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Coronavirus: What’s happening in Canada and around the world on Jan. 1

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The latest:

Several provinces have again set new highs in COVID-19 cases,┬аreporting on the first day of 2022 that┬аthe highly transmissible┬аOmicron variant continued to drive up infections across Canada.

Ontario┬аon Saturday reported 18,445 cases┬атАФ┬аan increase from 16,713 new cases┬аreported New Year’s Eve.

Infectious disease experts have said for several days that the actual number of new cases is likely far higher than those reported each day because many public health units in Ontario have reached testing capacity.

The provincial public health department said┬а12 more people have died due to the virus┬аand 85 more people were in hospital.

WATCH | Nurse reacts to Ontario’s┬аdecision to stop reporting COVID-19 cases in schools:┬а

Ontario nurse reacts to province’s decision to stop reporting COVID-19 cases in schools

Doris Grinspun, head of the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, responds to news that the Ministry of Education would be suspending the reporting of COVID-19 cases in schools and child-care centres. 8:48

Quebec reported┬а17,122 new cases, marking the fifth straight day┬аa record number of new infections have been reported in the province. It also recorded eight additional deaths.

Outdoor New Year’s Eve celebrations in the province were prohibited as of┬а10 p.m. ET because┬аa┬аcurfew, lasting until 5 a.m.,┬аwent into effect on Friday.┬аThe curfew is Quebec’s second of the pandemic. A previous curfew, announced in early January 2021, was in place for nearly five months.

New restrictions also include banning nearly all indoor gatherings and┬аthe closing of restaurant dining rooms.┬аIndoor gatherings involving more than one household bubble have been┬аprohibited.

WATCH |┬аExhaustion as Quebec’s COVID-19 curfew comes into force on New Year’s Eve:┬а

Exhaustion as Quebec’s COVID-19 curfew comes into force on New Year’s Eve

Quebec residents are frustrated and exhausted as the province’s latest round of COVID-19 restrictions тАФ including a renewed curfew тАФ come into effect on New Year’s Eve. 2:17

Records were also set┬аon Saturday in Nunavut, which┬аreported 50 new cases, and Newfoundland and Labrador, which logged 442 new infections.

In Newfoundland and Labrador, Health Minister John Haggie┬аsaid he had tested positive for COVID-19 and was┬аisolating with cold-like symptoms.

The province’s surge in cases will affect health-care services in St. John’s. Eastern Health says non-urgent services will be┬аtemporarily scaled┬аback as of Tuesday┬аto allow for a greater┬аfocus on booster vaccine clinics and testing for COVID-19. The health authority says it plans to focus on urgent or emergent acute care services within the city.

However, prenatal appointments will continue, as will those for cancer treatment. The medical imaging program will be performing exams on a priority basis, and those patients will be contacted only if their appointment has been cancelled, Eastern Health said in a statement issued Friday. All non-urgent appointments have been cancelled, it said.

Boosting vaccination efforts is one of┬аthe country’s top priorities as 2021 turns to 2022, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in his year-end statement on Friday.

Trudeau said Canadians will need to continue working together to end the pandemic, adding that the “strength, determination┬аand compassion” they’ve demonstrated over the past year will “keep inspiring and guiding us in the new year.”


What’s happening across Canada

WATCH |┬аProvinces shift strategies in attempt to counter Omicron’s rapid spread:┬а

Provinces shift strategies in attempt to counter Omicron’s rapid spread

Provinces are shifting their COVID-19 strategies as the Omicron variant sweeps through Canada at record-breaking speed. More provinces have shortened isolation periods, while Ontario has stopped trying to track and trace its cases, as labs report testing backlogs. 2:02

On the last day of 2021, nearly every province reported┬аrecord-breaking daily numbers for new cases of COVID-19.

British Columbia was┬аno exception, reporting 3,795 new cases of COVID-19 and three more deaths on Friday.┬аDr. Bonnie Henry, the province’s public health officer,┬аsaid earlier in the week that the true number of cases is likely higher because B.C.┬аhad reached its maximum capacity on testing and contact tracing.

The province also announced it is┬аlimiting┬аvisits to long-term care facilities to essential visitors and will fast track its┬аbooster program.

In the Prairies, Manitoba reported a single-day high of┬а1,494 new cases┬аon Friday, as well as five new deaths.┬атАЛтАЛтАЛтАЛтАЛSaskatchewan┬аreported 735 new cases on Friday, another daily high. (Alberta did not announce new numbers; it will┬аresume regular reporting on Tuesday.)

In Atlantic Canada,┬аPrince Edward Island┬аreported a record 175 new cases on Friday.┬аNew Brunswick┬аalso reported a daily high of 682 new infections┬атАФ a number┬аHealth Minister Dorothy Shephard┬аsaid┬аcould rise to 1,000 a day┬аwithin a week.

Shephard also said the province could see more than 160 COVID-19 patients in hospitals by mid-January, a scenario she warned “would very quickly┬аoverwhelm” health-care providers.

Nova Scotia┬аreported┬а618 new cases┬аon Friday.┬аStarting next week, the province┬аwill accelerate its descending age-based approach for boosters to include those┬а30 years and older.

In North, the┬аNorthwest Territories, which is delaying a┬аreturn to school, reported 42 new cases on Friday. Yukon┬аreported 26 new cases and one additional death.

B.C., Manitoba, Alberta and New Brunswick on Friday became the latest provinces to reduce the number of days people with two doses of vaccine must isolate if they get COVID-19. The isolation period has come down from 10 days to five for those individuals.

Ontario and Saskatchewan both announced on Thursday that┬аthey were reducing the isolation period to five days for double-vaccinated people with positive test results.

For Ontario and Saskatchewan, the changes were┬аimmediate. For B.C. and Manitoba, the new measures start on Jan. 1.┬аAlberta’s change takes effect Jan. 3, with New Brunswick set to implement the measure on Jan. 4.


What’s happening around the world

As of Saturday, roughly┬а289.1┬аmillion cases of COVID-19 had been reported worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University’s coronavirus tracker. The reported global death toll stood at more than 5.4 million.

In the Americas, the annual Rose Parade┬аreturned to the streets of┬аPasadena, Calif.,┬аwith marching bands and floral floats after being cancelled last year due to the pandemic.┬аThe crowd was smaller than in previous years, but the parade still drew thousands of fans along its 8.8-kilometre route.

Rose Queen Nadia Chung, centre, waves to the crowd at the 133rd Rose Parade in Pasadena, Calif., on Saturday. (Michael Owen Baker/The Associated Press)

The parade and the afternoon Rose Bowl football game between the Ohio State Buckeyes and the Utah Utes remained on track despite an explosion of COVID-19 infections in Los Angeles County, where daily new cases topped 27,000 on Friday.

In the┬аAsia-Pacific region,┬аChina ended the final week of 2021 with its biggest tally of local COVID-19 cases for any seven-day period since it largely contained┬аthe country’s first epidemic nearly two years ago.

The National Health Commission on Saturday reported┬а175 new community infections with confirmed clinical symptoms for Dec. 31, bringing the total number of local symptomatic cases in China in the past week to 1,151, driven mostly by an outbreak in the northwestern industrial and tech hub of Xi’an.

Xi’an has been under lockdown for 10 days as of Saturday.

A man undergoes a test for COVID-19 in Xi’an, in China’s northern Shaanxi province, on Wednesday. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

In the┬аMiddle East, the United Arab Emirates will ban┬аnon-vaccinated citizens from travelling abroad from Jan. 10, the country’s state news agency WAM reported on Saturday, citing the Foreign Affairs Ministry and the National Emergency Crisis and Disaster┬аManagement Authority.

The report said that fully vaccinated citizens would also┬аrequire a booster shot to be eligible to travel. The ban would┬аnot apply to those with medical or humanitarian exemptions.

In┬аEurope, Pope Francis delivered a New Year’s message on Saturday in which he acknowledged┬аthat the coronavirus pandemic has left many scared and struggling amid economic inequality.

“We are still living in uncertain and difficult times due to the pandemic,” Francis said. “Many are frightened about the future and burdened by social problems, personal problems, dangers stemming from the ecological crisis, injustices and by global economic imbalances.”

Pope Francis adresses the crowd from the window of the Apostolic Palace overlooking Saint Peter’s Square during the New Year Angelus prayer at the Vatican on Saturday. (Tiziana Fabi/AFP via Getty Images)

Thousands of Rome residents and tourists, wearing face masks as protection against the spread of the coronavirus, gathered in St. Peter’s Square on a sunny, mild day to hear the Pope┬аlay out his recipe for world peace, cheering his appearance.

In Africa, businesses working in Morocco’s key tourism sector say the country’s tough COVID-19 restrictions, including a full flight ban, are undermining its competitiveness compared with┬аrival destinations.

Morocco shut its borders in late November and will only reopen them at the end of January. It also banned New Year’s┬аEve celebrations and is enforcing its vaccine pass requirements more strictly in response to the Omicron variant of the coronavirus.

“These restrictions are unjustified and they have made Morocco lose tourists to Mediterranean competitors such as Egypt and Turkey,” said Lahcen Zelmat, head of Morocco’s hotel federation.

Morocco is Africa’s most vaccinated country, having now administered two shots to 23 million people, in a total population of 36 million. Nearly three million have also had booster shots.

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