A look at the latest COVID-19 developments in Canada
A look at the latest COVID-19 news in Canada:
— A Canadian study suggests the antiviral medication remdesivir could have a “modest but significant effect” on COVID-19 patient outcomes, including decreasing the need for mechanical ventilation by approximately 50 per cent. The study, published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, is billed as the largest single-country trial of remdesivir reported to date. Results are part of a larger study called the World Health Organization Solidarity, a randomized, controlled trial evaluating remdesivir’s impact on COVID-19 patients in several countries.
— Ontario is seeing “glimmers of hope” in its fight against the Omicron variant, the health minister says, setting the stage for what the premier has called a positive announcement on restrictions later this week. COVID-19 cases are expected to peak this month, Christine Elliott says, with a peak in hospitalizations and ICU admissions to follow. New hospitalizations are doubling roughly every two weeks, instead of doubling every seven days, as was the case just a few weeks ago, she says. “I do want to be clear, February will continue to pose challenges, especially for our hospitals as people continue to require care for COVID-19,” Elliott said. “But our goal has always been to ensure capacity is there to provide care for those who need it. Given current trends, we are increasingly confident in our ability to do so.”
— Parents in Toronto expressed mixed emotions as they dropped their kids off at school for the first time in weeks, saying they were worried about COVID-19 but glad to have their children get back to in-person learning. The return to physical classrooms after two weeks of remote learning was delayed by two days for the Toronto District School Board after a major snowstorm hit on Monday. Outside an elementary school in the north end of the city, Natasha Chadenga said she was feeling “a lot of trepidation” sending her six-year-old daughter back. “It doesn’t sound like the (education) ministry has put in everything that needs to be put in place to support the schools,” she said. “I’m really concerned that in another one week or four days from now, they’re going to be sent back home again, with some sort of outbreak in the school.”