Ontario COVID numbers: 1,281 people in hospital, 352 in intensive care
Global News
The death toll in the province has risen to 12,237 as 33 more virus-related deaths were added.
Ontario is reporting 1,281 people in hospital with COVID on Friday, with 352 in intensive care units as figures continue to trend downwards. Hospitalizations are at the lowest point since early January.
This is down by 61 hospitalizations and a decrease of four in ICUs since the previous day. Last Friday, there were 1,829 hospitalizations with 435 in ICU.
The province recently began distinguishing between those who were admitted to hospital directly because of COVID, and those who were admitted for other reasons but tested positive for the virus.
Of the 1,281 people in hospital with COVID-19, 51 per cent of them were admitted because of the virus, while 49 per cent were admitted for other reasons but tested positive for COVID-19.
Of the 352 people in ICUs with the virus, 81 per cent were admitted because of COVID, while 19 per cent were admitted for other reasons.
Meanwhile, Ontario also reported 2,337 new lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases on Friday, though that is an underestimate of the true widespread transmission of the virus due to recent testing restrictions. The provincial case total now stands at 1,083,274.
Of the 2,337 new cases recorded, the data showed 303 were unvaccinated people, 81 were partially vaccinated people, 1,656 were fully vaccinated people. For 297 people the vaccination status was unknown.
The death toll in the province has risen to 12,237 as 33 more virus-related deaths were added. A ministry of health spokesperson said 30 of the deaths occurred over the past 30 days. Three deaths occurred more than a month ago.