Chief public health officer says Canada could see 15,000 cases daily by October if vaccinations don't increase - Action News
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Chief public health officer says Canada could see 15,000 cases daily by October if vaccinations don't increase

Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam releasednew COVID-19 modelling today that warns Canada could see up to 15,000 cases per day by the end of the month if the rate of vaccination does not increase and more restrictive public health measures are not introduced.

In Alberta,active cases and ICU hospitalizationshave quadrupled

Health officials project grim 4th wave if vaccinations dont increase

3 years ago
Duration 2:38
The Public Health Agency of Canada released new modelling that suggested a fourth wave could again overwhelm hospitals and put Canadians at risk. The hyper-contagious delta variant leaves provinces with limited options: either raise the vaccination rate or increase restrictions.

Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam releasednew COVID-19 modelling today that warns Canada could see up to 15,000 cases per day by the end of the month if the rate of vaccination does not increase and more restrictive public health measures are not introduced.

"This is a crucial moment," Tam said. "We have a window of opportunity to rapidly accelerate vaccine uptake and close the protection gap in younger age groups with the lowest vaccine coverage."

Today'sbriefing marked the first timeTam has takenmediaquestions since the start of the federal election campaign.

Tam said that as the fall approaches and Canadians return to a more indoor lifestyle, they should increase their use of masks and physical distancing.

"If we continue on the path we are on now since reopening, we could expectto see a continued sharp increase in cases ... reaching levels not seen before in Canada during the pandemic," said Dr. Howard Njoo, deputy chief public health officer.

Tam said it's crucial to increase the vaccination rate in the 18- to 39-year-old age group because those in that groupare the most mobile and tend tointeract with a large number of people and currently have the lowest vaccination rate of any demographic in the country.

According to thePublic Health Agency of Canada (PHAC),only 63 per cent ofCanadians aged 18 to 29 are fully vaccinated and those aged 30 to39 are only slightly better off, with a vaccination rate of 68 per cent. The data showthat theolder age groups all have much higher vaccination rates.

Watch:Window for slowing down delta-driven wave with higher vaccination rates is 'narrowing,' says Tam:

Window for slowing down delta-driven wave with higher vaccination rates is 'narrowing,' says Tam

3 years ago
Duration 2:17
Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam says the 'window of opportunity' to slow the delta-driven fourth pandemic wave with higher vaccination rates is 'narrowing' due to increased spread of the more contagious variant.

Canadians aged 40 to 49 are 76 per cent fully vaccinated, those 50 to 59 are at 80 per cent, those aged 60 to 69 are 88 per cent vaccinated,those70 to 79 are 94 per cent vaccinated and those over age 80 are 92 per cent vaccinated.

Tam said Canadians aged 12 to 17are only 67 per cent vaccinated but added she was not worried about that low number because the number ofvaccinations in that age group is increasing rapidly.

A pandemic of the unvaccinated

According to the modelling, Canada could see case counts decline from the nearly 5,000 cases it is seeing daily now if transmission of the disease can be reduced by at least 25 per cent.

If the economy reopens further and transmission increases by 25 per cent, the modelling warnswe could hit that 15,000 number by mid-September.

Njoo said that right now about 7.6 million eligible Canadians still have not been fully vaccinated and that outbreaks of COVID-19 among this group are many times more likely than outbreaks among the fully vaccinated.

I would ask for caution and patience for a booster dose for the rest of the population because we haven't seen enough data.- Theresa Tam

PHAC says that the number ofnew cases isincreasing among the unvaccinated at a rate12 times higher thanthe rate for the fully vaccinated, and that the rate of hospitalization is 36 times higher for people who are unvaccinated compared to thefully vaccinated.

Tam said she would like to see up to 80 per cent of eligible Canadians fully vaccinated but doesn't want the country to stop there.

"There's no magic number except to say reach for the stars," she said. "I have a 100 per cent mark on that graph. That's where people should be aiming towardas much as possible."

"I believe that we can accelerate and I know that provinces are pulling all stops in different ways."

Not enough data on boosters yet: Tam

Tam said that the National Advisory Committee on Immunization, NACI, is meeting today to examine the evidence suggesting that immune-compromised Canadians would benefit from a third dose of the vaccine.

She said the committee would be releasing its findings soon but warned that offeringa third dose to immune-compromised Canadians is not the same as offering booster shots to other Canadians.

WATCH:Canadian Medical Association president says vaccinations key to mitigating 4th wave:

Canadian Medical Association president says vaccinations key to mitigating 4th wave

3 years ago
Duration 5:40
Dr. Katharine Smart tells Power & Politics that increasing vaccinations to 85 per cent across the country will lessen the severity of the pandemic's fourth wave.

"While that is being rapidly analyzed, I would ask for caution and patience for a booster dose for the rest of the population because we haven't seen enough data, and based on the information we have at hand in Canada we're not seeing a lot of breakthrough infections," she said.

Tam said that all evidence right now says that the available vaccines offer significant protection againsthospitalization and death.

Delta driven spike in cases

The update comes as parts of the country dive further into a delta variant-driven fourth wave of the pandemic.

In Alberta,active cases and ICU hospitalizationshave quadrupled. As of Thursdaythere were12,290active cases, 465 people in hospital and107 in intensive care units in the provinces.

The absence of COVID-19 briefings by the Public Health Agency of Canada during the election campaign sparked somecontroversy lastweek.

The Conservatives called on Interim Clerk of the Privy Council Janice Charette to investigatewhat they described as a breach of the "caretaker convention" thepolicy that directspublic servants to avoiddoing anything that could influence the campaign.

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