By Star staff Toronto Star Wednesday, December 8, 2021
The latest coronavirus news from Canada and around the world Wednesday. This file will be updated throughout the day. Web links to longer stories if available.
10:47 a.m. Nova Scotia today announced it will spend $57 million over the next two years as part of what the government says are “first steps” in bolstering continuing and long-term care in the province.
Premier Tim Houston says the money will go toward hiring additional continuing care assistants, improving working conditions, improving care for seniors and making more beds available to seniors.
The largest investment will see $22 million over two years to cover the entire tuition costs for over 2,000 students in continuing care assistant programs.
Another $8 million will be used to provide long-term-care homes with funding to offer their casual and part-time employees full-time positions or to hire more staff to provide direct care.
10:05 a.m. (will be updated) Ontario is reporting 1,009 new COVID-19 cases and 8 deaths; 333 are hospitalized and 155 are in the ICU.
As of Wednesday, Ontario is reporting 260 active COVID-19 outbreaks in schools and a new pandemic high of 239 in elementary schools, according to the Star’s Ed Tubb. Positivity, at 3.3 per cent is trending up; hospitalization numbers also rising.
In Ontario, 24,150,789 vaccine doses have been administered. 90.1 per cent of Ontarians 12+ have one dose and 87.4 per cent have two doses.
10 a.m. The Bank of Canada is keeping its key interest rate target on hold at its rock-bottom level of 0.25 per cent.
In a statement, the central bank also said Wednesday it doesn’t expect to raise the trendsetting rate until some time between April and September next year, which is unchanged from its previous guidance.
The Bank of Canada also warned that high inflation rates will continue through the first half of next year.
The central bank said it won’t be until the second half of 2022 that inflation falls back toward its comfort zone of between one and three per cent.
9:58 a.m. Austria will keep a range of regional pandemic restrictions in place after ending a nationwide lockdown for inoculated people, with strict limits affecting the unvaccinated.
The government in Vienna is ending a three-week lockdown on Sunday for most people after a decline in confirmed infections, even as the number of patients being treated at hospitals remains high. The move contrasts with a flurry of new measures being enacted elsewhere in Europe in response to concern over a new coronavirus variant.
Austria has been at the forefront of European efforts to raise vaccination rates by favoring the inoculated and putting limits on others. While only a fraction of those who had previously not taken the jab have sought the inoculation as a result of the policies, the government is betting on continued curbs to boost the vaccination rate.
9:15 a.m. Poland and several other countries in Central and Eastern Europe are battling their latest surges of coronavirus cases and deaths while continuing to record much lower vaccinations rates than in Western Europe.
In Russia, more than 1,200 people with COVID-19 died every day for most of November and on several days in December, and the daily death toll remains over 1,100. Ukraine, which is recording hundreds of virus deaths a day, is emerging from its deadliest period of the pandemic.
Meanwhile, the mortality rate in Poland, while lower than it was than in the spring, recently climbed to more than 500 deaths per day and still has not peaked. On Wednesday, the country reported 592 more virus deaths, the highest number of its current wave and bringing the pandemic death toll to nearly 87,000 in the nation of 38 million.
Intensive care units are full, and doctors report that more and more children require hospitalization, including some who went through COVID-19 without symptoms but then suffered strokes.
8:37 a.m. The Omicron variant of the coronavirus appears to have spread across South Africa’s northern border with Zimbabwe reporting record daily cases and its highest ever test positivity rate.
While the numbers have also been boosted by a jump in government testing, the fact that one in three tests are positive for the pathogen signals strong community transmission in the country.
“It is very clear that the inevitable is now here,” Agnes Mahomva, the co-coordinator of Zimbabwe’s national COVID-19 task-force, said in an interview.
8 a.m. Six Middlesex-London Paramedic Service employees have been placed on unpaid leave for not complying with its COVID-19 vaccination requirement, officials say.
The policy gave the service’s 401 full- and part-time staffers, including paramedics, superintendents, administrators and managers, until Nov. 1 to disclose their vaccine status.
“These (six) employees have been placed on an unpaid administrative leave of absence pending compliance with the COVID-19 vaccination policy,” Colin Heise, the service’s professional practice commander, said by email.
The remaining staffers — 99 per cent of the workforce — are fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
7:20 a.m. Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE said initial lab studies show a third dose of their COVID-19 vaccine neutralizes the Omicron variant, results that will accelerate booster shot drives around the world.
A booster with the current version of the vaccine increased antibodies 25-fold, providing a similar level as observed after two doses against the original virus and other variants, the companies said Wednesday.
Blood plasma from people immunized with two doses of the vaccine has neutralizing antibody levels more than 25-fold less versus omicron than against the original strain of the virus, the companies said.
“It’s clear from these preliminary data that protection is improved with a third dose,” Pfizer Chief Executive Officer Albert Bourla said in a statement. The initial data show a third dose could offer still offer enough protection from disease, BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin said.
The data are preliminary, as the partners continue to study the new variant.
7:05 a.m. Ontario’s science advisory table on COVID-19 is set to release new recommendations on rapid testing, amid growing calls for the tests to be made more widely available.
Dr. Peter Juni, the scientific director of Ontario’s COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, says the group will publish a science brief on the issue Wednesday.
He says it would make sense “from a scientific perspective” to use rapid tests more often, particularly in schools, workplaces and other congregate settings.
Juni says it’s unclear at this time how the tests perform with the new Omicron variant of the virus, but he says they are effective with the Delta variant, which continues to account for the bulk of cases in the province.
Opposition legislators have been calling for the province to distribute rapid tests more broadly, particularly in schools.
6:15 a.m.: Outbreaks of COVID-19 in Ontario’s elementary schools are at the highest point in the pandemic, surpassing the third-wave peak when skyrocketing cases forced schools across the province to pivot to online learning after the April spring break.
The province on Tuesday reported 219 active COVID outbreaks in elementary schools, a number experts say signals the need for greater protections to keep students in school and prevent further learning losses and disruptions for families.
And with some public health units already identifying the new and potentially more transmissible Omicron variant connected with schools, experts stress additional public health tools, including take-home COVID tests for students, are critical at this point in the pandemic, especially with elementary students only recently eligible for vaccines.
Read the full story from the Star’s Isabel Teotonio and Megan Ogilvie here.
6:13 a.m.: New coronavirus infections in South Korea exceeded 7,000 for the first time since the start of the pandemic on Wednesday as hours-long lines snaked around testing stations in the capital Seoul amid a worsening virus crisis.
More than 5,600 of the new 7,175 cases were reported in Seoul and the nearby metropolitan region, where a delta-driven surge has led to a shortage of hospital beds and strained an already depleted health care workforce.
The country’s death toll exceeded 4,000 after 63 virus patients died in the past 24 hours. The 840 patients in serious or critical conditions were an all-time high, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency said.
“Last week, the level of daily increase reached 5,000 and today the tally came out over 7,000 – the viral spread has been fierce,” Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum, Seoul’s No. 2 behind President Moon Jae-in, said during a virus meeting.
“The greater capital region is where 80% of the infections have been concentrated. While we have been working with hospitals to increase the number of hospital beds (designated for COVID-19 treatment), we have been unable to catch up with the speed of transmissions,” he said.
Officials have been scrambling to administer booster shots and they are monitoring a larger number of mild cases at home to preserve hospital beds for patients who are sicker.
Wednesday’s daily infection tally was 1,800 more than the previous one-day record of 5,352 set on Saturday, illustrating how the delta variant has ripped through the country after it loosened social distancing rules in November to address economic concerns.
6:12 a.m.: Poland and several other countries in Central and Eastern Europe are battling their latest surges of coronavirus cases and deaths while continuing to record much lower vaccinations rates than in Western Europe.
In Russia, more than 1,200 people with COVID-19 died every day for most of November and on several days in December, and the daily death toll remains over 1,100. Ukraine, which is recording hundreds of virus deaths a day, is emerging from its deadliest period of the pandemic.
Meanwhile, the mortality rate is Poland, while lower than it was than in the spring, recently has caused more than 500 deaths per day and still has not peaked. Intensive care units are full, and doctors report that more and more children require hospitalization, including some who went through COVID-19 without symptoms but then suffered strokes.
The situation has created a dilemma for Poland’s government, which has urged citizens to get vaccinated but clearly worries about alienating voters who oppose vaccine mandates or any restrictions on economic life.
6:11 a.m.: The reproductive number, an indicator of how fast the coronavirus spreads, almost doubled in South Africa last month as an outbreak of the omicron variant took hold.
The measure rose to 2.55 on Nov. 27 from 1.37 on Nov. 17, the National Institute for Communicable Diseases said in a report on Wednesday. The number means each infected person on average transmitted the disease to another 2.55 people.
The data is the latest indicator of how quickly the virus has spread in South Africa since the onset of omicron, which was first detected last month.
The gauge was at 3.06 in the commercial hub of Gauteng, the epicenter of the outbreak that’s home to Johannesburg and Pretoria. The number more than doubled to 1.63 in the Western Cape, where Cape Town is located, and rose to 2.18 from 1.23 in the northern province of Limpopo. The rate rose in eight of nine provinces, falling slightly in the sparsely populated Northern Cape.
South Africa announced the discovery of omicron on Nov. 25 and daily infection numbers have since surged. International markets have been roiled and travel bans imposed on South Africa and its neighbours.
6:11 a.m.: A leaked video that shows staff members in British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s office joking about holding a lockdown-breaching Christmas party is adding fuel to allegations that government officials flouted coronavirus rules they imposed on everyone else.
For days, the prime minister’s office has been trying to rebut reports that Johnson’s staff held a December 2020 office party — complete with wine, food, games and a festive gift exchange — when pandemic regulations banned most social gatherings.
According to multiple British media outlets, the party took place on Dec. 18, when restrictions in London prohibited most indoor gatherings, and a day before Johnson tightened the rules even further, ruling out family Christmas celebrations for millions of people.
The prime minister’s office said in response to the footage broadcaster ITV aired late Tuesday that “there was no Christmas party. COVID rules have been followed at all times.”
6 a.m.: Canadian business owners are bullish on the economy’s rebound from COVID-19, with a new report finding investment plans and sales expectations for next year exceed pre-pandemic levels.
Yet the bright outlook for 2022 is clouded by a persistent labour shortage and supply chain disruptions that are expected to continue in the new year, the Business Development Bank of Canada found in its annual survey of business owners.
The Canadian Entrepreneurs’ 2022 Investment Outlook released Wednesday said 84 per cent of businesses are planning to maintain investments or invest more in their business over the next 12 months.
6 a.m.: The Bank of Canada is set Wednesday to announce what will happen to its trendsetting interest rate with job and inflation figures on the rise.
The central bank’s key interest rate target has been at the rock-bottom level of 0.25 per cent since the onset of the pandemic in March 2020 and is unlikely to be raised as part of the last scheduled rate call for 2021.
The bank has said it won’t raise the rate until the economy has healed enough to handle an increase.
The economy grew at an annual rate of 5.4 per cent in the third quarter, almost in line with the bank’s expectations, and job gains in November lowered the unemployment rate to within 0.3 percentage points of what was recorded in February 2020 just before the pandemic.
At the same time, inflation remains above the central bank’s target range of one and three per cent.