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Gathering sizes reduced as Saskatchewan has 34 new COVID cases

There are 34 new cases of COVID-19 to report in Saskatchewan on Oct. 13, bringing the total to 2,174 cases. The new cases are located in the North Central (9), Saskatoon (8), Central West (4), and Regina (11) zones. Two cases have locations pending.
Oct. 13 map

There are 34 new cases of COVID-19 to report in Saskatchewan on Oct. 13, bringing the total to 2,174 cases. The new cases are located in the North Central (9), Saskatoon (8), Central West (4), and Regina (11) zones. Two cases have locations pending.

Public health investigations continue to follow up on all new cases to determine if they have links to known events or if they are new transmissions within the community.

With the increasing rise in cases throughout Saskatchewan, linked to public and private social gatherings, Saskatchewan’s Chief Medical Health Officer Dr. Saqib Shahab is amending the Public Health order on gathering sizes in private residences. As of midnight on Thursday, Oct. 15, the maximum allowable gathering size for private gatherings in the home will be 15.

“Even with increasing community transmission rates we still have the power to effect change, to flatten that curve, but it means all residents have to do their part to help keep their friends and family safe,” Shahab said.

Dr. Shahab is also strongly recommending masks be worn in all indoor public locations where physical distancing of two metres is not possible or predictable. Above all, stay home if sick.

Of the 2,174 reported cases, 238 are considered active. A total of 1,911 people have recovered, including 11 more patients who have recovered as of Oct. 13.

Nine people are in hospital. Seven people are receiving inpatient care; four in Saskatoon, one in Regina, one in North Central and one in Central East. One person is in intensive care in Regina and one person is in intensive care in Saskatoon.

Of the 2,174 cases in the province to date, 317 cases are travellers; 1,066 are community contacts (including mass gatherings); 613 have no known exposures; 178 are under investigation by local public health, and 78 cases are healthcare workers; however, the source of the infections may not be related to healthcare in all instances.

By age category, 373 cases involve people 19 years of age and under; 726 cases are in the 20-39 age range; 658 are in the 40-59 age range; 347 are in the 60-79 age range; and 70 are in the 80-plus range.

About 51 per cent of the cases are females and 49 per cent are males.Twenty-five deaths related to COVID-19 have been reported to date.

There are 465 cases are from the south area (226 southwest, 207 south central, 32 southeast); 450 cases are from the Saskatoon area; 375 cases are from the far north area (356 far northwest, 0 far north central, 19 far northeast); 388 cases are from the north area (140 northwest, 127 north central, 71 northeast); 314 cases are from the central area (187 central west, 127 central east), and 230 cases are from the Regina area.

To date, 218,959 COVID-19 tests have been performed in Saskatchewan. As of Oct. 11, when other provincial and national numbers are available from Public Health Agency of Canada, Saskatchewan’s per capita rate was 151,482 people tested per million population. The national rate was 217,924 people tested per million population.

Yesterday, 2037 COVID-19 tests were performed in Saskatchewan.

Note Correction: an incorrect number of total tests was reported in Monday’s COVID-19 case news release. There were 684 tests that were double-counted, therefore the correct total number of tests performed on October 11th was 2,553.

Failure to Abide by Public Health Orders May Result in Fines

In Saskatchewan and across the country, public health authorities are seeing increasing transmission rates as a result of contravention of public health orders and guidelines, particularly as a result of public and private gatherings. There can be very serious consequences for not following Public Health Orders, including fines in cases where negligence or misconduct have been found. Fines may be $2,000 for individuals and $10,000 for corporations, plus a victim surcharge.

Everyone should continue to take precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Do not attend or host any events if you are experiencing symptoms, even if they are mild.