Active COVID-19 case count drops to 45

The active COVID-19 case count dropped by 21 over the weekend and now sits at 45 across Chatham-Kent.

The Chatham-Kent Public Health Unit updated their ‘current situation’ page, which provides a summary of COVID-19 cases and testing in Chatham-Kent, on Monday, April 12, 2021.

The total number of COVID-19 cases increased by nine and sits at 1,689 across Chatham-Kent.

CK Public Health officials say no one remains hospitalized with COVID-19 from Chatham-Kent, two less than on Friday.

Public health officials announced 29 new recoveries, increasing the total at 1,631.

A new school outbreak was announced at A.A. Wright Public School in Wallaceburg. More details, here.

One outbreak at an un-named workplace was declared over as well.

A school outbreak at Ursuline College Secondary Catholic School in Chatham remains active and involves two cases.

The institutional outbreak at Hudson Manor, a retirement home in Tilbury, and two un-named workplace outbreaks, all remain active.

29 of the active cases across Chatham-Kent are linked to close contact, five cases have information pending, five are unknown, four cases are linked to school outbreaks, one case is linked to institutional outbreaks and one case is linked to workplace outbreaks.

CK Public Health officials say a total of 99 Chatham-Kent residents have had COVID-19 with a variant of concern or related mutation.

94 of the cases had a mutation detected with “no lineage identified”, while five cases had detected the B.1.1.7 variant of concern, also known as the U.K. variant, public health officials say.

Since the pandemic began last March, a total of 13 people from Chatham-Kent have died from COVID-19.

A total of 99,454 tests for the virus have been completed to date.

Public health officials say 26,054 total doses of the COVID-19 vaccine had been administered to date, while 24,621 people have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in Chatham-Kent.

Beginning on Saturday, April 3, 2021, Chatham-Kent moved into the ‘Grey-Shutdown’ tier of the Keeping Ontario Safe and Open framework, along with the rest of the province.

Provincial officials say the provincewide “emergency brake” will be in place for at least four weeks.

More details, here.

The Province also declared a state of emergency and issued a ‘stay-at-home’ order for all of Ontario.

The order came into effect at 12:01 a.m. on Thursday, April 8, 2021 and is expected to last for four weeks.

More details, here.

To view the full ‘current situation’ page from CK Public Health, click here.

For more information about COVID-19, residents are asked to visit
http://www.ckpublichealth.com/covid19 or call the CK Public Health COVID-19 intake line at 519-355-1071 ex. 1900.

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