They are seeing increases in both case numbers and variants of concern there. 麻豆视频 Central 2 including Moose Jaw has 51 active cases, 麻豆视频 East 1 including Indian Head and Fort Qu鈥橝ppelle had 42, and 麻豆视频 East 3 including Weyburn has 21.

While not as high as the 862 active cases in Regina

When asked if the rise in cases in the south central and the south east part of the province might prompt more restrictions there, Dr. Shahab noted they are 鈥渨atching very closely.鈥

鈥淲e expected communities close to Regina would be impacted,鈥 he said. Dr. Shahab added that if you see lots of cases of variants of concern not linked to one another, 鈥渢hat speaks to uncontrolled community transmission. So if we start seeing that in any community, unfortunately we would have to think of further progressive measures.鈥

Regarding the latest measures in Regina and area, which includes orders to limit gatherings to immediate households and travel restrictions in and out of the city, Dr. Shahab said it was 鈥渁 bit early to show impacts.鈥 Because there is more testing happening. He said they expect case numbers to rise for the next week or two 鈥渂efore they stabilize and hopefully start coming down.鈥

Dr. Shahab also noted the bulk of new cases are in the 18-49 age group, noting these were people out and about in public-facing jobs. With the variants, there was quick transmission from the workplace into a household and into schools, and 鈥渢hat鈥檚 what we鈥檙e trying to get ahead of.鈥

He urged Saskatchewan people to stay the course.

鈥淲hile we have significant measures in Regina right now, all of us all throughout Saskatchewan should continue to observe everything we are doing.鈥

He also urged people to get the vaccination when eligible, and called the vaccination program a 鈥渒ey thing in our race against time against variants of concern.鈥

SHA chief executive officer Scott Livingstone admitted that 鈥渋n the past few weeks we have been tested in a way we have not been tested during the pandemic.鈥

In terms of numbers, Livingstone said 60 patients are in Regina hospitals with COVID-19 with 16 admitted to ICU. Of those 39 have tested positive for variants and that includes 15 of the 16 patients ICU.

The patients are also getting younger. Of 35 ICU admissions in the past month, only a single individual was over the age of 70, and 10 are under the age of 40.

On the vaccine front, the feedback has been 鈥渙verwhelmingly positive鈥 to the drive thru vaccine clinic in Regina. It has garnered attention across the country, said Livingstone, because of the speed in which it worked. There are plans to set more drive thru clinics up in Saskatoon, Yorkton and Moose Jaw. Other locations are also planned but Livingstone said those are at more seasonal locations, meaning not indoor. Those are likely to be set up in parking lots and more information will be coming on those.

Livingstone was also questioned about long waits for drive thru testing in Regina, with stories of waits in line of over four hours.

鈥淣o, it鈥檚 not acceptable to have people wait that long in line for a test," said Livingstone, and 鈥渢hat is why we're aggressively expanding capacity so they don't have to wait and we can meet demand.鈥

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks