Canada Covid-19: Military will help out in the province of Ontario as the Covid-19 positivity rate hits an all-time high

The government approved Ontario’s request for medical and other support as ICU admissions hit new highs Monday.

“We have approved a request for assistance from Ontario to provide support to their provincial healthcare system against COVID19,” Bill Blair, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, said on Twitter. “@CanadianForces will provide medical + civilian human health resources within medical care facilities in ON, as well as logistical and admin. support.”
Earlier this month the province issued new stay-at-home orders that were met with some protests. The government doubled down on April 16 when it said it would strengthen enforcement and penalties for those not complying with orders.

Canada said it would deploy federal health human resources, provide support from the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), and pay for the redeployment of the Canadian Red Cross to support and relieve staff in medical care facilities, a statement released late Monday said.

“The CAF is preparing to deploy up to three multi-purpose medical assistance teams (MMATs), which are scalable healthcare provider teams primarily composed of Nursing Officers and Medical Technicians as well as additional CAF members for general duty support as applicable,” the statement said. “The MMATs will be rotated in and out of the province rather than deployed simultaneously to ensure that CAF support is sustainable.”

Ontario is already using surge capacity in dozens of hospitals, including a few field hospitals that are admitting patients with Covid-19 who do not need intensive treatment or those who have recovered enough to be transferred into the field facilities.

The field hospital in the parking lot of Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto.

Ontario public health officials said the province’s positivity rate hit 10.9% in the last 24 hours, a pandemic high.

The province said it also lacks vaccine supply, which mirrors the situation throughout most of Canada, as the country’s vaccine rollout is set to ramp up in May.

However, more doses will not be received or distributed in time to avoid what are already record hospitalizations in Ontario and British Columbia, with a significant increase in admissions in Alberta in the last two weeks.

“We are in somewhat of a vaccine valley,” said John Tory, Toronto’s mayor during a press briefing Monday, adding, “In short, we have significant vaccine capacity which will not be able to be fully utilized because available supply does not allow for it.”

More young people are getting hospitalized as a 'stickier,' more infectious coronavirus strain becomes dominant

A moment of silence was held in Ontario’s legislature in Toronto and in Canada’s parliament in Ottawa on Monday for a 13-year-old Ontario girl who died at home, one of the youngest victims of Covid-19.

“The variants of concern, and the ones we’re dealing with now, do have a predilection, more and more for the younger age groups. And what I was hoping not to happen, did happen, and I’m concerned that it could happen some more in some cases, said Dr. David Williams, the chief medical officer for Ontario. “We have to be careful; families have to be careful.”



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