COVID-19 case count hits 600 in London-Middlesex

A woman is given a nasal swab test for COVID-19. File photo courtesy of © Can Stock Photo / dolgachov


The London region has hit a milestone total of 600 cases of COVID-19 after five new cases were confirmed in the area on Thursday.

It is the third day in a row the case count went up by five.

The Middlesex London Health Unit noted four of the new cases involve staff at local long-term care homes. To date, 109 cases have been linked to the facilities with 62 residents and 47 staff testing positive.

One of the three outbreaks at area old-age homes has been declared over. Health officials said on Thursday the outbreak at Chelsey Park Retirement Community, which had been ongoing since May 30, had now ended. Outbreaks remain at Kensington Village and Peoplecare Oak Crossing.

There have been no additional deaths related to COVID-19 in London or Middlesex County since last Friday. That leaves the death toll at 57.

Three more people, previously diagnosed with the virus, have recovered, bringing the total number of resolved cases to 465.

In Elgin and Oxford counties, there were no new cases or deaths related to the virus reported on Thursday. The area’s total number of cases since the pandemic began remains at 82, with all but 12 of those cases resolved. There have been no additional deaths since April 22, leaving the death toll at four.

Ontario’s downward trend of new COVID-19 cases continued on Thursday with the province reporting its lowest number of infections in a single day since March.

There were 173 new cases reported over the last 24 hours, with 26 of the province’s 34 health units recording five or fewer new cases.

This is the fifth straight day the number of new cases has been below 200 and the first time since March 28 the number has been this low.

Since the start of the outbreak, Ontario has reported a total of 32,917 cases, with 28,004 of those since resolved.

“With 220 more resolved, we continue to see a persistent decline in the number of active cases, with 1,455 fewer active cases since last Tuesday,” tweeted Health Minister Christine Elliott.

There were only three additional COVID-19 deaths in Ontario over the past 24 hours, bumping the total number of deaths linked to the virus to 2,553.

The number of people infected with the virus in hospital is 351. Of those, 84 are in intensive care and 60 are relying on a ventilator to breathe.

The province conducted 25,278 tests for the virus over the last 24 hours, bringing the total number of tests completed since January to 1,096,707.