4th COVID wave has 'reached our shores' as virus rips through central Newfoundland, infecting 45

Dr. Rosann Seviour, acting chief medical officer of health, moved Twillingate to Alert Level 3 on Friday, as a cluster in central Newfoundland continues to grow. (Government of Newfoundland and Labrador - image credit)
Dr. Rosann Seviour, acting chief medical officer of health, moved Twillingate to Alert Level 3 on Friday, as a cluster in central Newfoundland continues to grow. (Government of Newfoundland and Labrador - image credit)

Newfoundland and Labrador is reporting 45 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, leaving the province with its highest active case count in over six months.

According to Dr. Rosann Seviour, acting chief medical officer of health, 39 of the cases are in the Central Health region, which is currently dealing with the latest COVID-19 outbreak in the province.

Thirteen of Friday's reported new cases were previously categorized as presumptive positive.

There are also three cases in the Eastern Health region, two of which are under investigation and one of which is related to travel, and three in the Western Health region, all under investigation.

Newfoundland and Labrador now has 109 active cases of COVID-19, the highest total case count since March 5.

Seviour also reported 18 new presumptive cases, all in the Central Health region, as of Friday.

"The 4th wave has unfortunately reached our shores," Seviour told reporters in an unplanned briefing on Friday afternoon, noting that a cluster of cases originally located in Baie Verte has begun to shift toward the Twillingate area.

As a result, Twillingate, New World Island and communities accessed via Route 340, starting at and including Boyd's Cove, will move to Alert Level 3 effective midnight. Non-essential travel into areas under Alert Level 3 should be limited, said Seviour.

Government of Newfoundland and Labrador
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador

Communities along Routes 410 to 419 on the Baie Verte Peninsula also remain under Alert Level 3.

There are 71 confirmed cases connected to the Central cluster, which includes 10 cases in New World Academy in Summerford. As a result, the school will close in-person learning in favour of online classes.

The Department of Health confirmed later Friday that 21 of those cases, or 30 per cent, are considered breakthrough cases, because COVID-19 infections developed in people who are fully vaccinated.

Nine of the 71 cases are people who are partially vaccinated, while 40 cases, or 57 per cent of the cluster, are in unvaccinated people.

Across the province, over 79 per cent of the eligible population has received two doses, while over 87 per cent has received at least one.

Testing will be also available in Twillingate, Baie Verte and Gander over the weekend. A total of 294,264 tests have now been completed in the province.

"A case identified is a case contained," Seviour said. "Delta is here. And we need to show it the door."

Health-care system prepared for 4th wave: Seviour

The province reported 13 recoveries on Friday, while two people are presently in hospital due to COVID-19 severity.

"One-hundred-nine cases is a threshold we hoped we wouldn't see again. Quite frankly, it speaks to the importance of vaccinations at the community level," Health Minister John Haggie said.

Haggie added the province will continue to update the public on new COVID cases over the weekend, which was done previously in the pandemic when higher case counts were reported.

Watch Friday's briefing:

Both Seviour and Haggie pushed to remind people to wear their masks when needed and the importance of following health measures in place.

"We have stared down the face of COVID before and we will do it again. We have 18 months of this pandemic under our belts and it has been a long haul for everyone," she said.

"But those 18 months have armed us with the knowledge, tools and ability to keep us and our loved ones safe."

Despite the dramatic rise in cases, Seviour expressed confidence in the health-care system's ability to handle a spike in infections after speaking with Dr. Proton Rahman, head of Newfoundland and Labrador's COVID-19 data modelling team.

"He has told us that at the moment, we are certainly not in an area where we are being overwhelmed," she said. "Even our total cases, we're up to … 1,654, which for some provinces is what they see in a day."

Rahman will also speak to the province and present the latest COVID-19 modelling to the province as part of Wednesday's COVID-19 briefing.

Case spike bringing 'fear' to central Newfoundland communities

Meanwhile, as communities in Newfoundland's Central Health region continue to navigate the province's latest COVID-19 outbreak, officials in the region say the onslaught of new cases is bringing fear to the area.

"There is fear," Baie Verte-Green Bay MHA Brian Warr told CBC Radio's Newfoundland Morning Friday.

"I guess we've learned to live with it, but in this part of the province I don't know if we've ever had a positive case of COVID-19 within my district…. To have a cluster like this that's happening right now, it's put fear into the people of my district."

Warr said he's especially concerned about viral spread between the 19 communities in the region and a relatively low vaccination rate compared to the rest of Newfoundland.

Only 65.5 per cent of the eligible population on the Baie Verte Peninsula is fully vaccinated — the lowest on the island — according to data provided to CBC News by the Department of Health on Friday.

Warr suggested seeing no cases in the region could have led to complacency.

"It may be the demographic. It certainly is an aging population, especially in some of the smaller communities," Warr said. "It's close-knit, and the variant is known to spread widely. And it has."

Seviour echoed Warr, suggesting the province's relative isolation from severe COVID outbreaks may have prompted some people not to get vaccinated earlier.

"I think one of the reasons is we feel fairly secure in Newfoundland, fairly safe. Especially in our smaller areas, where we just don't think COVID is going to get there," she said.

"We're also sort of reaching out to communities now in trying to understand a bit better and support people in making that choice."

85 per cent of the eligible population in Twillingate has received two doses of vaccine, according to Seviour.

Submitted by Kayla Dalley
Submitted by Kayla Dalley

COVID testing is available in Baie Verte on Friday and Sunday from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. at Tommy Ricketts arena. An appointment is not required, with those seeking testing asked to stay in their vehicles until advised to enter the testing building.

Visitor restrictions have also been put in place at two regional health centres, the James Paton Memorial Centre in Gander and the Central Newfoundland Regional Health Centre in Grand Falls-Windsor.

Visiting hours will move from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. effective immediately, with COVID screening still in place. All patients can be accompanied by one person for emergencies, appointments or procedures. Emergency services and scheduled outpatient appointments are not affected.

Those requiring information about loved ones affected by the change should contact the appropriate nursing unit, according to Central Health.

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