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Ontario's daily COVID-19 cases dips below 300 for first time since March

There were, however, 35 more deaths reported today
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For the first time since March 31, Ontario has reported a daily COVID-19 case increase in the 200s. 

Today, Public Health Ontario announced 294 new lab-confirmed cases of the coronavirus. The last time the number was below 300 was March 31, when the total case count in the province was 1,966 cases. 

There have now been 20,238 cases reported by the province’s public health agency, and of those 14,772 are recorded as recovered (73 per cent) and 1,634 people have died (8.1 per cent). 

In today’s update, the province reported 35 deaths linked to COVID-19, and another 389 recoveries. 

Of the 35 deaths reported today, two people between the ages of 40 and 59 have died, 10 people between the ages of 60 and 79 have died, and 23 people over 80 have died.

There are 961 people in hospital, including 195 in intensive care and 140 people on ventilators. 

There were 17,618 tests completed in a single day and there are 14,816 tests awaiting results. Ontario has now completed 433,994 COVID-19 tests. 

The Ministry of Long-Term Care is reporting 172 outbreaks with 2,727 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in residents, and 1,693 cases in staff. The ministry also stated there have been 1,235 resident deaths as a result of COVID-19 outbreaks. However, only 788 of those are included in the province’s total number of deaths in Ontario. 

At the end of last week, Premier Doug Ford announced some non-essential businesses could start to re-open. On Friday garden centres and nurseries were permitted to open for in-store and curbside pick-up. On Saturday, hardware and safety supply stores were allowed to reopen for in-store and curbside pick-up
Tomorrow retail stores with entrances facing the street can offer curbside pickup. 

The Ontario Government also announced provincial parks and conservation reserves will reopen this week, some on Monday and the rest on Friday, for day-use only including hiking, walking, bird-watching and biking. Physical distancing measures must remain in place for those using the parks. 

There have now been 360 cases of COVID-19 confirmed in the Simcoe-Muskoka region, including 184 recoveries and 25 deaths. Public Health Ontario, however, reports there are at least 367 cases in the region. The Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit will provide a case update on its website tomorrow.

The breakdown of cases in each municipality is as follows:

Barrie (119 cases, 61 recoveries, 7 deaths, 1 in hospital), Bradford West Gwillimbury (80 cases, 29 recoveries, 10 deaths, 3 in hospital), New Tecumseth (24 cases, 17 recoveries, 2 in hospital), Orillia (15 cases, 10 recoveries, 2 deaths), Collingwood (11 cases, 7 recoveries, 1 in hospital), Innisfil (28 cases, 13 recoveries, 1 in hospital), Springwater (6 cases, 4 recoveries, 1 death), Midland (6 cases, 5 recoveries), Wasaga Beach (11 cases, 5 recoveries, 1 death), Oro-Medonte (5 cases, 2 recoveries, 2 deaths, 1 in hospital), Adjala-Tosorontio (7 cases, 5 recoveries), Clearview (6 cases, 2 recoveries, 1 in hospital), Essa (7 cases, 3 recoveries, 1 death), Ramara (5 cases, 2 recoveries), Tiny (2 cases, all recovered), Tay (2 cases), Penetanguishene (2 cases, all recovered), and Severn (3 cases) for a total of 339 cases in Simcoe County, including 169 recoveries.

There are also 18 confirmed positive cases in Muskoka, and 15 have recovered, one person from Muskoka Lakes has died.

The case rate (including lab-confirmed cases only) for Simcoe-Muskoka region is 61.2  cases per 100,000 population. The provincial average is 136.2 cases per 100,000 population.


 

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Erika Engel

About the Author: Erika Engel

Erika regularly covers all things news in Collingwood as a reporter and editor. She has 15 years of experience as a local journalist
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