
N.B. COVID-19 roundup: 1 death reported as hospitalizations remain high
CBC
Public Health is reporting one new death as the province continues to grapple with its highest hospitalization numbers since the pandemic began.
New Brunswick has recorded 172 deaths due to COVID-19.
Seventy-nine people are in hospital, down by one from Saturday when the province hit an all-time high for hospitalizations. Sixteen people are in the ICU and 10 are on ventilators.
Out of the 1,054 PCR tests conducted, 201 were confirmed as positive. The positivity rate is 19.1 per cent.
The breakdown of the 201 new PCR-confirmed COVID-19 cases includes:
As of Saturday, 25.4 per cent of eligible New Brunswickers had received a booster dose, 83.1 per cent had received two doses and 90.8 per cent had received one dose.
Public Health is currently only reporting cases confirmed through PCR testing on the COVID-19 dashboard. Since the eligibility of PCR testing changed and became only accessible to vulnerable populations, the number of reported cases has declined.
The province has asked the public to register their positive rapid test results through an online form.
Jean-Claude D'Amours, an MLA and Liberal health critic, wants the province to start reporting positive results obtained from rapid tests on the COVID-19 dashboard.
"If you change from PCR to rapid tests, the government should report the number of positive rapid tests in the province," he said.
D'Amours said the recent changes made by Public Health in regards to testing, providing exposure notices, conducting contact tracing and providing daily news releases mean less transparency about the state of COVID-19 in New Brunswick.
"It's less information coming from the government with no rationale, no logic," said D'Amours.
As New Brunswick struggles with staffing shortages in the health-care system, D'Amours said the province should be asking the federal government for help if it's unable to keep up. Last week, 200 members of the Canadian Armed Forces were deployed to help with vaccination efforts in Quebec as that province struggles with rising hospitalizations.
"We see the government trying to do everything by themselves, not asking for help," he said. "At the same time, we're seeing other provinces in the country asking for help."