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Canada 'may' have passed peak of Omicron wave, says top doctor

Canada 'may' have passed peak of Omicron wave, says top doctor

CBC
Friday, January 21, 2022 10:29:09 PM UTC

Canada may have passed the peak of the Omicron wave but the number of people hospitalized because of COVID-19 is now at its highest level since the pandemic began, Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam said today.

"In the weeks since the modelling update, there are early indications that infections may have peaked at the national level, including daily case counts, test positivity, Rt or the effective reproduction number and wastewater surveillance trends," Tam said today.

Nationally, the average daily case count has decreased by 28 per cent since last week. Tam warned that, because lab testing can't keep up with demand as Omicron spreads, that count may underestimate the actual number of cases. 

Tam also said that with test positivity at 22 per cent and the seven-day average of daily cases at almost 27,000, COVID-19 is widespread throughout the country.

While the current wave may have passed its peak, Tam said hospitalization rates are still rising quickly and many hospitals across Canada are under "intense strain."

"Over the past week, an average of over 10,000 people with COVID-19 were being treated in our hospitals each day, surpassing peak daily numbers for all previous waves of the pandemic," Tam said.

"This includes over 1,100 people in intensive care units, which is higher than all but the third wave peak."

Tam again encouraged all unvaccinated Canadians and those who haven't yet received boosters to step up.

Asked about a report from the University of Washington saying that the pandemic is winding down, Tam said it's "possible" but called for caution.

Watch: Dr. Tam reports possible peak of national COVID-19 cases:

"There are many experts in the world trying to work out this question. I don't think [this is] necessarily the scenario, but it is a possible scenario, so I think we need to prepare for different potential futures," she said. 

Tam pointed out that Canadians who've recovered from the virus or have received booster shots will now have stronger immune responses. She also warned that uncertainty over how quickly that increased immunity wanes, and the threat of new variants emerging, complicate the business of making predictions.

"There will be future variants. That's a characteristic of viral infections — they continually mutate and form new variants," said Dr. Cory Neudorf, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan.

"We could have a longer period where a significant [portion] of the population is immune to new waves ... We will see more waves of COVID coming our way in the next year or two, but signs are pointing to smaller, less severe."

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