N.B. COVID-19 roundup: 2,548 new cases, 2 deaths, 500 health-care workers isolating - Action News
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New Brunswick

N.B. COVID-19 roundup: 2,548 new cases, 2 deaths, 500 health-care workers isolating

The provincereported 2,548 new cases on Monday, a total that includes three consecutive days of record numbers over the weekend.

Monday's case count reflects three consecutive days of record numbers

Empty hospital hallway with a stretcher on the left side.
More than 500 health-care employees are currently off work and isolating due to COVID-19 as of Monday. (Shutterstock)

Latest

  • Red Cross bolsters N.B. supply of rapid test kits
  • 500 health-care workers isolating
  • 51 people in hospital, 17 in ICU
  • Three days of record numbers include 922 new cases today
  • Moderna to be reserved for those over 30
  • Shifting to 'living with' COVID-19
  • Bad start to the new year for small business

The provincereported 2,548 new casesand two more deaths because of COVID-19 on Monday.

Two people in the Fredericton region, Zone 3, have died, one of them in their 60s and the other in their 70s, Public Health said in a news release late Monday.

The new case numbers, which encompass the weekend's case counts, reflect three consecutive days of record numbers, including 797 new cases on Saturday, 829 on Sundayand 922 today.

There aremore than 500regional health authority employees off work and isolating because ofCOVID-19, including 461 Horizon Health Network employees and69Vitalit Health Network employees.

Fifty-one people with the virus are in hospital. Of these, 17 are in intensive care, 33are over the age of 60 and 12 are on ventilators. No one under 19 ishospitalized.Public Health reported435 recoveries since Friday, bringing the province's active case count to5,442.

Breakdown of new cases

The new casesreported since Friday break down this way:

Moncton region, Zone 1

  • 697 cases

Saint John region, Zone 2

  • 1,070 cases

Fredericton region, Zone 3

  • 299 case

Edmundston region, Zone 4

  • 132 cases

Campbellton region, Zone 5

  • 58 cases

Bathurst region, Zone 5

  • 149 cases

Miramichi region, Zone 7

  • 143 cases
People line up for COVID-19 booster shots at Shoppers Drug Mart on Crown St. in Saint John late Monday morning. By mid-afternoon, they had run out of doses and advised people to try again on Tuesday. (Bobbi-Jean MacKinnon/CBC News)

Moderna will only be offered to those over 30

New Brunswick's vaccination clinics will exclusively offer the Moderna vaccine to individuals over the age of 30.

Due to a limited national supply of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine until April, the National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) is recommending that Pfizer be reserved for individuals 12 to 29 years of age, citingevidence that the risk of myocarditis/pericarditis for this age group is decreased with the Pfizer vaccine.

This risk is lower with Moderna in the over-30 population, Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Jennifer Russell said in a news release late Monday.

"Moderna is a safe and effective vaccine, and as the number of COVID-19 cases rise due to the Omicron variant, it becomes ever more important for people to get their third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine," Russell said.

As well, Russell said, mixed doses of Moderna and Pfizer "are now considered to be acceptable" for most international travel, including to the United States.

Bill Lawlor, director of the New Brunswick and P.E.I. arm of the Red Cross, said the agency is 'ready for the influx' of requests for rapid test kits. (Rachel Cave/CBC)

Red Cross bolsters rapid test kit supplies

The Canadian Red Cross is steppingup to meet surging demand for rapid test kits in New Brunswick and across Canada.

Climbing case counts and changes to PCR test access have seen New Brunswickers lining up to get their hands on rapid test kits in recent weeks. But the lineups have been long, and supplies have often come up short.

In an interview with Shift New Brunswick on Monday, Bill Lawlor, provincial director of Red CrossCanada for New Brunswick, said the agency is providing rapid test kits to community organizations for distribution via a federal Stop the Spread campaign.

The agency has already handed outkits to 11 New Brunswick workplaces that have been approved for theStop the Spread initiative, with another 37 organizations' applications under review or in progress, Lawlor said.

"We are expecting a bit of a shift in demand, right across the country and here in New Brunswick," where Public Health has announced changes to PCR testing, Lawlor said.

As of Tuesday at11:59 p.m., the province will start reserving PCR tests for people who are at the highest risk of being hospitalized with COVID-19. This includes symptomatic people over the age of 50 and under the age of two, those who are immunocompromised or pregnant, and people who are identified as a priority by Public Health.

The Red Cross is already seeing a spike in demand for tests, and will be able to meet it, Lawlor said.

"We've built up a surge, we're ready for the influx," he said, adding that the kits are being supplied by the federal government. "There is no issue of us running out anytime soon."

Rod Russell, a professor of virology and immunology at Memorial University of Newfoundland, said the shortened isolation requirement seems to be borne out of necessity, and signals more of a shift toward living with COVID-19. (Memorial University)

Shifting to 'living with' COVID-19

A shortened isolation period for those infected with COVID-19 in New Brunswick signals a larger shift toward a policy of "living with" the disease, says an Atlantic Canada virologist.

Last Friday, the New Brunswick government announced that vaccinated people who test positive for COVID-19 now only have to isolate for five days, while unvaccinated individuals must isolate for 10 days.

Shortened isolation periodswere also introducedin other provinces including Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, as well as the United States.

The move appears to signal a broader shift toward living with COVID-19 as the disease potentially becomes endemic, said RodRussell, a professor of virology and immunology at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

The latest wave of the pandemic has brought record high case counts across Canada, largely driven by the new Omicron variant.

With the risk of getting infectedat an all-time high, Russell said it seems the shortened isolation time was borne out of necessity.

"If everyone stays home for 10 days, there's not going to be anybody to work, right? And that really makes a difference to the frontline," said Russell, speaking Monday on Information Morning Fredericton.

"So if nurses and doctors and all health-care individuals, you know, have to stay home for10 days, or have to isolate because they were exposed to somebody who was infected, you know, we're going to end up with nobody around to take care of the people who actually need help."

Last week, Horizon Health Network announced 95 employees at the Saint John Regional Hospital had to isolate after exposures in three departments.

It's going to be a rough start to 2022 as small businesses deal with renewed restrictions on capacity limits, said Louise-Philippe Gauthier of the Canadian Federation of Independent Businesses. (Canadian Federation of Independent Business)

"So we've been talking for a year now about learning to live with the virus, and we, you know, at least in Atlantic Canada, we haven't really had to because cases have been low in most parts of Atlantic Canada for most of the time," Russell said.

"But I thinkthis situation, you know, you can't hide from this now."

In announcing a shortened isolation period last Thursday, Ontario Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore said"90 per cent of your viral risk oftransmission isalready transpiredby five days."

Alberta Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Deena Hinshaw also justified her province shortening the isolation time by saying it's "based on the evidence that those who are fully immunized shed virus for a shorter amount of time if they have a breakthrough infection."

Bad start to the new year for small business

The post-holiday season is typically a difficult time for many businesses.

But, with new restrictions on capacity limits in stores and restaurants, many small business owners are going into the new year feeling discouraged, said Louis-Philippe Gauthier of the Canadian Federation for Independent Business.

"For some it's, it's discouraging," said Gauthier, speaking on Information Morning Fredericton.

"I had a district manager tell me just before the Christmas time, they said 'Philip, you know, the members aren't smiling anymore.' So, you know, when you hear that,it's not fun. It's definitely not a pleasant moment to have to deal with all these things."

As of Dec. 27, 2021, all zones inthe province were moved to Level 2 of New Brunswick's COVID-19 winter plan.

That means most establishments, including restaurants, retail stores, gyms, spas and salons must operate at 50 per cent capacity.

Gauthier said restaurants, the entertainment and events industries remain the hardest hit.

In addition to capacity limits, he said the existing shortage of workers has been made worse by the sheer number of cases, which has led to more employees having to take sickdays.

"And the added reality is that many consumers unfortunately have started spending their disposable dollars towards the big box stores... and that's something that doesn't make it easy for small and medium-sized businesses across New Brunswick in our communities," he said.

With files from Information Morning Fredericton