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You are here:Home / Featured /Nova Scotia has the highest weekly COVID death count of the entire pandemic

Nova Scotia has the highest weekly COVID death count of the entire pandemic

March 4, 2022ByTim Bousquet1 Comment

Jump to sections in this article:
Overview
Vaccination
Testing

Nova Scotia is reporting four new COVID deaths today (Friday, March 4). The deceased are:
• a man in his 50s, Northern Zone
• a man in his 70s, Eastern Zone
• a man in his 80s, Northern Zone
• a man in his 80s, Western Zone

This week, 20 COVID deaths were reported in Nova Scotia, the highest weekly COVID death count of the entire pandemic. The next highest weekly death count was 18, Feb. 12-18, 2022.

Phase 2 of the loosening of Public Health restrictions starts Monday. Phase 2 also means that the province’s COVID reporting will now be weekly, so this reporting won’t return until Thursday, March 10.

Additionally, the province is reporting a total of 320 people in hospital who either now have COVID or once did have COVID, as follows:
• 45 admitted because of COVID symptoms, 13 of whom are in ICU. Those 45 range in age from 5 to 91 years old, and their median age is 61;
• 117 admitted to hospital for other reasons but who tested positive for COVID during the admissions screening or who were admitted for COVID but no longer require specialized care;
• 158 who contracted COVID in the hospital outbreaks

The 45 people now hospitalized because of COVID have the following vaccination status:
• 12 (26.7%) have had 3 doses
• 23 (51.1%) have had 2 doses but not 3
• 1 (2.2%) has had 1 dose only
• 9 (20.0%) are unvaccinated
Note that less than 8% of the population is unvaccinated.

My very rough calculation of the rate by vaccination status of those hospitalized (based on numbers of the population in each category two weeks ago) is as follows:
• (12) a rate of 2.4 per 100K with 3 doses
• (23) a rate of 6.9 per 100K with 2 doses (but not 3)
• (1) a rate of 1.8 per 100K with 1 dose only
• (9) a rate of 9.8 per 100K unvaccinated

Additionally, the province announced 294 new lab-confirmed cases today.

By Nova Scotia Health zone, the new cases break down as:
• 117 Central
• 64 Eastern
• 43 Northern
• 70 Western

The Dept. of Health estimates there are 2,650 active cases in the province.

The graph above shows the number of reported weekly cases (green, left axis) and reported weekly deaths (red, right axis).

The graph above shows the number of weekly cases (green, left axis) and the number hospitalized on Fridays (orange, right axis) for the duration of the pandemic.


Vaccination

Yesterday, 831 doses of vaccine were administered (which is low, probably because of the weather):
• 42 first doses
• 184 second doses
• 602 third doses
(three doses are missing)

In total, 2,217,196 doses have been administered:
• 882,930 first doses
• 831,009 second doses
• 503,257 third doses

At end of day yesterday, 92.2% of the entire population have received at least 1 dose of vaccine:
• 5.4 with 1 dose only
• 34.8% with 2 doses but not 3
• 52.0% with 3 doses
• 7.8% unvaccinated

The graph above shows the vaccination progress as captured on Fridays through the pandemic. The yellow line is people withat least一剂疫苗蓝线的人onlyone dose. The green line is people with two doses but not three. The grey line is people with three doses. The red line is 80% of the population.

Appointments for boosters are now open to people 18 and over for whom 168 days have passed since their second shot.

Vaccination appointments for people 5 years of age and older can be bookedhere。

People in rural areas who need transportation to a vaccination appointment should contactRural Rides, which will get you there and back home for just $5. You need to book the ride 24 hours ahead of time.


Testing

Nova Scotia Health labs completed 1,632 PCR tests yesterday, with a positivity rate of 18.0%.

If you test positive with a rapid (antigen) test, you are assumed to definitely have COVID, andyouandyour householdare to self-isolate as required.

The pop-up testing schedule can be foundhere。


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Filed Under:Featured,News

AboutTim Bousquet

Tim Bousquet is the editor and publisher of the Halifax Examiner.email:[email protected];Twitter

Comments

  1. Bill Turpinsays

    March 5, 2022 at 1:22 pm

    It would be nice if NS Public Health published more detail, such as age-standardized risk information. For example, the March 4 epidemiological survey says: “Compared to cases fully vaccinated with an additional dose, unvaccinated cases were 12 times more likely to be hospitalized and 14 times more likely to die as a result of their illness, during this same 4-week period.” That’s age-standardized. (Table 3).

    Without that detail, people trying to understand the publicly reported figures sometimes have to struggle with false anomalies. For example, contrary to what the feds say, the data presented here and on the NS Public Health site imply the “sweet spot’ for vaccination status is single dose. However, a careful reading of the the Epidemiological Survey shows otherwise:https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/epidemiological-summary-covid-19-cases.html#a9。

    None of this is a problem if you don’t understand statistics — you simply accept what NS Public Health tells you. But for those of us who understand just enough to be confused it’s, um, confusing. In other words, a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

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