From the CBC:
“The other
numbers behind Canada's 10,000 pandemic deaths”
Canada hit
another milestone in the COVID-19 pandemic on Tuesday, when the death toll
reached 10,000 people. That number may be inaccurate, though, and the true
number could be higher. Statistics Canada has said the number of deaths from
COVID-19 in the early months of the pandemic might have been under-reported.
That's because some patients might have died before getting tested for the
coronavirus.
The numbers
vary greatly between regions. Most of the deaths — more than 90 per cent — have
been reported in Quebec (6,172 deaths) and Ontario (3,103). Those provinces
also account for 80 per cent of Canada's overall cases. More than 70 per cent
of Canada's deaths have occurred in those aged over 80 — about twice the
average of rates in other developed countries. Both Ontario and Quebec experienced
severe COVID-19 outbreaks in long-term care homes which drove those numbers up.
There are currently more than 320 outbreaks in such homes across Canada. Canada
crossed the threshold of 5,000 deaths on May 12, a little over two months after
the first death was reported.
COVID-19 case
counts slowed across the country through the summer, but have taken a big jump
in many areas this fall, with new daily highs regularly being set through
Central and Western Canada. The death toll has also climbed much more slowly
since April and May, when outbreaks in long-term care homes and a lack of
medical knowledge about the coronavirus led to more fatal infections.
Growing more
deadly However, the pandemic has grown deadlier over the past month. More
than 600 COVID-19-related fatalities have been reported in October so far
compared with 165 COVID-19 in September, according to the Public Health Agency
of Canada. Equally troubling, the number of people experiencing severe
COVID-19 illness continues to increase. According to Canada's Chief
Public Health Officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, data from the provinces and territories
shows that an average of 1,010 people with COVID-19 were being treated in
hospitals each day during the most recent seven-day period (Oct. 16-22),
including 209 of whom were being treated in intensive care units. During the
same period, there were an average of 23 COVID-19-related deaths reported
daily. Tam also warned in her statement Monday that "as
hospitalisations and deaths tend to lag behind increased disease activity by
one to several weeks, the concern is that we have yet to see the extent of
severe impacts associated with the ongoing increase in COVID-19 disease
activity."
Doctors have
learned how to better prevent COVID-19 from spreading — through masks,
distancing, hand hygiene and avoiding crowds — and have found better ways to
treat it in hospital, for example, by not putting people on ventilators too
soon, or by using new steroid treatments like dexamethasone. Overall, deaths and hospitalizations in Canada
are not as bad as some experts had predicted they would be by this point, and
they are not necessarily in line with the rate of new cases seen early in the
pandemic. It's not entirely clear why that is. According to the Coronavirus
Resource Centre at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., Canada's
COVID-19 case fatality rate is about 4.5 per cent, with about 27 deaths per
100,000 residents.
^ It is always
sad to hear that a country or a region has reached a grim milestone like this
one. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/covid-19-10-000-deaths-1.5779193
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