Ontario to allow symptomatic COVID-19 testing in pharmacies as 481 new cases reported - Action News
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Ontario to allow symptomatic COVID-19 testing in pharmacies as 481 new cases reported

Ontario reported 481 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, as the seven-day average of daily infectionscontinued to tick upward though the pace of that climb has slowed compared to recent weeks.

Pace of week-over week case rate growth slowing

A nurse wearing blue gloves handles a COVID-19 test swab.
Ontario is moving to allow COVID-19 testing for symptomatic people for pharmacies that opt in. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Ontario pharmacies will soon have the optionto offerCOVID-19 testingto symptomatic people.

That's a change from the previous policy, which only allowed for testing in a pharmacy if a person wasn't showing any symptoms of the virus.

While speaking at a news conference Tuesday, Premier Doug Ford said he is confident protocols will be in placeto protect shoppers. Fordindicated masking policies remain in place and said there will bededicated lines for testing.

"We have strong protocols in place we're going to be very cautious," Ford said.

Currently, pharmacies can only carry outCOVID-19 tests for people without symptoms, who haven't been in contact with someone with COVID-19, and aren't part of an outbreak investigation. The testing is largely intended for residents, workers and visitors of long-term care homes, Indigenous individuals, and people who need out-of-country medical services.

A government source says pharmacies if they opt in will soon be able to offer PCR swab tests for people with symptoms and high-risk contacts of people with the virus.

Pharmacies takingpart in the program will be providing free, in-store diagnostic testing andPCR self-collection kits.Theywill alsoserve as drop-off points for at-home tests.

Pharmacies will be expected to have a dedicated space in which to perform the tests, physical distancing, time between tests to allow for cleaning, and put up signage indicating the location provides symptomatic testing.

481 new cases reported

Meanwhile, Ontario reported 481 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, as the seven-day average of daily infectionscontinued to tick upward though the pace of that climb has slowed compared to recent weeks.

Today's count is a roughly nine per cent jump from the same time last week, when the province logged 441 cases.

The seven-day average of daily cases rose to 579. Last Tuesday it stood at 492.

The most recent estimate from Ontario's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table is that cases are now doubling every 24 days or so, compared to about every 15 to 17 days at the same time last week. In other words, the rate of growth in the transmissionof the virus is slowing.

Here are some other key pandemic indicators and figures from theMinistry of Health's daily provincial update:

Newly reported school-related cases: 245 from last Friday afternoon to Monday afternoon. Three of Ontario's 4,844 publicly-funded schools are closed due to COVID-19.

Patients in ICUs with COVID-related illnesses: 139, with 82relying on ventilators to breathe.

Tests in the previous 24 hours: 18,965, with a 2.5per cent positivity rate.

Active cases: 4,814, the first significant drop in overall active cases in about three weeks.

Newly reported deaths: One, pushing the death toll to 9,938.

Vaccinations: 13,146 doses were administered by public health units on Monday. About 85.7per cent of eligible Ontarians have had two shots.

Southwestern PHU considers new COVID measures

The Southwestern Public Health unit in Ontario is considering adopting new public health measures to mitigate the recent rise in COVID-19 case counts.

The medical officer of health for the counties of Oxford and Elgin said this week thatthe daily counts of new infections in the area have been higher than those in the rest of the province.

Dr. Joyce Lock saidthe positivity rate in the daily COVID-19 tests in her unit is continuing to climb every week, reaching about 5.1 per cent recently.

She saidher team is looking at the local data to see what additional measures can help in stopping the spread of the virus and reducing the pressure onlocal hospitals.

St. Thomas Elgin General Hospital, which is one of three hospitals in the region, saidit's facing a dire situation, and is now seeingthe highest number of patients requiring critical care since the start of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, the public health unit in Sudburyreinstated capacity rules and some other measures last week amid a rapid local rise in cases.

With files from The Canadian Press