Ottawa COVID-19 trends and 4th vaccine dose count going up

A person walks with a rainbow umbrella in Ottawa Sept. 30, 2022. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press - image credit)
A person walks with a rainbow umbrella in Ottawa Sept. 30, 2022. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press - image credit)

Recent developments:

  • Ottawa's pandemic trends are mostly rising.

  • Its hospitalizations dropping are an outlier.

  • Ottawans got about 12,000 3rd and 4th doses in the last eight days.

  • Hospitalizations are high in the Belleville and Kingston areas.

The latest Ottawa update

Ottawa Public Health (OPH) said late last week COVID-19 levels were high going into Thanksgiving weekend as another pandemic wave rises. Cold and flu season has also begun.

Experts recommend staying home when sick, gathering outside, considering wearing masks indoors and in crowded outdoor spaces, and getting the added protection of a COVID vaccine, including the updated bivalent booster available to adults.

While COVID-19 vaccines and previous infection give some protection, subvariants continue to emerge.

Wastewater

The weekly average level of coronavirus in Ottawa's wastewater has been high and rose further at the start of October.

As of Oct. 6, the average is about 13 times higher than it was at this time last year.

613covid.ca
613covid.ca

Hospitals

Seventeen Ottawa residents have been admitted to a city hospital with COVID-19, according to OPH's latest update.

That number had been slowly rising and then started dropping around the start of October. It's back at a level not seen since July.

One patient is in intensive care.

The hospitalization figures above don't include all patients. For example, they leave out patients admitted for other reasons who then test positive for COVID-19, those admitted for lingering COVID-19 complications, and those transferred from other health units.

When you include those kinds of patients, the number is stable

Ottawa Public Health
Ottawa Public Health

Tests, outbreaks and cases

Testing strategies changed under the Omicron variant, meaning many COVID-19 cases aren't reflected in current counts. Public health officials now only track and report outbreaks in health-care settings.

Ottawa's test positivity rate has now risen for about a month, currently sitting at 18 per cent. OPH considers that high.

There are currently 62 active COVID outbreaks in Ottawa. This is moderate, according to OPH, and slowly rising.

OPH reported 296 more cases over three days and two more deaths: one person in their 50s who had COVID and one in their 70s.

Vaccines

Ottawa residents received about 12,400 COVID-19 vaccine doses in the last eight days (reporting was delayed a day because of Thanksgiving).

About 11,000 of those were fourth doses, close to the number from the previous week, and another 1,000 were third; Moderna's bivalent vaccine has been OPH's most popular since the last week of September.

As of the most recent weekly update, 93 per cent of Ottawa residents aged five and up had at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose, 90 per cent had at least two and 61 per cent at least three.

Twenty-six per cent of Ottawans aged 12 and older had at least four. Children 12 to 17 are only eligible if they're significantly immunocompromised.

Nearly 8,000 residents under age five have had a first dose, which is about 17 per cent of Ottawa's population of that age group.

Across the region

Spread

As of the most recent update, wastewater trends are mixed in Kingston and low and stable in Casselman. They're rising in Brockville and Kemptville and high and stable in Smiths Falls.

Data from other areas is out of date or unavailable.

The average test positivity in the Eastern Ontario Health Unit (EOHU) rises to about 15 per cent. About 18 per cent of tests in Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington (KFL&A) Public Health are positive.

Hospitalizations and deaths

Western Quebec's health authority, CISSSO, reports a stable 84 COVID hospitalizations. One of them is in intensive care.

Eastern Ontario communities outside Ottawa are reporting a rise to about 60 COVID hospitalizations, nine of them in intensive care. Nearly half are in KFL&A; its 26 COVID hospitalizations are its most since its severe autumn 2021 wave.

That regional count doesn't include Hastings Prince Edward (HPE) Public Health, which has a different counting method. It reports a rise to 43 local COVID hospitalizations, one of its highest counts of the year. Three of those patients are in intensive care.

Leeds, Grenville and Lanark counties reported two more COVID deaths in their weekly update for a total of 124. The Kingston area's health unit also reported two more of these deaths for a total of 86.

Vaccines

Across eastern Ontario, between 81 and 92 per cent of residents age five and up have received at least two vaccine doses and between 52 and 64 per cent of those residents have had at least three.