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Ontario reports 170 COVID cases, lowest since September – Timmins Times

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About 78% of Ontarians have had at least 1 COVID-19 vaccination, 44% fully vaccinated

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Ontario reported 170 cases of COVID-19 on Monday, the lowest new case count in nearly 10 months. There was one new death.

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Waterloo Region reported 34 new cases, Toronto 27, Grey Bruce 18 and the Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit reported 13 cases.

The daily case count was the lowest in Ontario since the 170 cases reported on Sept. 10 and 149 cases on Sept. 9.

The current rate is now slightly higher than the number of new cases reported in Ontario in July and August of 2020, when most days the count was between 75 and 150 new cases a day.

The province completed 12,900 COVID-19 tests  and as of 8 p.m. Sunday, some 144,795 doses of vaccines had been administered. Ontario has now administered more than 15.7 million vaccinations.

There are 155 patients in hospital, 228 in intensive care and 157 on ventilators.

Ontario has had 545,973 total cases of COVID-19, of which 534,791 are considered resolved. There have been 9,215 deaths.

Closer to home, there are no active cases and no hospitalizations. There were 400 confirmed COVID cases in Algoma District and six deaths.

The province opened up its vaccine booking portal on Monday to allow accelerated appointments for youth aged 12 to 17 to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Though some complained on Twitter of difficulty booking their shot, Vaccine Hunters Canada tweeted there were still many appointment times available.

About 78 per cent of Ontarians have had at least one COVID-19 vaccination and 44 per cent are fully vaccinated.

Ontario moved into Step 2 of its reopening plan last Wednesday, which allowed for larger outdoor gatherings and the opening of personal care services like hair salons, among other things.

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Premier Doug Ford said the government would follow the advice of its Chief Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Kieran Moore.

“They’re the experts,” Ford said. “We’re going to work day in and day out, No. 1 to get every single business open in this province, get them back on their feet. But we’re going to do it cautiously too. We’ll take directions from the health team.”

Last week, at his first briefing in his new job, Moore urged caution in the face of the more contagious Delta variant, which according to the Ontario COVID-19 science table currently makes up 74 per cent of new cases in the province.  Moore said it would be prudent to follow the province’s plan, which calls for waiting 21 days between each stage of reopening to gauge the public health consequences.

At the news conference Monday, Ford also said he’s committed to maintaining a wage increase brought in for personal support workers during the pandemic.

Ford says it’s a “guarantee” that his government will keep the temporary $3 an hour wage bump for the workers who staff long-term care homes and similar facilities. He did not share any further details.

A spokesperson for Ford, Alexandra Adamo, said the province recently extended the pay increase to Aug. 23. However, the “premier has said many times in the past that he’s committed to making it permanent,” Adamo said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Porter Airlines announced it would resume flights on Sept. 8, including its six daily flights from Ottawa to Toronto.

It’s been more than 18 months since the airline suspended operations because of the pandemic.

Last week the airline received more than $20 million in federal loans to help it reimburse passengers whose flights were cancelled.

Porter announced Monday that it will recall 500 employees as it begins operations. Flights to U.S destinations, including New York, Washington, Boston and Chicago, will resume Sept. 17.

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Some Ontario docs now offering RSV shot to infants with Quebec rollout set for Nov.

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Some Ontario doctors have started offering a free shot that can protect babies from respiratory syncytial virus while Quebec will begin its immunization program next month.

The new shot called Nirsevimab gives babies antibodies that provide passive immunity to RSV, a major cause of serious lower respiratory tract infections for infants and seniors, which can cause bronchiolitis or pneumonia.

Ontario’s ministry of health says the shot is already available at some doctor’s offices in Ontario with the province’s remaining supply set to arrive by the end of the month.

Quebec will begin administering the shots on Nov. 4 to babies born in hospitals and delivery centers.

Parents in Quebec with babies under six months or those who are older but more vulnerable to infection can also book immunization appointments online.

The injection will be available in Nunavut and Yukon this fall and winter, though administration start dates have not yet been announced.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 21, 2024.

-With files from Nicole Ireland

Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Polio is rising in Pakistan ahead of a new vaccination campaign

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ISLAMABAD (AP) — Polio cases are rising ahead of a new vaccination campaign in Pakistan, where violence targeting health workers and the police protecting them has hampered years of efforts toward making the country polio-free.

Since January, health officials have confirmed 39 new polio cases in Pakistan, compared to only six last year, said Anwarul Haq of the National Emergency Operation Center for Polio Eradication.

The new nationwide drive starts Oct. 28 with the aim to vaccinate at least 32 million children. “The whole purpose of these campaigns is to achieve the target of making Pakistan a polio-free state,” he said.

Pakistan regularly launches campaigns against polio despite attacks on the workers and police assigned to the inoculation drives. Militants falsely claim the vaccination campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.

Most of the new polio cases were reported in the southwestern Balochistan and southern Sindh province, following by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and eastern Punjab province.

The locations are worrying authorities since previous cases were from the restive northwest bordering Afghanistan, where the Taliban government in September suddenly stopped a door-to-door vaccination campaign.

Afghanistan and Pakistan are the two countries in which the spread of the potentially fatal, paralyzing disease has never been stopped. Authorities in Pakistan have said that the Taliban’s decision will have major repercussions beyond the Afghan border, as people from both sides frequently travel to each other’s country.

The World Health Organization has confirmed 18 polio cases in Afghanistan this year, all but two in the south of the country. That’s up from six cases in 2023. Afghanistan used a house-to-house vaccination strategy this June for the first time in five years, a tactic that helped to reach the majority of children targeted, according to WHO.

Health officials in Pakistan say they want the both sides to conduct anti-polio drives simultaneously.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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White House says health insurance needs to fully cover condoms, other over-the-counter birth control

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions of people with private health insurance would be able to pick up over-the-counter methods like condoms, the “morning after” pill and birth control pills for free under a new rule the White House proposed on Monday.

Right now, health insurers must cover the cost of prescribed contraception, including prescription birth control or even condoms that doctors have issued a prescription for. But the new rule would expand that coverage, allowing millions of people on private health insurance to pick up free condoms, birth control pills, or “morning after” pills from local storefronts without a prescription.

The proposal comes days before Election Day, as Vice President Kamala Harris affixes her presidential campaign to a promise of expanding women’s health care access in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to undo nationwide abortion rights two years ago. Harris has sought to craft a distinct contrast from her Republican challenger, Donald Trump, who appointed some of the judges who issued that ruling.

“The proposed rule we announce today would expand access to birth control at no additional cost for millions of consumers,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a statement. “Bottom line: women should have control over their personal health care decisions. And issuers and providers have an obligation to comply with the law.”

The emergency contraceptives that people on private insurance would be able to access without costs include levonorgestrel, a pill that needs to be taken immediately after sex to prevent pregnancy and is more commonly known by the brand name “Plan B.”

Without a doctor’s prescription, women may pay as much as $50 for a pack of the pills. And women who delay buying the medication in order to get a doctor’s prescription could jeopardize the pill’s effectiveness, since it is most likely to prevent a pregnancy within 72 hours after sex.

If implemented, the new rule would also require insurers to fully bear the cost of the once-a-day Opill, a new over-the-counter birth control pill that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved last year. A one-month supply of the pills costs $20.

Federal mandates for private health insurance to cover contraceptive care were first introduced with the Affordable Care Act, which required plans to pick up the cost of FDA-approved birth control that had been prescribed by a doctor as a preventative service.

The proposed rule would not impact those on Medicaid, the insurance program for the poorest Americans. States are largely left to design their own rules around Medicaid coverage for contraception, and few cover over-the-counter methods like Plan B or condoms.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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