30 Yukoners now dead from COVID-19; health officials dial back case reporting - Action News
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30 Yukoners now dead from COVID-19; health officials dial back case reporting

The Yukon hit a grim milestone this month, with health officials logging the territory's 30th death associated with COVID-19.

Case numbers now 'less reliable' in determining one's risk of infection, chief medical officer says

A hospital building exterior on a grey winter day
The Whitehorse General Hospital. Yukon has now seen 30 people die with COVID-19. (Paul Tukker/CBC)

The Yukon hit a grim milestone this month, with health officials logging the territory's 30th death associated with COVID-19.

The numbersalso showthere's been a recent spike in fatalities with Yukon'scumulative death toll increasing by four people overless than two weeks.

Health officials, though, are not saying much about the recently deceased.

The health department did not make anybody available for an interview this week.

In an emailedstatement on Wednesday, Health department spokesperson Samantha Henney said the recent deaths involved people older than 50 and the "majority" were not up to date with their vaccinations.

"In addition, other risk factors or co-morbidities were present," the statement reads.

Henney would not say whether the most recent deaths suggest more people are becoming infected, or that there are more cases of serious illness.

Henney said Yukon's COVID-19 online dashboard is updated daily, with case numbers, fatalitiesand test positivity rates. But Yukon's top doctor has also cautioned that those numbers have become less meaningful as a way for Yukoners to understand and manage their risk of infection.

A portrait of a man smiling with flags behind him.
Chief Medical Officer Dr. Sudit Ranade says the goal is to 'move to a place where people, you know, don't make false presumptions about what the numbers are telling them' about risk of infection. (Vincent Bonnay/Radio-Canada)

"What we're trying to do is move to a more routine frequency of reporting. And one that's perhaps less sort of, you know, frenetic and reactive one that's more sort of scheduled and planned," Dr. Sudit Ranade, Yukon's chief medical officer, told CBC News last week.

"The ongoing, you know, review of these numbers to help you determine what your personal risk is or what you should do is less reliable."

Ranade said COVID-19 is "not going to go away," so there will be always be some level of risk of exposure when socializing.

"What we're going to try to do is move to a place where people, you know, don't make false presumptions about what the numbers are telling them and what that means they should do."

Officials are still urging people to get vaccinated and ensure they're up-to-date with their boosters,saying it's the best protection against infection and serious illness.

With files from Jackie Hong and Roch Shannon Fraser